Increasing atmospheric, sea and ground temperatures causes hot air to rise (taking water with it) and cold air to sink (dumping that water) at a greater speed, thus accompanied by winds of higher velocity than normal.
So we see more extreme weather as a result.
Anthropogenic atmospheric warming exacerbates solar induced atmospheric warming, so increasing the likelihood of extreme weather conditions in apparently anomalous places and times.
Temperature inversion induced winds, increasing in velocity, cause increased water evaporation, creating a greater potential for extreme weather anomalies, such as unseasonal snow dumps where snow rarely falls, sudden rainstorms and floods, hurricanes/tornadoes/cyclones of greater force and extended surface area, increased land-ice melt at the poles, drought and extremely hot/dry summers.
Climatic conditions flipping from too hot to too cold,.... that's starting to become the norm, but only as a result of an ongoing temperature change.
On balance, indications are that global warming, not cooling is creating this situation, and it's based primarily on solar activity but amplified by human industry.