Why This Old 1984 Photo of the Statue of Liberty Provides Some Great...
Grand Jury Indicts Former Olympian for Defacing Reflecting Pool
Separatist Group Admits to Killing US Pilot
Do Vague State Education Standards Open the Door to Classroom Activism?
The Left's Fascist Fallacy
Left Building Momentum to Pack Supreme Court
This Republican Has a Wild Idea for Fixing Housing Prices: Let the Market...
Trump Gives Hilarious Guest Appearance on Storytime With the Second Lady
British Police Don't Want You to Watch This Footage of Their Mistake
'Vandals' Tear Down Buffalo, NY Flag Celebrating Somali Independence
America's Homelessness System Must Pursue Self-Sufficiency, Not Simply Housing
Federal Court Block Trump Administration DEI Firings Just Days After Related SCOTUS Case
Today's Aviation Day Celebration Might Be the Most Patriotic Event of the Century
Illegal Alien SNAP Fraud Plot Resulted in 'Substantial Hardship' for Victims
Ex-Army Contractor Convicted in $1.1M MRE Theft Scheme at Ft. Bliss
Tipsheet

Something Wasn't Right With CNN's Graphic About High Temperatures

Something Wasn't Right With CNN's Graphic About High Temperatures
AP Photo/Ron Harris

CNN posted a graphic alongside a story about the summer's high temperature, claiming it has been the hottest average in over 120,000 years.

The dubious claim from the citied scientists aside, the graphic CNN posted turned even more heads because of what was depicted. It shows heavy smoke with three women, who are all wearing sweaters and jackets, with one of the women wearing a mask.

Advertisement

The comical side by side of people wearing sweaters and masks outside during a supposed unprecedented heat wave did not go unnoticed:

"We have just lived through the hottest three-week-period on record – and almost certainly in more than a hundred thousand years," CNN reported, going on to say:

Advertisement

Related:

MEDIA BIAS

The data used to track these records goes back to 1940, but many scientists – including those at Copernicus – say it’s almost certain that these temperatures are the warmest the planet has seen in 120,000 years, given what we know from millennia of climate data extracted from tree rings, coral reefs and deep sea sediment cores.

'These are the hottest temperatures in human history,' said Samantha Burgess, deputy director at Copernicus.

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement