It’s summertime, and it is hot outside. You may have noticed. If you’ve turned on the “news,” you’ve probably heard that this staggering heatwave is a record-breaking phenomenon due to global warming, and we’re all going to die from heat unless we switch to a system of communism that puts the UN in charge of America. Don’t believe the hype. It gets hot outside every summer and this year is not much different. The climate alarmists do this every year when it gets hot outside, and we’re all looking for the A/C because gullible people are more likely to fall for their BS.
There’s no evidence that the world is experiencing more hurricanes, wildfires, heat waves, or other weather-related events that suck. Yet every time one of these things occurs, the morons in the media instantly connect it to climate change. They’re like robots.
“It’s flooding! This has never happened before!”
Axios is leading the charge this summer with its claims that we’re experiencing climate change because it’s hot outside. A story the outlet ran this week claimed, “Climate change greatly increases the likelihood of heat waves, as well as their intensity and duration.”
Okay. Any proof to back that up?
Axios then provided a map that disproved their assertion. The map showed the duration of heatwaves in states across the US between 2001 and 2021 and compared them to heatwaves that occurred between 1901 and 1960.
The map shows that heat waves are slightly longer today on the West Coast. From California to New Mexico, heat waves are on average about 5.5 days longer than they were in the first half of the last century. (A “heat wave” is defined as consecutive days with temperatures above 95 degrees F.) In the Pacific Northwest, heat waves today are about two days longer than they used to be.
In the other 40 states, heat waves are shorter. In some cases, they are much shorter than they were before 1960. From Virginia down to Florida, and from Tennessee down to Louisiana, heat waves are now an average of 9.7 days shorter than they were a hundred years ago. Heat waves in the upper Midwest are averaging about five days shorter than they used to experience. From West Virginia north to Maine, heat waves are 1.3 days shorter on average.
So, even the “evidence” that Axios uses to prove its assertion that heat waves are getting longer because of climate change is false. The worst heat waves in America’s recorded history all happened in the 1930s, which was long before humans could have had any meaningful impact on the climate.
If you want to know whether “climate science” is even a real science, check out the results of its predictions. This should be easy. How many of the scientific predictions made by the climate alarmists have come true since the 1980s? We’ll wait.
The answer is zero. None of their doomsday predictions have ever come through. That’s why they changed the name from “global warming” to “climate change” in the early 2000s. When all the data showed that the earth is getting cooler over time, no one believed their BS about global warming any longer. If you change the name to “climate change,” then you declare this fake phenomenon is to blame no matter what the weather does. If it snows, it’s proof of climate change. If it’s sunny, it’s proof of climate change. See how the scam works?