In today’s world people begin statements with their own facts. Facts are supposed to be provable, in nature, but often are not. For example, people will start a sentence with: ‘Humans are the main cause of climate change.’
Of course, that statement is not true; rather it is a way to pave a road toward propaganda. There is no evidence that man is the root cause of climate change. Period.
If you think I’m not telling the truth, please stop reading here. Otherwise, I’ve got some bad news for you.
There’s a little publication that cleverly masquerades as a newspaper, but isn’t. It is called USA Today. It’s been around since the 1970’s and has been the darling of the Left. Writing for that rag is someone named Doyle Rice.
I don’t know Rice and am unsure if Rice is a man or woman, Black or White. I know that Rice made a giant mistake when on April 9, 2021, a small article under the USA Today byline appeared in the Delmarvanow.com fish wrapping, also disguised as a newspaper.
Its headline is CO2 levels highest in over 3M years, and caught my eye. For you New Jerseyites, 3M referred to therein is 3,000,000 years. Rice let the cat out of the bag and told the truth.
Humans first appeared on Earth 2,500,000 years ago, nearly 500,000 years after Rice’s story about CO2 levels. This is important because most of our revered scientists and researchers in the environmental arena normally begin their pontificating with the old ‘Humans are the main cause of climate change,' drivel.
Not being a scientist myself, I find it difficult to imagine how humans could be responsible for climate change since they were not even alive when the enviro-nuts claim the planet became tainted.
I’ll spare you the painful foolishness concerning man burning things for warmth and cooking, higher sea levels, and fossil fuel emissions, because they have no bearing on anything concerning humans being the main cause of climate change.
This brief article meanders its way though half-baked science to attempt to demonize man and his perceived blight on our environment. Unfortunately, Rice committed the cardinal sin of exposing what many “flat Earthers” have contended for decades.
Agency chock full o' rocket surgeons |
NOAA’s Global Monitoring Laboratory recently released a statement about how we, as a civilization, need to mitigate those fossil fuel emissions as our survival is dependent upon their reduction.
Evidently the folks at NOAA, as well as all environmental egoists believe humans have the ability to stem the tide of our planet’s perceived woes. And, they think we have the facility to reverse all damage to our planetary home; all we need to do so is mo’ money.
I find it odd that most of the Earth’s damage was done well before we arrived, and seems likely to continue – with or without the intervention of humans. How this tragic situation occurred would be my first question to any and all the Green subject matter experts.
In any case, here’s a special “Thanks!” to Doyle Rice for what may be his final mistake at USA Today. And, Happy Earth Day!