Which is essentially what you are doing as well on this topic. I don’t think you and I disagree that much on the central point, but let’s not pretend you’re presenting recent peer reviewed research that makes your opinion a case-closed argument either. This is both just conjecture on the part from both of us because neither one of us can prove the other is definitively correct because of the bare bones nature of actual reliable tornadic occurence data. You’ve posted a few of those papers, which I took a look at.You say this, but you're using the relatively low data quality to argue for your preferred pattern even though you have even less evidence for that. You've also jumped from the possibility of events in certain places being less detectable to 'only sig events will be recorded outside the plains'. My only suggestion was that making comparisons using sig events could be more robust, though it could be more biased against western areas (less to hit). What data we do have are consistent with the plains being the normal locus of activity.
I stated my opinion, you obviously have yours, but neither of us are going to be able to produce points that completely satisfy the bar set by the other. You can point to a paper from 1960, I can point to statements from Rich Thompson and some research from Dr. Gensini at NIU.
Again, I do agree something is janky with the plains over the past decade. However,
we can’t say for certain it’s global warming or just a cyclical pattern. I am hesitant to start saying climate scale changes could already be impacting down at the mesoscale Level.
Edit: this is an earnest question, but has this always been your only user profile on here? I’ve seen that paper you linked above posted a few times. I had this same exact conversation with someone during or after the 2024 Oklahoma high risk bu$t and it may have been you actually
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