Shirley wrote: ↑Fri Aug 25, 2023 11:34 am
DCHawk1 wrote: ↑Fri Aug 25, 2023 8:57 am
And mark my words, Vivek is eagerly anticipating a reporter asking him the "right" question.
"You said climate change is a 'hoax.' Can you tell me...."
"Wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait...I did NOT say climate change is a hoax. But let me tell you what IS a hoax...."
Too clever by half.
DC's right, Vivek said the
"the climate change agenda is a hoax".
Vivek knows that the future, the younger demographic, considers climate change a more important problem than the older demographic. (Although, thankfully, not by much. Plus, the rate of it becoming more important across age demographics is increasing at the same rate*.)
Vivek and DC know that decade after decade after decade of republicans denying Global Warming is even a thing, in service to their benefactors, day after day after day of ever-increasing all-time high temperature records along with what can seem like nearly half of N. America on fire at times this summer, makes the argument about the very existence of climate change harder and harder to make, even to their cult.
When the facts are on your side, argue the facts.
The
"facts" are not on their side so like Vivek during the debate, yesterday DC invited us to participate in a discussion about the
process. It's not that the "process" doesn't need a nearly infinite amount of discussion, or that I/we wouldn't likely learn a lot from it, especially since we've never been here before, but by cynically contesting the "facts" for so many decades in service to the extraction industries, et al, seamlessly segueing now to a likely never-ending discussion about "process" while the polar ice caps continue to melt and climate refugees continue to increase globally, might strike a reasonable person as being a little rich.
*4/5/23
Gen Z and Millennials (60%)1 are more likely to be either Alarmed or Concerned about global warming than Gen X (53%), or Baby Boomers and older generations (53%). Gen Z and Millennials (16%) are also less likely to be either Doubtful or Dismissive than Gen X (21%), or Baby Boomers and older generations (25%).