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‘Climate Change’ Was Supposed to Make DC Winters ‘More Southern’—And It’s Colder Than It’s Been in Three Decades


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– The piece examines how major media and climate writers have long suggested that human-caused climate change would make Washington, D.C. winters milder and more southern, contrasting that with a surprising cold spell in early 2026.

– It cites Washington Post climate coverage, including 2020 pieces by Ian Livingston and Andrew Freedman and later notes by Jason samenow, which argued that warming winters could resemble Atlanta’s, forecasting fewer bitterly cold days and less snowfall.

– Yet, DC experienced a nine-day stretch below freezing ending February 2, 2026—the longest as 1989—along with othre unusually cold days, challenging the notion of permanently milder winters.

– The article notes that outlets like Axios echoed the expectation of milder winters, often citing Post reporting, while some media frames attributed winter storms to climate change or “fueled by global warming,” implying long-term trends toward warming.

– It also points to opposing narratives, such as The New York Times pieces titled “The End of Snow,” which seemed to predict less snow, contrasted with observed cold snaps and snow events in cities like Brooklyn and New Orleans, illustrating the unpredictability of whether within long-term climate trends.

– The overall message is that short-term weather can diverge from long-term climate projections, and media coverage sometimes oversimplifies the complex relationship between warming trends and winter conditions.




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