There have always been doomsday predictions, so I guess there always will be. I don't listen to predictions, because they are so often wrong, And maybe also because I'm an atheist, so they don't impress me. Doomsday predictions are the worst. They are "sitting around the campfire telling scary stories", to me. When I hear a doomsday story, all I think of is "please, not again".
Some people actually think the world will end from climate change in 12 years, maybe 11 years now. Others think that without drastic actions in 12 years, or maybe 11 years now, runaway global warming will be impossible to stop. Runaway global warming from the current low level of CO2 in the air, relative to higher CO2 levels throughout most of Earth's history? Up to 17 times higher CO2 levels than today. So where was the runaway warming in the past, and why are we still here?
I happen to know that the world will end on June, 6, 2030, at 4:37pm, and 14 seconds. And I have the scientific proof of that to four decimal places. Four decimal places is real science. Three decimal places, or fewer, is baloney, malarkey, and banana earl (Brooklyn, USA). ... Sorry, I lost control, because this subject is so hard for me to take seriously.
Getting serious again: In the past decade, climate change alarmists have used photos of natural disasters to spin the idea that climate change has aggravated them. Photos, and videos, are extremely useful tools in storytelling to the masses. But climate alarmists spin weather events (short-term, and local) as climate events (long-term, and global).
They also misrepresent regular events, as being unprecedented events.
Last month, climate "perfesser", and the most famous high school dropout in the world, Greta "thundering" Thunberg, retweeted a tweet about recent flooding in India. It was an attempt to promote the need for climate action. Ms. Greta, and others, claimed a regular summer rainfall downpour in India was something unprecedented. It was being used it to promote their climate doomsday narrative.
India is in the middle of its summer rainfall season. Also known as the monsoon season, and these rains are important for India's 1.3 billion people. The excess rainfall made the Indian people who depend on rain for agriculture very happy. Farmers have already begun sowing, and expect a historic food crop output in 2021, topping already record-high levels.
To be specific: The flooding in the state of Bihar is unrelated to long-term global climate change. Flooding there has been a regular event, and not something unprecedented. Rainfall data since 1871 reveal that the annual precipitation levels have always been erratic, with no significant trend.
Source: IMD/imetsociety, accessed at
http://imetsociety.org/wp-content/pdf/vayumandal/2014/2014_12.pdf
No significant changes
in rainfall in Bihur,
according to scientists
at the Indian Meteorological
Department.
Climate alarmists lie many times.
I try to expose some of those lies here.
Climate alarmists should be
held accountable for their lies.