Okay, now you can take data from every station and filter it to get rid of everything shorter than 30 years. That's called a low-pass filter. And you can look at that and each station and see how does it correlate with the globe. It turns out very poorly because most climate change, by that definition, is regional. So for instance, in this area, let's say the states like Louisiana, Alabama, Gulf states, they had a period of cooling when the rest of the country was warming. Nobody paid much attention to it because that's normal. Different areas do different things. You have reasons why it's local. I mean, if you're near a coast, near a body of water, the circulations in the ocean are bringing heat to the surface and away from the surface all the time, on time scales ranging from a few years for El NiƱo ENSO to 1,000 years. And so this has nothing to do with the global average.