The New York Times on Sunday published a special section titled “How Close Are the Planet’s Climate Tipping Points?” The article is heavy on fancy infographics and short on actual references or facts about how many of the Earth’s natural features may be “in danger of collapse.” We will break it down and debunk the Times’ misinformation about coral reefs, the Greenland ice sheet, climate change causing loss of the Amazon Rainforest, and more.
On Episode 123 of The Climate Realism Show, we welcome back two special guests – CFACT’s Chris Martz and Steve Milloy of JunkScience.com – two of the best on X/Twitter at pushing back at climate alarmist nonsense. We will also cover some of the Crazy Climate News of the week, and a new report by the American Energy Institute report showing how the Climate Justice Project is corrupting the courts.
Join us LIVE at 1 p.m. ET with The Heartland Institute’s Jim Lakely, Linnea Lueken, Chris Martz, and Steve Milloy. Join our always lively chat and we’ll answer your questions on the air.
This video along with hundreds of others is available on our ClimateTV page.
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Did the New York Times explain why all of these purported tipping points didn’t occur during the Holocene Climate Optimum?
Why would they, the NYT are HCO Climate Deniers
The only tipping point I see is the inexorable collapse of freedom and integrity since the Globalists took over in most of the countries and international institutions.
Why don’t we just say, “Yes. We’re past the ‘tipping point’. It’s too late to do anything. So let’s scrap ‘Net Zero’ and go on living.” 😎
Change that to a tippling point. Let’s all get drunk and to heck with the weather,
UHI.. also urban “densification”…
eg single houses with a yard and trees, being replaced with multi-story apartments.
The phrase “tipping point” implies irreversible.
Reality appears to be that little in the natural world is like that.
Ice sheet masses vary greatly with seasons, cultivated lands rewild, just consider the Amazon, once cultivated now regarded as pristine rain forest, great barrier reef subjected to multiple bleachings which means it’s capable of repairing itself, even wild fires promote new growth .