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Climate activists throw soup at Mona Lisa painting in Paris
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Vivek Ramaswamy gets interrupted by climate protestors during a campaign event in Iowa
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Environmental extremists vandalize Gucci's Christmas tree in Milan
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Members of the organization "Last Generation" attack Christmas trees with paint in Germany
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Hillary Clinton: “We’re beginning to count the deaths that are related to Climate”
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Climate experts believe the next ice age is on its way -1978
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1983. NBC News warns of Catastrophe climate change by the 1990’s
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Climate experts believe the next ice age is on its way -1978

2 years ago
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Climate experts believe the next ice age is on its way -1978

Climate change refers to long-term shifts in temperatures and weather patterns.

The climate change debate’ describes the combination of factors that led to recognition and acceptance of climate change, including that it was anthropogenic, beginning with climate change science research carried out in the 1950s and early 1960s. The next stages of research into this area came later in the 1980s: the observed upturn in the global temperature data set; the increased knowledge of past climate change; significant advances in global climate modelling; the emergence of global environmental awareness; increased media interest in the confrontational nature of the debate; and finally politicians and economists taking the climate change threat seriously since the late 1990s.

The debate about climate change has been raging for over 30 years. Is the climate really changing? If it is, are the changes caused by human actions? If they are, can anything be done about it? And, if so, should anything be done? On each of these questions, opinions clash. On one side are those who would say yes to all four questions. Among them are almost all climate scientists, most of the world’s governments and a large part of the educated public. On the other side are the current United States Government, most oil, gas and coal corporations, and most conservative politicians and their supporters, especially in the United States.
It cannot be denied that the debate has caused confusion in the mind of the public—at least in the United States—and has helped prevent effective measures to mitigate global warming. In this essay, however, I argue that the impact of the debate pales in comparison to that of two other factors: developmentalism, the glorification of economic growth; and consumerism, the modern energy-intensive way of life. While the causes of the failure to mitigate global warming can be found in every country, the case of China is particularly glaring.

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