The article challenges prevalent climate change narratives, labeling them as myths perpetuated by the media. It critiques claims about worsening droughts, suggesting that recent years are wetter and droughts are part of natural weather patterns. It argues that wildfires are not primarily driven by climate change but by land management practices and increased suburban development. The author presents commentary from Linnea Lueken, who highlights that past records show fewer droughts and that fire management significantly affects wildfire intensity, rather than climate change alone.
Climate change will make Earth a living hell! claims popular astrophysicist Neil DeGrasse Tyson. I don't believe him.
Every individual drought that occurs in the United States, or anywhere in the world, is not evidence of catastrophic climate change. It's weather.
One degree of change does not dry out all of the brush... The real driver of these issues is land management.
Today's wildfires affect more people not because of climate change, but because there's more suburban sprawl.
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