In Brief: How to Debunk the Climate Apocalypse
Thoughts on a fun rebuttal to the alarmism perpetuated by leftists who want power.
Rael Jean Isaac, policy writer and author of Climate Change: Roosters of the Apocalypse, has written a piece at American Spectator on how to address the climate hysterics. And it’s important for our very way of life, she says:
With the wave of executive orders and legislation coming from the Biden administration, and the cultural antics of his woke supporters, Biden’s war on fossil fuels has received insufficient attention. Yet energy is the lifeblood of our economy, and making traditional energy sources vastly more expensive is the single most destructive aspect of Biden’s policies. If this country does not successfully mobilize against these policies, the vast majority will experience a dramatic drop in their standard of living.
Supposedly the assault on fossil fuels — via regulation; cancellation of pipelines; concocting a huge, wholly imaginary “social cost of carbon”; taxes; and solar and wind mandates — is necessary to save the planet from imminent catastrophe produced by man-made global warming.
But genuine climate scientists, as we know from those who dare to speak up, are amazed and horrified.
The fact that this absurd narrative has gained so much traction with elites is hugely problematic, even if much of the population remains not very alarmed. To counter this dogma is as much a matter of presentation as science, she says.
The new movement could be titled “Lights On.” Participants should have fun. There was never a claim of “settled science” more ripe for ridicule. How about contests for college students rewarding those who can document the largest number of disproven prophecies of global warming doom (for example, the end of snow, no more Arctic glaciers, U.S. coasts under water, all with specified dates now long past)? …
The movement can have fun, but it must also be serious: members will only back politicians prepared to fight to maintain our access to cheap, reliable energy. To the extent solar and wind can someday compete on an even playing field, without subsidies and mandates, they are welcome to the energy mix.
For the current apocalypse to come to an end, the notion that man-made global warming poses an existential threat must come to be seen as ridiculous. Otherwise the policies of shutting down our traditional energy supplies to stave off this absurd end of days will themselves become an existential threat.
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- climate change