This is, of course, no contradiction. The rallying cry of the denialists — “It’s really cold outside, so global warming must be a crock!” — can be taken seriously only by those with a toddler’s limited conception of time and space. They forget that it’s winter, and apparentlythey don’t quite grasp that even when it’s cold in one part of the world, it can be hot in another.
Indeed, while the United States is having an unusually frigid month, Australia has been sweltering through record-breaking heat. Play had to be interrupted at the Australian Open tennis tournament when temperatures in Melbourne reached 109 degrees; one player said her plastic water bottle began to melt. The extreme heat came as officials reported that 2013 was the hottest year in Australia since record-keeping began more than a century ago.
http://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/eugene-robinson-global-warmings-impact-cant-be-ignored/2014/01/27/b5917594-8792-11e3-a5bd-844629433ba3_story.html
This kind of twisty double talk is the problem not the solution.
While the article fabricates out of whole cloth the following straw man...
"The rallying cry of the denialists..."
It ignores the 100x citable media tripe which attributes the latest extreme weather phenomena to AGW.
Further, the underlying theory you espoused earlier (that higher temps cause more snow, more extreme weather) is actually completely false.
Higher latent heat energy will do this. "Higher air temperatures" is not a plausible measure from which these supposed effects can be attributed. Neither is there a direct or meaningful relation between latent heat energy and air temperatures.
The problem is, you are fighting back with facts. That will never fly with hockey stick players...