Climate Change Activists Should Never Google These 5.47 subjects

2 months ago
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A wacky look at the most ironic and controversial subjects in the climate change debate, flipping the narrative on its head. Can global warming save lives by preventing deaths from cold? Do your opinions on climate depend more on what your friends think than on what you've read on the subject? Does knowledge of history give us more answers, or does it just confuse the issue more? Is Al Gore a climate visionary or completely delusional?

Five intriguing subjects (well, 6 really) might tempt the viewers into further study if reverse psychology is at work. Surely they must wonder what really happened to the walruses in Attenborough's documentary or why Tony Heller would be such a taboo subject among climate change activists. Most intriguing in the list is the work of Bjorn Lomborg, an influential speaker who claims global warming have negative consequences, yet is opposed to public policies aimed at preventing it. Priorities! Meanwhile we see Justin Trudeau giving massive corporate handouts to promote his climate agenda while Canada's most disadvantaged communities are without clean drinking water.

The video underpins the state of climate policy debate. Or, actually, lack of debate. We see hints of censorship at work, the most insane example being Australian Green Party senator Nick McKim screaming that his opponent is a sociopath who should shut his mouth. Then there's Joe Biden, advocating for "truth over facts". We'll leave the viewers to decide which of the two they prefer.

Acknowledgements: The video of Australian Green Party senator Nick McKim is from The Daily Mail, which in turn got it from Sky News Australia, which had various editorials on McKim's performance, including a video by Daisy Cousens. ClimateClips.com featured the Greenland video (with Jorgen Peder Steffensen, curator of the Niels Bohr Institute Department of Geophysics) and was rebroadcast on Ivor Cummins' YouTube channel. Thanks again to Touropia, for spectacular scenery, with the Ten Best Places to Visit in Iceland, and Northern Lights shots from Ten Best Places to Visit in Norway. Paradox road sign came from picpedia.org and climate memes were from quotefancy.com's collection of the top 30 Bjorn Lomborg quotations. "Sea Level Check--Bill Gates Mansion" was produced by Climate Discussion Nexus in 2023, using data from the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. Al Gore's "Hiroshima class nuclear bombs" rant was from the World Economic Forum (WEF) meeting in 2023. Charts and stats provided by Bjorn Lomborg's books and X/Twitter posts. Also information from The National Post, Financial Post, Canadian Broadcasting Corporation and the History Channel. Music clip is sped-up version of Pink Floyd Project Cover Band. Photos from nathab.com and Alan Hart through fineartamerica.com. Narrated by Blerfnerg Ghobloudian, #UncleBlerf #WhatTheWef. You can support the channel through www.buymeacoffee.com/UncleBlerf

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