Author Topic: Climate Skeptics and Fiction  (Read 254 times)

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Offline rangerrebew

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Climate Skeptics and Fiction
« on: July 15, 2024, 06:54:01 am »
Climate Skeptics and Fiction
22 hours ago 
Why would a climate skeptic be interested in writing fictional stories?

John M. Cape – Author of Poorly Zeroed

Why would a climate skeptic be interested in writing fictional stories?



The simple answer is that they capture our imagination. There’s a real market for dystopian literature. The Alarmists have had great success in this arena.

Nature’s End, a 1986 adventure, featured mankind destroying the atmosphere with poor environmental decisions. Barbara Kingsolver’s Flight Behavior was a poetic piece that dealt with Monarch butterflies incapable of dealing with global warming. Ian MacEwan’s Solar deals with a bureaucrat tackling global warming.

In the cinema, similar accounts blame mankind for environmental disasters of all sorts. The Mad Max series features a world of crazies burning up the final remnants of fossil fuels. Don’t Look Up ridicules skeptics as unreasonable and unscientific people. The Day After Tomorrow depicts catastrophic climate effects leading to oceanic events that lead to the start of the next glaciation.

https://wattsupwiththat.com/2024/07/14/climate-skeptics-and-fiction/
The unity of government which constitutes you one people is also now dear to you. It is justly so, for it is a main pillar in the edifice of your real independence, the support of your tranquility at home, your peace abroad; of your safety; of your prosperity; of that very liberty which you so highly prize. But as it is easy to foresee that, from different causes and from different quarters, much pains will be taken, many artifices employed to weaken in your minds the conviction of this truth.  George Washington - Farewell Address