They're Scattering: Anti-ICE Leftists Consider Fleeing Country After Signal Chat Got Expos...
Here's What Schumer and Company Are Demanding to Avoid Another Government Shutdown
How the Economy Created This Disturbing New Dating Trend
Was a Washington Man Just Stabbed Because of His Christian Faith?
Tim Walz Just Got Called Out by the Holocaust Museum
Why ICE and Minnesota Dominated the Conversation Last Week — and What the...
Trump Isn’t the Problem, Europe Is
Venezuela’s Opposition Leader Says Democracy in Venezuela Could Be Trump's Berlin Wall Mom...
Top Chinese General Accused of Leaking Nuclear Secrets to the US
Scott Bessent Blasts Canadian PM Mark Carney for Cutting a Deal With China
It Looks Like Budweiser Learned Their Lesson After This New Ad Dropped
The Antifa Crossdresser Who Urged Followers to Take Up Arms Against ICE Is...
Virginia Democrats Have a New Plan on How to Lock Up Gun Owners
Another Wave of Venezuelan Gang Members Just Got Busted In an ATM Hacking...
This Texas University Got Caught Spending Millions on Foreign Labor
OPINION

More Climate Fiction

The opinions expressed by columnists are their own and do not necessarily represent the views of Townhall.com.
AP Photo/Noah Berger

It's been a good summer for climate activists who are pushing the false narrative of "climate change."

We had the Canadian wildfires with smoke drifting into other parts of North America. Then there were hotter than usual temperatures in many parts of the country (it's summertime and I predict temperatures will drop this fall, winter and spring, as usual), followed by a devastating fire in Maui, and then Hurricane Idalia.

Advertisement

Never mind that the fires in Canada might have been prevented if environmentalists had not opposed clearing underbrush and removing old trees. The same goes for Maui, along with better management of the fire when it first broke out.

President Joe Biden added to this fictional summer storyline by embellishing an often-told story about a fire at his Delaware home. We've heard several versions, the latest being firefighters "ran into flames" to rescue his wife and the house "almost collapsed." Previous stories put his 1967 Corvette and cat at risk after a lightning strike.

Much of the media are hauling out one of their favorite words - "unprecedented" - to describe the force and destructive power of Idalia, which is not true. Hurricanes happen during the summer and early fall and some of the worst occurred long before the Industrial Age. Let's not forget the "experts" who swore in the 1970s that the Earth was headed for a new ice age in which we would all freeze to death. Trust the science we were told.

The deconstruction of this latest chapter of fiction begins with this: According to the Hawaii Wildfire Management Organization, "98 percent of all Hawaiian fires are started by people, of which 75 percent are due to carelessness." Bring back Smokey Bear who said: "Remember, only YOU can present forest fires."

Advertisement

Related:

CLIMATE CHANGE

Returning to those Canadian wildfires - common across that country during summer - the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel reported that half were caused by lightning strikes while the other half were caused in different ways, from discarding cigarette butts to sparks from passing trains. While the newspaper includes "climate change" as a contributing factor, better forest management would have helped reduce the risk.

Concerning the predictable hysteria from some TV reporters standing in ankle or hip-deep water, the climate Chicken Littles are wrong again. According to the webpage Advancing Earth and Space Sciences: "Global hurricane counts and Accumulated Cyclone Energy (ACE) have significantly decreased since 1990 likely due to a trend toward LaNina. (The) decreasing trend in global hurricanes and ACE is primarily driven by (the) downturn in western North Pacific activity."

CNN went full crisis mode when its top climate "expert" Dr. Bill Weir said: "The cost of (using fossil fuels) is becoming bigger with every storm. Science has been warning about this for a very long time, in many ways it has been predicted..."

Not all "science" and not all scientists, especially those who are in the field of environment and not receiving grants from the federal government, which could skew the credibility of their findings. The organization Climate Intelligence has published a letter signed by 1,609 scientists who say there is no climate emergency. Their letter is loaded with scientific facts and not statements by politicians and reporters who repeat familiar lines.

Advertisement

In addition to their citation of scientific facts, they write: "To believe the outcome of a climate model is to believe what the model makers have put in. This is precisely the problem with today's climate discussion to which climate models are central. Climate science has degenerated into a discussion based on beliefs, not on sound self-critical science. Should we not free ourselves from the naive belief in immature climate models?"

It's a good question and one purveyors of the "climate change" storyline should contemplate.


Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement