Indeed. In Europe it's been a lot colder than usual until about four weeks ago. This year so far we had about two or three "summer" weeks. All the rest has been dreadful weather.
And now, in our "unable to understand the difference between 'local' and global'" category, we have two winners.
What do we have for these winners, Johnny?
Then why is this post about climate change based on a local event. You can't even see the irony of your post.
You might want to keep this in mind: Just because it's happening here doesn't mean it's happening everywhere.
Texas is hot right now because:
1. It's summer.
2. It can get very hot in Texas during the summer.
If it was cold in Texas right now then you might be able to claim it was because of climate change - because that would be weird. But heat in Texas during the summer is to be expected. You might want to google that.
BTW, it's been raining like crazy in NC. There isn't a drought here.
People generally treat climate change like they do politics. They are in one camp or the other. I doubt anyone could convince you that climate change is real, since you already have your mind made up.
I grew up in Texas and have lived here my whole life. This is the hottest that nights have been that I can remember, which means that running in the early morning is not the reprieve that it usually is:
I think this is like this in Cbus. It isn't super-crazy hot during the day in the middle of summer (87-90, rather than 95-96) but the overnights never really get below 70. And summer lasts from May to mid-October. We get 1 month of fall, and then it's 30s in November all the way to about March. We get a semi-good spring but it's usually cool, then hot after Memorial Day.