Yes, more moisture in our atmosphere can cause extreme weather events like snow storms in places that don't typically get snow. Global warming doesn't effect the tilt of the earth, nor does it stop seasonal cooling due to that tilt.
It just means that the global climate is changing. Hotter summers, more hurricanes that have the potential for extreme devastation, extreme winter storms, rising oceans, melting glaciers, an Arctic free of ice in the summertime, Greenland and Antarctic ice sheets melting at unprecedented rates, oceans becoming more acidic, potential for large scale war over water rights and resources.
All of this is being driven by an increase in CO2 in our atmosphere from the burning of fossil fuels.
It just means that the global climate is changing. Hotter summers, more hurricanes that have the potential for extreme devastation, extreme winter storms, rising oceans, melting glaciers, an Arctic free of ice in the summertime, Greenland and Antarctic ice sheets melting at unprecedented rates, oceans becoming more acidic, potential for large scale war over water rights and resources.
All of this is being driven by an increase in CO2 in our atmosphere from the burning of fossil fuels.
Insanity - Doing the same thing over and over again, expecting a different result