Human-driven climate change has 'slowed the Earth's rotation' and could affect how we measure time, study suggests
The melting of ice in Greenland and Antarctica is said to have slowed the rotation of the Earth because it has changed where the planet's mass is concentrated.
Tell me how that affects rotation again?
How does a ball 'spin faster' with ice at the ends?
How does a ball 'spin slower' if it is not frozen at the ends?
In any case, the Earth has had periods of NO ice at the poles, when humans were not even there, making nasty car fumes. Explain that.
Furthermore, the literature suggest that CO2 has nothing to do with it - that it follows the temperature rather than driving it. This may explain why ((they)) are trying to find a different reason for the ice melting, but the spinning of the Earth is new one.
P.S. Just to prove that the CO2 nonsense is well and truly over:
https://cp.copernicus.org/articles/18/1729/2022/
You're talking about people who don't comprehend that there's one total volume of water on Earth and that's it. At any one time, some of it is frozen and some of it is waiting to fall back down from the sky, but it doesn't 'increase' because of globollocks warming.
These people do not even think ice and water are the same thing. If ice melts it is 'gone'.
Maybe we can get Aquaman to call all the shrimp in the ocean to one side of the world. That should slow the spin like a washing machine with a big load of sheets in it. That's what I would do.