R.I.P to the great Charlie Kirk!
Quote from: Herman on October 30, 2025, 09:50:26 PMWhen are we getting our money back Conman Carney?The hundreds of dollars spent on unreliable wind and and solar, ev/battery manufacturing, Canada's two carbon taxes, the trillion dollars in lost revenue from blocking resource extraction and that is just one country - Canada.

Quote from: Brent on October 30, 2025, 11:47:03 AMBill Gates once said humanity must change or perish. Now he claims we'll survive just as elites prepare total surveillance.I wish we could sue these billionaire bastards into dining at food banks. Lies from pricks like him and Carney cost us lower living standards.
For decades, Americans have been told that climate change is an imminent apocalypse — the existential threat that justifies every intrusion into our lives, from banning gas stoves to rationing energy to tracking personal "carbon scores."
Microsoft co-founder Bill Gates helped lead that charge. He warned repeatedly that the "climate disaster" would be the greatest crisis humanity would ever face. He invested billions in green technology and demanded the world reach net-zero emissions by 2050 "to avoid catastrophe."
Now, suddenly, he wants everyone to relax: Climate change "will not lead to humanity's demise" after all.
Gates was making less of a scientific statement and more of a strategic pivot. When elites retire a crisis, it's never because the threat is gone — it's because a better one has replaced it. And something else has indeed arrived — something the ruling class finds more useful than fear of the weather.
The same day Gates downshifted the doomsday rhetoric, Amazon announced it would pay warehouse workers $30 an hour — while laying off 30,000 people because artificial intelligence will soon do their jobs.
Climate panic was the warm-up. AI control is the main event.
Quote from: DKG on October 30, 2025, 07:31:10 AMThat is the pattern. When one prediction and/or climate model does not come to pass make sure you have another one that is at least as dire.
Quote from: Herman on October 28, 2025, 11:10:35 PMNot one kid was on antidepressants when I was in high school forty years ago at Kindersley Composite High School.
 Herm?
 Herm?Quote from: Biggie Smiles on October 30, 2025, 01:01:48 AMBut they know their sheep will buy right into the next iteration of this scam.That is the pattern. When one prediction and/or climate model does not come to pass make sure you have another one that is at least as dire.
Quote from: Renegade Quark on October 30, 2025, 12:53:38 AMThey are all starting to back-pedal because none of their models are panning out. He'll, NYC should be underwater by now based on their hyperbole over the last two decades.
It was bullshit at the beginning of this scam and it's bullshit now.
Quote from: Herman on October 28, 2025, 11:10:35 PMNot one kid was on antidepressants when I was in high school forty years ago at Kindersley Composite High School.Shame on adults who are responsible for this happening to children.
QuoteAmong the countries analyzed, Canada ranked third highest in antidepressant consumption per capita by 2019, behind Iceland and Australia.Not one kid was on antidepressants when I was in high school forty years ago at Kindersley Composite High School.
QuoteA major international study led by Canadian researchers warns that climate anxiety—a growing sense of fear and hopelessness over environmental collapse—is becoming an urgent but under-recognized mental health issue, particularly among youth.
The report, published in Nature Mental Health on Tuesday found that antidepressant use rose by 63 per cent across 20 countries between 2008 and 2019. While the surge is often attributed to growing awareness and treatment of mood disorders, the authors say it also masks emerging stressors like climate-driven psychological distress.
"Climate anxiety is real and increasingly affecting mental health, especially among young people who are deeply worried about the future of the planet," said Dr. Paul Kurdyak, senior author and lead CAMH scientist.
The study references a growing volume of international literature linking eco-anxiety—particularly fear over wildfires, rising temperatures, and biodiversity loss—to increases in anxiety, depression, and trauma symptoms.
Among the countries analyzed, Canada ranked third highest in antidepressant consumption per capita by 2019, behind Iceland and Australia.
At the same time, surveys cited in the report show that more than half of young people in Canada and globally say climate change makes them feel sad, anxious, angry, powerless or guilty.
https://truenorthwire.com/2025/10/canada-ranks-3rd-in-antidepressant-use-driven-by-climate-anxiety-study/
Page created in 0.499 seconds with 26 queries.