Sure, whatsisname. I refer to the IPCC itself, which finds nothing of the sort, and a bunch of papers, and yes, you'll find that I'm talking mostly about cyclones.
I refer to a consensus paper in the WMO in 2010 here:
http://www.nature.com/ngeo/journal/v3/n3/pdf/ngeo779.pdfAbout other things, look, I'll be criticizing the points raised by your link one by one.
1. Earth's hottest year on record
This is one of the premises to the idea that gw is causing havoc, not an argument. I agree with it.
2.Most extreme winter Arctic atmospheric circulation on record; "Snowmageddon" results
This is a complete ad hoc explanation for the latest "snowmageddons", that were created post fact. I have little respect for a kind of science that is only able to predict phenomena
after it is seen, specially when it is a phenomena that it would otherwise create suspicion we had the wrong idea about the climate. I am not saying it is a false idea. I'm saying it's ad hoc and not impressive overall.
3. Arctic sea ice: lowest volume on record, 3rd lowest extent
Our "record" of the arctic sea ice spans for 30 years. Not impressive, but something to watch out for. It says nothing about "extreme weather events" however.
3.Record melting in Greenland, and a massive calving event
Same.
4. Second most extreme shift from El Niño to La Niña
The first one being in 73. This kind of thing is expected to happen, you know? It is statistically impossible to avoid that some years will have record heights in some cherry picked values, specially if your records are only 50 years old.
5.Second worst coral bleaching year
Sad.
6. Wettest year over land
The trend is somewhat clear, if a little obscured by the graphical choice of presentation. It says nothing about extremes, however. One could both have a case where mild rains were more frequent (a generally good thing, I'd say), or extreme rains were more frequent (a bad thing for sure).
7. Amazon rainforest experiences its 2nd 100-year drought in 5 years
Amazon phenomena is intriguing, but has little to do with GW. Much more to do with direct human abuse of it, I'd say. At least, I don't see how you could disentangle such obvious fact from the data.
8. Global tropical cyclone activity lowest on record
Yeah, right on. I can't see how this should be a problem, the most powerful cyclones being a little more powerful shouldn't be so damned scary. I find the lack of weather protection in third world countries to be far,
far more deadly than these beasts.
(To compare, see the two hundred thousand casualties from Myanmar and compare them to the 3000 people dead in New Orleans, and a good case is made that these 3 thousand casualties can be blamed on the incompetence of those who should have maitained the levees that were shattered by Katrina).
9. A hyperactive Atlantic hurricane season: 3rd busiest on record
To be sure, any trend that spans for more than a century on this kind of thing should be caveated with the notion that most likely a century ago not all storms would be caught in the record, while nowadays to miss these is pretty much impossible, creating an artificial trend.
10. A rare tropical storm in the South Atlantic
So? Impossible things happen all the time?
11. Strongest storm in Southwestern U.S. history
This is novel to me. Ok, what is the physical explanation linking this phenomena to GW?
12. Strongest non-coastal storm in U.S. history
The second one in 76? As I said, records will be shattered every year in any given place for any phenomena, it's statistically inevitable. Just like someone is always winning the lottery.
13. etc.,etc.
The list is impressive, but it shows nothing other than we are living in a hazardous planet. The blame-the-humans for everything that happens to us is an usual mind faulty process that has accompanied us for thousands of years, one which we should watch out for. Are we sure we aren't just witnessing the results of amazing detection abilities progress, really bad urban planning, global media connections that are instant, etc.?
I have seen no evidence of the "weirdness" that the post aspires to demonstrate, but I'm willing to accept there's probably a trend there of increasing intensity of some phenomenas.
If it doesn't then someone should be explaining a mechanism for how it doesn't, which I have yet to see.
Oh, that is fairly simple. GW predicts that while the average temps will grow, they will grow faster in the poles rather than in the tropics. This means that the temperature differences between the extremes will be
lower than now. If you accept the premise that many weather events are caused by the tensions and confrontations between these extremes (differences in pressures, etc.), then you are given that mechanism. The other mechanism that you refer to also makes sense. So here we have two different mechanisms that may be working at the same time. Or not.