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Climate Myths
I guess United Nations Secretary-General Antonio Guterres didn’t think his hyping global warming risks brought him enough attention, so now he says, “The era of global boiling has arrived!” Global boiling? Give me...
I guess United Nations Secretary-General Antonio Guterres didn’t think his hyping global warming risks brought him enough attention, so now he says, “The era of global boiling has arrived!” Global boiling? Give me a break. Yes, the climate is warming. We can deal with that. What annoys me is politicians, activists and media pushing hysterical myths.
Myth 1: The Arctic will soon be icefree. It “could already be ice-free by the summer of 2030!” shrieks a DW report. “’Doomsday Glacier’ is melting faster than scientists thought,” adds the BBC. “Earth’s biggest cities are at risk!” Nonsense. “It’s not happening at nearly the catastrophic pace that they claim,” says Heartland Institute fellow Linnea Lueken in my new video.
But the media show dramatic images of melting and missing ice. “No ice! There’s all these walruses laying out on a stony beach. ... It’s because it’s the summertime! In the winter, it all comes right back!” As far as ice disappearing in winter, too, “Compared to the amount of ice that’s in the Arctic,” says Lueken, it “is like a grain of sand ... so minuscule compared to the amount of ice that’s there, it doesn’t even show up on a trend chart when you plot it.”
But zealots push hysteria.
In 2009, Al Gore, while collecting a Nobel prize, said there was “a 75% chance that the entire north polar ice cap ... during some of the summer months, could be completely icefree within five to seven years!” In just five to seven years! Oh, no!
Wait ... seven years have passed. In fact, 16 years passed. The ice cap has plenty of ice, even in summer. Yet nobody calls him on it. “They absolutely should be calling him on it,” says Lueken.
Myth 2: Polar bears are going extinct.
Polar bears look cute, so environmental groups use them in ads to sucker you into donating money.
But Polar bear populations have increased!
In the 1960s, 17,000-19,000 was the highest of three scientific estimates of polar bear population. Today, there are about 26,000 polar bears.
Yet the Environmental Defense Fund collected almost a quarter-billion dollars from gullible donors running ads that say: “Your support can help Environmental Defense Fund save the polar bears!” The EDF hasn’t agreed to my interview requests. I understand why. I would call their advertising sleazy. “ A b s o l u t e l y , ” agrees Lueken, “the data is right there. It’s not hard to find out that polar bears are fine.”
OK, maybe polar bears aren’t going extinct, but we might starve! That’s Myth 3.
MSNBC shrieks, “Climate change could create a massive global food shortage.”
President Barack Obama said, “Our changing climate is already making it more difficult to produce food!” “
There is no claim less true.” sighs Lueken. “Food production has skyrocketed.” She’s right, and the data is there for everyone to see.
Agriculture output sets record highs year after year.
In fact, the extra carbon dioxide in greenhouse gasses probably increases food production. “We inject CO2 into greenhouses for a reason,” Lueken points out. “It helps to fertilize plants for faster and better growth.” As the climate has warmed, the world experienced the biggest drop in hunger and malnutrition ever. MAGNOLIA GAZETTE “ERROR OF OPINION MAY BE TOLERATED WHERE REASON IS LEFT FREE TO COMBAT IT” ...THOMAS JEFFERSON, 1801 LUCIUS LAMPTON, M.D., Editor-in-Chief MARK I. LAMPTON, Business Manager ALYCE SIMPSON, Managing Editor NANCY MORRIS, Office Manager, Osyka Reporter, Publisher’s Assistant NANCY LEBLANC, Contributing Editor JAMES HARRIS, Contributing Editor DAVID MORRIS, Contributing Editor CARROLL CASE, Contributing Editor DWALIA SOUTH, M.D., North Miss. Correspondent MELISSA JOHNSON, Social Editor STANLEY HARTNESS, M.D., Natchez Trace Correspondent SCOTT ANDERSON, M.D., Fine Arts Editor TOMMY YOUNG, Sports Photographer CHARLES W. “TREY” EMERSON, M.D., Poetry Editor LUCINDA LAMBTON, European Correspondent BENNETT SIMPSON, Digital Editor FREDERICK W. REIMERS, Outdoors Editor FORD DYE, M.D., Oxford Beat Writer TERRY JACKSON, City Editor JIM MCELWEE, County Editor JUDY CAUSEY LOVE, S.E. Alabama Contributing Editor MAC GORDON, SOWEGA Bureau Chief CRAWFORD D. LAMPTON, Gazette Photographer GARLAND D. LAMPTON, Gazette Autos Editor CATHERINE BROWN, Columnist BECKY NELMS CURRIE, Political Editor/Photographer (Ming Dynasty Cotillion Queen) IN MEMORIAM: Literary Ed. Richard C. Wood (1925-2014) Louis J. Lyell, Contributing Editor (1925-2023) Guy Geller, Contributing Editor (1936-2024) Tommy Covington, My Mixed-Up Files Editor (1943-2024) Published by THE MAGNOLIA GAZETTE PUBLISHING CORPORATION on Thursday of every week at 280 Magnolia Street, Magnolia, Miss, 39652 Phone (601) 783-2441 Fax (601) 783-2091 Email address: magnoliagazette@bellsouth.net nancymgazette@gmail.com Office Hours: Mon., Tues., Wed. 9-5 Established December 7, 1872 by Captain J. D. Burke Periodical postage paid for at Magnolia, MS Post Office Member, Mississippi Press Association Member, National Newspaper Association Subscriptions: $25 in Pike, Amite & Walthall Counties, & Tangipahoa Parish $40 Elsewhere PUBLICATION POLICY All interested individuals are invited to submit letters, articles, opinions, cartoons, photos and other material of general interest to this publication. Submissions must be accompanied by a signature and bear the mailing address and phone number of the author. Letters to the editor will be edited for space and clarity, and the editor reserves the right to reject letters due to length, available space or libelous content. Deadline on all copy will be 12 noon Friday. The views expressed by the articles in this publication are not necessarily those of the editor or publishers. POSTMASTER: Please send changes of address to 280 Magnolia Street, Magnolia, Mississippi 39652 web site: www.magnoliagazette.com CLIMATE MYTHS