Offline
NBC’s Ron Allen Thinks Climate Deal Is ‘Designed to Stop’ Storms Like Hurricane Matthew
President Barack Obama spoke to reporters on Wednesday afternoon in the White House Rose Garden commenting on the required number of nations having ratified the Paris climate change agreement and, almost on cue, NBC’s Ron Allen connected global warming to Hurricane Matthew set to bear down on the Bahamas, the Carolinas, Georgia, and Florida.
Speaking on MSNBC Live to host Kate Snow, Allen first gushed about how the President “believes so deeply in protecting the environment” that the deal marks “one of the most significant aspects of his legacy” before bringing in Hurricane Matthew as a intriguing “practical matter.”In making the following comments, Allen failed to realize that there hasn’t been a major Atlantic Hurricane to crack the top ten in intensity in nine years and if it comes ashore, Matthew would be the first major hurricane to make landfall in the U.S. since Hurricane Wilma in 2005:
"It’s very interesting that this is happening a day when there’s a hurricane bearing down on the United States and in the Caribbean because these severe storms, beach erosions, intense weather episodes that we’ve had is perhaps the most practical sample of what the president was talking about as the threat that the planet faces."
Offline
You know what's funny about that posting Common . . . The only places that story can be found is on right wing conspiracy theory ultra conservative websites that still can't find anything to talk about other than degrading Obama and trying to discredit the scientifically accepted fact of global warming.
It's time for them to move on.
Offline
I'm sorry, where in post #1 does it actually say what the title of the thread says, That NBC, or Ron Allen, thinks that the climate deal was designed to stop hurricanes?
Last edited by Goose (10/06/2016 9:49 am)
Offline
It might be a good idea to separate science from politics, and in fact, since when did science become a political issue? As rongone said, "it's time for them to move on." Climate change is real, so let's put on our big boy pants and deal with it.
Offline
Just Fred wrote:
It might be a good idea to separate science from politics, and in fact, since when did science become a political issue? As rongone said, "it's time for them to move on." Climate change is real, so let's put on our big boy pants and deal with it.
Galileo?
And funny, the conservative science deniers were wrong then, just as they are now.
Ron is correct. The science is well established. Let's move forward.
Offline
The rest of the world must think we are pretty dumb here in the US.
This election seems to verify it !