No, I still think you are miscomprehending the statements. Let me post them again:
1.
On July 9, 2021, California’s Death Valley reached 130 degrees Fahrenheit, according to an automated measuring system there, representing one of the highest temperatures ever recorded on the planet. The world record, also recorded at Death Valley, was 134 degrees in July 1913.
2.
US climate data pinpoints Monday as hottest recorded day on Earth.
To remove confusion from the government-approved statement we must clarify a few facts for the record. If temperatures recorded on Monday from data collection points in the US indicated an average temperature measurement that was the highest average temperature ever recorded by the collection agency in the US on that calendar date, then we can accept the possibility that conclusion was likely reached from the data they have recorded in the last few years.
However, the major source of data for these organizations comes from a limited number of collection points that are mostly situated in the continental US. The conclusions drawn from such relatively few sources is hardly irrefutable, especially if claimed to represent climate conditions worldwide.
Also, if there has ever been a hotter day on earth than Monday then Monday could not have been the hottest recorded day on earth.