Man sent home from work for wearing shorts in 30C heat goes

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renesm1
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Man sent home from work for wearing shorts in 30C heat goes

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Re: Man sent home from work for wearing shorts in 30C heat g

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It's that time of year again. The thermometer gets above 25 and the cack-handed old fogie managers with their head stuck up their back orifices couldn't run the office sweep-stake never mind a load of staff decide that they are going to stick with the company rules that were written when Disraeli was Prime Minister. Instead of the lame now they can wear shorts that are two inches above the ankle they should fall on their swords - literally. Faced with the same situation I would look at what the women were wearing and copy them.
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Re: Man sent home from work for wearing shorts in 30C heat g

Post by trainspotter48 »

And there has been the usual scenario of punishing the boys who wore shorts to school - mind you, these were their exercise shorts, but the average British teenager probably hasn't got anything else of that nature in his wardrobe. Apparently they were permitted to remove their ties!!
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Re: Man sent home from work for wearing shorts in 30C heat g

Post by r.m.anderson »

I wonder how the Londoner's would handle 118 F on the original London Bridge imported to the USA years ago.
Maybe your Parliament should take up business on the shores of Lake Havasu.

Let's see 118 F converts to almost 48 C.

So your present 30 C =s 86 F of course with that nasty humidity bug you would be swimming and boiling in sweat instead of baking in it !

And then on this side of the pond we (USA) have political types ignoring Global Warming - not happening - doesn't exist - no sense in attending
meetings to discuss about it - surely you must be having a heated babble brain effect or some other malady.

Need to open an investigation into the Russkies playing games with mother nature's weather - they seem to be putting their noses into more things
than they should like keeping peace on the home front.

C - F and F - C LINK:

https://weather.dfrc.nasa.gov/ctof.pdf

Yo'all stay cool now ya hear !
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renesm1
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Re: Man sent home from work for wearing shorts in 30C heat g

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r.m.anderson wrote:I wonder how the Londoner's would handle 118 F on the original London Bridge imported to the USA years ago.
Maybe your Parliament should take up business on the shores of Lake Havasu.

Let's see 118 F converts to almost 48 C.

So your present 30 C =s 86 F of course with that nasty humidity bug you would be swimming and boiling in sweat instead of baking in it !

And then on this side of the pond we (USA) have political types ignoring Global Warming - not happening - doesn't exist - no sense in attending
meetings to discuss about it - surely you must be having a heated babble brain effect or some other malady.

Need to open an investigation into the Russkies playing games with mother nature's weather - they seem to be putting their noses into more things
than they should like keeping peace on the home front.

C - F and F - C LINK:

https://weather.dfrc.nasa.gov/ctof.pdf

Yo'all stay cool now ya hear !
Well, if quite a lot of your wealth depended on fossil fuels, course you'd be denying any link to climate change. It's straight from the big tobacco playbook!
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Re: Man sent home from work for wearing shorts in 30C heat g

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renesm1 wrote:Well, if quite a lot of your wealth depended on fossil fuels, course you'd be denying any link to climate change. It's straight from the big tobacco playbook!
Trust me, that is quite well understood here. Very few people put any credibility on the deniers here because the charade is so transparent that it's laughable. However, they do have the ears of those in power, and as such wield much sway. When Trump announced the withdrawal from the Paris Accord one could hear the salivating from the executives at Ford, GM, and Exxon/Mobil. It was quite disgusting.
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Re: Man sent home from work for wearing shorts in 30C heat g

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86 degrees? (30C)... shoot... that's a mild day!

Wait until August when it cranks up to about 98F (36.6C) and about 90% humidity...

And yes, our U.S. southern fat cats still expect their property (the workers) to sweat it out on roofs and parking lots in dark colored trousers! At least this guy gets an air conditioned office!
From the article wrote:He predicted he would be home again soon...
And if he had attempted such a stunt around here... he would have been [sent home again]....

But I have to admit, bellyaching about 86 degrees to me does put him squarely in "pansy" territory... Lets see him pop the hatch on some strip mall roof, poke his heat up and observe the heat waves, surrounded by condensers that are billowing out blistering hot air from their coils, or do any kind of involved work in any restaurant that's in full production while the air conditioner is down or froze up as the temperature exceeds 110 or higher degrees in some cases.

... yep, the more I think about it- he's a pansy.
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Re: Man sent home from work for wearing shorts in 30C heat g

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Contrary to Carl's assertion that the North American auto industry is happy about the US leaving the Paris Accord, both the major US oil companies and all of the major US nameplate auto companies recommended against it.

Don't take Carl's or my word for it, read the US newspapers and business press.
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Re: Man sent home from work for wearing shorts in 30C heat g

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moonshadow wrote:86 degrees? (30C)... shoot... that's a mild day!

Wait until August when it cranks up to about 98F (36.6C) and about 90% humidity...

And yes, our U.S. southern fat cats still expect their property (the workers) to sweat it out on roofs and parking lots in dark colored trousers! At least this guy gets an air conditioned office!


And if he had attempted such a stunt around here... he would have been [sent home again]....

But I have to admit, bellyaching about 86 degrees to me does put him squarely in "pansy" territory... Lets see him pop the hatch on some strip mall roof, poke his heat up and observe the heat waves, surrounded by condensers that are billowing out blistering hot air from their coils, or do any kind of involved work in any restaurant that's in full production while the air conditioner is down or froze up as the temperature exceeds 110 or higher degrees in some cases.

... yep, the more I think about it- he's a pansy.
In where I live temperatures of 30C and above are normal everyday, especially in the dry season (temperatures get somewhat lower in the wet season). Today the temperature here is 34C.
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Re: Man sent home from work for wearing shorts in 30C heat g

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Yes, but Judah that's dry heat. I was in Egypt a couple of years ago in July and the temperature was between 35 and 40 for almost the whole time. And it was bearable, just, as long as there was a swimming pool nearby, because it was dry. This past week we've had temperatures of just over 30 but because the humidity was high, and let's be honest we just ain't used to it either, then the sweat couldn't evaporate and it was all sticky and awful. I had one night where I was up at 02:30 to go for a walk just to cool down in the mild evening air.
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Re: Man sent home from work for wearing shorts in 30C heat g

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Todays high temperature in Phoenix is 113° F (45° C), a welcome cool-off from the 120° F (49° C) we've been having the last few days.

And in six months the northerners will be calling us weather wimps.
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Re: Man sent home from work for wearing shorts in 30C heat g

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Caultron wrote:And in six months the northerners will be calling us weather wimps.
Nah, we Northerners get the fact that you're dealing with a different set of issues than we get. If anything we regard you lot as fortunate in that you live in a dry climate -- we get the humidity, and if you want miserable try either hot or cold coupled with a high dew-point.
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Re: Man sent home from work for wearing shorts in 30C heat g

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crfriend wrote:Nah, we Northerners get the fact that you're dealing with a different set of issues than we get. If anything we regard you lot as fortunate in that you live in a dry climate -- we get the humidity, and if you want miserable try either hot or cold coupled with a high dew-point.
Actually, sometime in the next few weeks, our "monsoon" season will start and bring in extra humidity.

For most of the year, our air comes in from the Pacific Ocean and then passes up and over the mountains in California. The air cools with altitude and most of the moisture falls out before it gets to us. That's why it's so dry here.

But in mid- to late-summer, the winds shift and we get our air from the south. Then there are no mountains to pass over, and so the air comes to us a lot more humid. There's also more turbulence, resulting in wind, dust, and lightning storms. The moisture in the air does act as a partial barrier to the sun, though, and temperatures drop to the low 100's. (That means 100-105, BTW, and not 100-500.) That's the monsoon season.

I know it's crazy that the dry air comes from the Pacific and the humid air from Mexico but oh well, it's a crazy state.
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Re: Man sent home from work for wearing shorts in 30C heat g

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Caultron wrote:I know it's crazy that the dry air comes from the Pacific and the humid air from Mexico but oh well, it's a crazy state.
It's not crazy -- it's geography!

One thing that's incredible to watch is a time-lapse of the weather-satellite imagery from GOES-East and seeing how the mountains in Mexico "breathe" according to the time of day. They soak up moisture in the night-time and release it as clouds during the day, albeit with mostly insufficient moisture to cause precipitation. I'm not sure if those animations are routinely available from NOAA, but I've had processes running for years snap-shotting every east coast image (which looks west enough to catch most of the US and Mexico) and which I have other processes stitch those images into movies once a day and rotating by weeks. Want to see Hurricane Katrina hit New Orleans? I've got that. "Superstorm Sandy" into New York City? That, too. What a magical planet we live on.
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