1 00:00:00,280 --> 00:00:05,720 Speaker 1: Climate is a super important problem. There's enough the innovation 2 00:00:05,920 --> 00:00:12,720 Speaker 1: here to avoid super bad outcomes. We won't achieve our 3 00:00:12,760 --> 00:00:16,320 Speaker 1: best goal, the one point five or even the two degrees. 4 00:00:17,040 --> 00:00:21,279 Speaker 1: And as we go about trying to minimize that, we 5 00:00:21,400 --> 00:00:25,279 Speaker 1: have to frame it in terms of overall human wealthare 6 00:00:25,440 --> 00:00:29,400 Speaker 1: not just everything should be solely for climate. 7 00:00:30,360 --> 00:00:34,800 Speaker 2: That was Bill Gates, and Bill Gates was saying that, 8 00:00:34,880 --> 00:00:36,760 Speaker 2: you know, I'm a believer that the end of the 9 00:00:36,800 --> 00:00:38,879 Speaker 2: world is coming in climate change is real and all that. 10 00:00:38,960 --> 00:00:41,559 Speaker 2: Jazz is also a guy who wants to control it. 11 00:00:41,680 --> 00:00:46,360 Speaker 2: Seemingly wants to control vaccinations and how people eat, in 12 00:00:46,400 --> 00:00:49,600 Speaker 2: the amount of farmland he's buying up. It's very concerning stuff. 13 00:00:49,880 --> 00:00:52,800 Speaker 2: Tony Katz Tony Kats Today, good to be with you 14 00:00:52,880 --> 00:00:56,760 Speaker 2: find everything over at Tony kats dot com. What he's 15 00:00:56,920 --> 00:01:02,200 Speaker 2: making the argument of is that maybe there's a better 16 00:01:02,280 --> 00:01:06,000 Speaker 2: way for us to go about things. Maybe it doesn't 17 00:01:06,040 --> 00:01:12,200 Speaker 2: always have to be all environmentalist nonsense all the time. 18 00:01:12,400 --> 00:01:15,959 Speaker 2: Maybe we need to be focused on starvation or other issues. 19 00:01:16,080 --> 00:01:19,039 Speaker 2: Maybe we need to focus on humans and not this 20 00:01:19,080 --> 00:01:23,440 Speaker 2: whole green conversation, which you and I would call green 21 00:01:23,480 --> 00:01:29,160 Speaker 2: cabald because it is well, holy heck, did this make 22 00:01:29,640 --> 00:01:36,320 Speaker 2: the political left angry, angry, vitriolic, hateful. It has been 23 00:01:36,480 --> 00:01:41,840 Speaker 2: incredible the response that this has gotten because what Bill 24 00:01:41,920 --> 00:01:47,600 Speaker 2: Gates did was he broke the sacred trust. What Bill 25 00:01:47,880 --> 00:01:52,560 Speaker 2: Gates did was say, hey, you know, everything that we're 26 00:01:52,600 --> 00:02:02,520 Speaker 2: screaming about out here, maybe maybe not, maybe not. Maybe 27 00:02:03,080 --> 00:02:06,480 Speaker 2: America is not buying in, maybe the globe is not 28 00:02:06,840 --> 00:02:11,200 Speaker 2: buying in, and maybe everything we have said to these 29 00:02:11,240 --> 00:02:18,079 Speaker 2: people is complete and total garbage, starting with the the 30 00:02:18,240 --> 00:02:21,480 Speaker 2: Michaelman hockey stick and working our way up if you 31 00:02:21,480 --> 00:02:24,320 Speaker 2: don't know what the hockey stick is. That was an 32 00:02:24,320 --> 00:02:27,240 Speaker 2: inconvenient truth, was that where it first came out, that 33 00:02:27,320 --> 00:02:30,440 Speaker 2: Al Gore nonsense film where it said, oh look here, 34 00:02:30,600 --> 00:02:33,440 Speaker 2: here's where the graph is the x y right, the 35 00:02:33,520 --> 00:02:36,160 Speaker 2: x y access and it's coming along and temperature hitting 36 00:02:36,240 --> 00:02:38,120 Speaker 2: up a boom. Look how high it goes up. And 37 00:02:38,160 --> 00:02:40,160 Speaker 2: you think of it as a hockey stick. Right, it's 38 00:02:40,240 --> 00:02:43,160 Speaker 2: Latin and it goes straight up. Look at that. And 39 00:02:43,200 --> 00:02:46,200 Speaker 2: people have questioned this, and Michael Man sues anybody who 40 00:02:46,280 --> 00:02:50,400 Speaker 2: disagrees with them. It's quite incredible. What Bill Gates has 41 00:02:50,400 --> 00:02:56,160 Speaker 2: said is that the approach to the environmentalism, the approach 42 00:02:56,919 --> 00:02:59,560 Speaker 2: to the you're all going to die, so you now 43 00:02:59,560 --> 00:03:02,359 Speaker 2: have to say and do what we say. The approach 44 00:03:02,440 --> 00:03:07,399 Speaker 2: to let's subjugate the citizenry in name that nation. Maybe 45 00:03:07,400 --> 00:03:09,840 Speaker 2: it doesn't work. Now, he didn't say it like that. 46 00:03:09,919 --> 00:03:13,320 Speaker 2: He said, maybe we should be focused on hunger or 47 00:03:13,360 --> 00:03:17,840 Speaker 2: some other issues. What the environmentalist, who is a cultist, 48 00:03:17,919 --> 00:03:23,960 Speaker 2: took it as as an absolute traitorous moment. They looked 49 00:03:24,000 --> 00:03:28,320 Speaker 2: at it as pure heresy. The only thing that matters 50 00:03:28,360 --> 00:03:32,280 Speaker 2: to the environmentalist is you no longer running your air conditioner. 51 00:03:33,240 --> 00:03:38,960 Speaker 2: Now you notice I say environmentalist, not conservationists. Conservationists are 52 00:03:39,040 --> 00:03:43,440 Speaker 2: interesting folk because they're not focused on the idea that 53 00:03:43,800 --> 00:03:47,000 Speaker 2: we're all going to die. They're focused on what's actually 54 00:03:47,040 --> 00:03:49,839 Speaker 2: happening and how could we do things better, which none 55 00:03:49,920 --> 00:03:53,000 Speaker 2: of us would ever disagree with. Hey, how could we 56 00:03:53,040 --> 00:03:55,720 Speaker 2: do something better? Hey? How do we If there is 57 00:03:55,840 --> 00:03:58,480 Speaker 2: a species that is in trouble, how do you help 58 00:03:58,560 --> 00:04:01,280 Speaker 2: bring it back? Is there reason that it's in trouble? 59 00:04:01,640 --> 00:04:05,280 Speaker 2: Are there are there ways and methodologies to go about 60 00:04:05,440 --> 00:04:11,400 Speaker 2: changing human behavior that will actually provide value as opposed 61 00:04:11,400 --> 00:04:15,360 Speaker 2: to punishment, that would then allow for the thriving of 62 00:04:15,400 --> 00:04:19,919 Speaker 2: an ecosystem or anything else. What madness has anybody thinking 63 00:04:19,920 --> 00:04:22,600 Speaker 2: that people in the political right are opposed to an ecosystem. 64 00:04:23,000 --> 00:04:26,320 Speaker 2: What we're opposed to is being told that we, because 65 00:04:26,360 --> 00:04:30,159 Speaker 2: of our existence as human beings, are parasites on Mother 66 00:04:30,320 --> 00:04:34,240 Speaker 2: Gaya and we have to be held responsible. So therefore, 67 00:04:34,279 --> 00:04:39,880 Speaker 2: no cars, you weirdo freaks. We like cars. Cars are awesome, 68 00:04:40,160 --> 00:04:43,039 Speaker 2: and the bigger the better. We like trucks. We like 69 00:04:43,080 --> 00:04:47,000 Speaker 2: the sound that a muscle car makes. We like going fast. 70 00:04:47,040 --> 00:04:49,479 Speaker 2: It's who we are, it's what we do. Other nations 71 00:04:49,480 --> 00:04:51,520 Speaker 2: don't like it. Well, it's too bad for them. I 72 00:04:51,600 --> 00:04:54,080 Speaker 2: never asked what they like because I do not care. 73 00:04:55,040 --> 00:04:57,039 Speaker 2: And if I'm like, oh, that looks interesting, I'll go 74 00:04:57,080 --> 00:05:00,080 Speaker 2: pay them a visit and I'll take whatever little well 75 00:05:00,360 --> 00:05:03,640 Speaker 2: smart card is they're driving, or I'll take some kind 76 00:05:03,640 --> 00:05:06,359 Speaker 2: of bicycle, whatever it is they do in their country. 77 00:05:06,360 --> 00:05:10,280 Speaker 2: But in our country cars are good because really, I mean, 78 00:05:10,279 --> 00:05:12,080 Speaker 2: never mind with you like a big car, small car, 79 00:05:12,240 --> 00:05:16,840 Speaker 2: muscle car, whatever, mobility is good. Not having centralized planning 80 00:05:17,560 --> 00:05:20,600 Speaker 2: in where you get to travel to is good. Freedom 81 00:05:21,040 --> 00:05:24,640 Speaker 2: via that mobility, the automobile is very very good stuff, 82 00:05:25,200 --> 00:05:28,920 Speaker 2: healthy stuff, worthy stuff, This kind of stuff that allows 83 00:05:28,920 --> 00:05:32,520 Speaker 2: you to build a society and here comes Bill Gates, 84 00:05:32,560 --> 00:05:34,560 Speaker 2: one of the richest people in the world, to say, hey, 85 00:05:34,560 --> 00:05:38,920 Speaker 2: maybe we shouldn't focus all on this. That drove them 86 00:05:39,240 --> 00:05:43,800 Speaker 2: nuts nuts. This was Michael Mann. I mean a lot 87 00:05:43,839 --> 00:05:47,479 Speaker 2: of people started talking about this, Michael Mann on MSNBC. Well, 88 00:05:47,520 --> 00:05:50,280 Speaker 2: where else would you find him? Yeah, it's very disappointing. 89 00:05:50,440 --> 00:05:53,799 Speaker 3: And frankly, Bill Gates doesn't have any expertise in climate science, 90 00:05:54,760 --> 00:05:57,680 Speaker 3: and he's failing to listen to what the experts actually 91 00:05:57,760 --> 00:06:00,479 Speaker 3: have to say. And we're seeing it play out in 92 00:06:00,520 --> 00:06:04,120 Speaker 3: real time right here. You know, disastrous climate change is 93 00:06:04,160 --> 00:06:06,240 Speaker 3: not far off in the future. It's not one point 94 00:06:06,240 --> 00:06:09,719 Speaker 3: five celsius, it's not too celsius as he suggests. 95 00:06:09,960 --> 00:06:10,520 Speaker 2: It's here. 96 00:06:10,880 --> 00:06:13,039 Speaker 3: And the question is how bad are we willing to 97 00:06:13,120 --> 00:06:13,680 Speaker 3: let it get? 98 00:06:14,760 --> 00:06:18,520 Speaker 2: So Bill Gates was great and wonderful. We were happy 99 00:06:18,560 --> 00:06:20,440 Speaker 2: to take his money. And now, well, you know he's 100 00:06:20,440 --> 00:06:25,760 Speaker 2: not a scientist. You didn't say that before. Oh he 101 00:06:25,800 --> 00:06:27,760 Speaker 2: disagrees with us. Well, you know, he's not a scientist. 102 00:06:28,000 --> 00:06:30,040 Speaker 2: And as we all know, we're dying right now. We're 103 00:06:30,120 --> 00:06:32,400 Speaker 2: dying right now, The planet is dying right now. How 104 00:06:32,400 --> 00:06:34,000 Speaker 2: bad are we gonna let it get? That's why you 105 00:06:34,080 --> 00:06:37,080 Speaker 2: have to give me more of your money so I 106 00:06:37,240 --> 00:06:40,039 Speaker 2: can keep telling people that they need to give me 107 00:06:40,120 --> 00:06:43,440 Speaker 2: more of their money. We're not calling it a grift. 108 00:06:44,560 --> 00:06:47,880 Speaker 2: I mean, I'm talking about environmentalism in general. I wouldn't 109 00:06:47,920 --> 00:06:51,640 Speaker 2: say specifically of the sue happy Michael Mann. No, no, no, 110 00:06:51,640 --> 00:06:54,240 Speaker 2: no no. I am absolutely not saying that. I don't 111 00:06:54,240 --> 00:06:56,479 Speaker 2: know anything about his economics. I have no idea how 112 00:06:56,720 --> 00:06:59,039 Speaker 2: any of that works or how he gets paid. You 113 00:06:59,040 --> 00:07:01,480 Speaker 2: think that covered me with the law I was. I was 114 00:07:01,520 --> 00:07:03,360 Speaker 2: really trying to just get covered with the lawyers there, 115 00:07:03,640 --> 00:07:06,279 Speaker 2: because you know, that's all. That's where I'm gonna leave it. 116 00:07:06,520 --> 00:07:09,840 Speaker 2: That's where I'm leaving it for sure. But now that 117 00:07:09,920 --> 00:07:11,280 Speaker 2: Bill Gates is like, I don't know if this is 118 00:07:11,320 --> 00:07:15,880 Speaker 2: the best approach here he is. Here are the environmentalists 119 00:07:15,960 --> 00:07:19,040 Speaker 2: to say, well, he's not really a scientist. Next thing 120 00:07:19,080 --> 00:07:21,120 Speaker 2: I know, they're gonna bring Bill Nye up to explain 121 00:07:21,160 --> 00:07:24,520 Speaker 2: why Bill Gates isn't a scientist. Bill Nye is a 122 00:07:24,560 --> 00:07:27,200 Speaker 2: failed comic who found the character and went with it. 123 00:07:28,360 --> 00:07:31,960 Speaker 2: Not a scientist the way we would think of people 124 00:07:32,120 --> 00:07:38,160 Speaker 2: who might have an expertise. CNN. By the way, again, 125 00:07:38,400 --> 00:07:45,400 Speaker 2: Harry Enton just crushing the environmentalists and and their acolytes 126 00:07:45,840 --> 00:07:49,240 Speaker 2: and and their supporters. Uh and uh and and they're 127 00:07:49,440 --> 00:07:52,960 Speaker 2: they're I don't, I don't see again the lawyers like 128 00:07:53,120 --> 00:07:57,360 Speaker 2: Michael Mann. Listen to Harry Enton, the numbers guy on CNN. 129 00:07:57,240 --> 00:08:01,480 Speaker 4: Data analyst Harry. And this is interesting is because this 130 00:08:01,560 --> 00:08:04,840 Speaker 4: does represent a shift in Bill Gates in his public 131 00:08:04,920 --> 00:08:07,760 Speaker 4: speaking on climate change. When you hear a shift on 132 00:08:07,800 --> 00:08:10,920 Speaker 4: climate change, Harriet made you think about maybe how people 133 00:08:10,960 --> 00:08:11,840 Speaker 4: are looking at it differently. 134 00:08:11,920 --> 00:08:14,720 Speaker 5: Yeah, I think a lot of people will agree with 135 00:08:14,800 --> 00:08:17,320 Speaker 5: Bill Gates that maybe this wouldn't be the end of humanity. 136 00:08:17,360 --> 00:08:19,160 Speaker 5: And I think you know, we've been talking about climate 137 00:08:19,240 --> 00:08:23,160 Speaker 5: change now for decades upon decades upon decades, and the 138 00:08:23,240 --> 00:08:26,160 Speaker 5: worry in terms of climate change, simply put, hasn't shifted. 139 00:08:26,200 --> 00:08:28,160 Speaker 5: It has not reached the majority of Americans. What are 140 00:08:28,160 --> 00:08:29,960 Speaker 5: we talking about greatly worried about climate change? 141 00:08:30,000 --> 00:08:30,960 Speaker 2: You go all the way back to. 142 00:08:31,000 --> 00:08:33,000 Speaker 5: Nineteen hundred and eighty nine, it was thirty five percent, 143 00:08:33,040 --> 00:08:36,680 Speaker 5: two forty percent, twenty twenty forty six percent, and in 144 00:08:36,720 --> 00:08:39,280 Speaker 5: twenty twenty five, look at that, it's forty percent, the 145 00:08:39,320 --> 00:08:42,160 Speaker 5: same number as we had twenty five years ago. Back 146 00:08:42,160 --> 00:08:45,320 Speaker 5: in twenty two thousand and then only just five points 147 00:08:45,400 --> 00:08:47,520 Speaker 5: higher than we had back in nineteen hundred and eighty nine. 148 00:08:48,080 --> 00:08:50,040 Speaker 2: Can I just tell you, for people who are gen 149 00:08:50,240 --> 00:08:53,079 Speaker 2: X at older to hear Harry Anton say nineteen hundred 150 00:08:53,080 --> 00:08:55,320 Speaker 2: and eighty nine, that is that. 151 00:08:55,360 --> 00:09:01,160 Speaker 6: Is hurtful, hurtful, hurtful stuff all the way back in 152 00:09:01,240 --> 00:09:06,839 Speaker 6: nineteen hundred and eighty nine. Ah, Okay, Harry's going to 153 00:09:06,880 --> 00:09:07,560 Speaker 6: get some hate mail. 154 00:09:08,400 --> 00:09:12,559 Speaker 2: Forty. You still don't have a majority of Americans concerned 155 00:09:12,559 --> 00:09:17,360 Speaker 2: about this stuff because they've seen that all the claims 156 00:09:17,400 --> 00:09:20,640 Speaker 2: of we are going to have all the ice melt, 157 00:09:20,800 --> 00:09:22,360 Speaker 2: We're going to be flooded in New York's gonna be 158 00:09:22,440 --> 00:09:27,320 Speaker 2: underwater didn't come true. We have seen the lies, heard 159 00:09:27,360 --> 00:09:31,560 Speaker 2: the lies, heard the premonition, seen the premonitions, that the 160 00:09:31,640 --> 00:09:35,280 Speaker 2: doomsday clocks. It didn't happen. And we said, okay, chicken, 161 00:09:35,320 --> 00:09:38,440 Speaker 2: little you screened, the sky is falling. We're getting back 162 00:09:38,440 --> 00:09:42,760 Speaker 2: to our lives in our air conditioned departments, and man, 163 00:09:42,840 --> 00:09:46,920 Speaker 2: that drives them nuts. They've lost this messaging war. 164 00:09:47,559 --> 00:09:50,200 Speaker 5: Really, we've just seen consistency on this issue. The bottom 165 00:09:50,200 --> 00:09:53,200 Speaker 5: line is that the climate change message that folks who 166 00:09:53,240 --> 00:09:55,280 Speaker 5: of course believe that climate change is real and is 167 00:09:55,320 --> 00:09:58,080 Speaker 5: quite worth. Simply put, has not really worked with the 168 00:09:58,120 --> 00:09:58,880 Speaker 5: American people. 169 00:09:59,040 --> 00:10:02,120 Speaker 2: No, it hasn't, and they're not worried about it either, 170 00:10:02,240 --> 00:10:06,800 Speaker 2: which brings up Harry Endon's second point, As the data shows, why. 171 00:10:06,640 --> 00:10:09,040 Speaker 5: Don't we just talk about top issue facing the US 172 00:10:09,080 --> 00:10:11,319 Speaker 5: climate change? Well, I got some numbers for you on 173 00:10:11,360 --> 00:10:13,000 Speaker 5: the screen right here. You don't have to be a 174 00:10:13,040 --> 00:10:16,120 Speaker 5: mathematical genius to know that these numbers are not particularly high. 175 00:10:16,240 --> 00:10:18,480 Speaker 5: Top issue facing the United States climate change It was 176 00:10:18,520 --> 00:10:20,960 Speaker 5: three percent in twenty twenty one, two percent in average 177 00:10:21,000 --> 00:10:23,280 Speaker 5: polls in twenty twenty three, and this year the average 178 00:10:23,320 --> 00:10:28,200 Speaker 5: poles two one two. It is very very low on 179 00:10:28,240 --> 00:10:30,120 Speaker 5: the list of priorities. I was trying to count it 180 00:10:30,160 --> 00:10:33,160 Speaker 5: down the gallop pole, and basically it was so low down, 181 00:10:33,160 --> 00:10:35,000 Speaker 5: you know, I was counting all the different issues, almost 182 00:10:35,080 --> 00:10:39,000 Speaker 5: lost trackers like fifteenth or twentieth. It was just very, 183 00:10:39,080 --> 00:10:42,240 Speaker 5: very low down. So the bottom line is, not only 184 00:10:42,559 --> 00:10:45,079 Speaker 5: are we seeing that the number has not really moved 185 00:10:45,080 --> 00:10:47,200 Speaker 5: over the last thirty six years, but in terms of 186 00:10:47,280 --> 00:10:50,480 Speaker 5: being the top issue, it's simply put, has not broken 187 00:10:50,559 --> 00:10:53,000 Speaker 5: through two percent. There are just a ton of things 188 00:10:53,000 --> 00:10:54,400 Speaker 5: that rank way higher in the list. 189 00:10:54,400 --> 00:10:59,040 Speaker 2: Of importance, even agreed, agreed, Yet they still try to 190 00:10:59,040 --> 00:11:01,679 Speaker 2: scare your kids to death, your grandkids to death with it, 191 00:11:02,160 --> 00:11:05,400 Speaker 2: your nieces and nephews. They try and scare him to 192 00:11:05,440 --> 00:11:10,480 Speaker 2: death with this climate nonsense. We shouldn't burn tires in 193 00:11:10,480 --> 00:11:13,000 Speaker 2: the middle of the road, guys. We should be taking 194 00:11:13,000 --> 00:11:16,520 Speaker 2: a look at conservation efforts and what actually brings value 195 00:11:16,960 --> 00:11:21,679 Speaker 2: based on the data. Live in fear, live without air conditioning, 196 00:11:21,760 --> 00:11:26,680 Speaker 2: live without the combustion engine. No, now, we shouldn't do that. 197 00:11:26,679 --> 00:11:28,640 Speaker 2: We shouldn't act like that. We shouldn't think like that. 198 00:11:29,520 --> 00:11:33,760 Speaker 2: And people who push those things, people who push those 199 00:11:33,800 --> 00:11:38,320 Speaker 2: things are a serious issue. They're a serious danger. They 200 00:11:38,400 --> 00:11:44,640 Speaker 2: aren't happy that their cult hasn't come to fruition. This 201 00:11:45,000 --> 00:11:49,760 Speaker 2: was MSNBC. This is their climate reporter. His name is 202 00:11:49,800 --> 00:11:52,920 Speaker 2: Moses Small. Great voice on Moses Small. And of course 203 00:11:53,160 --> 00:11:57,319 Speaker 2: you had this massive hurricane hitting Jamaica and the pictures 204 00:11:57,360 --> 00:12:01,000 Speaker 2: of the devastation and the some of the shots from 205 00:12:01,080 --> 00:12:04,400 Speaker 2: inside the eye wall. It's beyond it's beyond belief. How 206 00:12:04,640 --> 00:12:07,559 Speaker 2: you know, in your imagination of what a hurricane must 207 00:12:07,640 --> 00:12:11,160 Speaker 2: look like with the eye and everything else, the constructions 208 00:12:11,200 --> 00:12:13,520 Speaker 2: beyond it is exactly what you would envision if you 209 00:12:13,520 --> 00:12:15,480 Speaker 2: were drawing a pictures what you would draw if you 210 00:12:15,480 --> 00:12:17,760 Speaker 2: were thinking of a photo, this is what you would imagine. 211 00:12:18,679 --> 00:12:21,600 Speaker 2: Check out what Moses Smallhouse to say here on MSNBC. 212 00:12:22,040 --> 00:12:25,120 Speaker 7: Risk definitely not over for the Caribbean, and this is 213 00:12:25,160 --> 00:12:28,000 Speaker 7: just the beginning of a very long recovery process for Jamaica. 214 00:12:28,000 --> 00:12:29,160 Speaker 7: I want to take a look at some of the 215 00:12:29,160 --> 00:12:32,040 Speaker 7: devastation we've seen. I've been talking to climent scientists over 216 00:12:32,080 --> 00:12:33,679 Speaker 7: the past week who think there should really be a 217 00:12:33,720 --> 00:12:37,120 Speaker 7: category six for storms that bring this kind of devastation. 218 00:12:37,200 --> 00:12:40,040 Speaker 7: You can see all these buildings knocked completely to the ground. 219 00:12:40,040 --> 00:12:42,680 Speaker 7: You see all that debris, and at the same time 220 00:12:42,720 --> 00:12:44,760 Speaker 7: you have big parts of the island that are completely 221 00:12:44,800 --> 00:12:47,439 Speaker 7: without power and other parts that are isolated where it's 222 00:12:47,440 --> 00:12:49,520 Speaker 7: going to be harder to get aid to them because 223 00:12:49,520 --> 00:12:52,600 Speaker 7: without power communications more difficult. And all those down trees 224 00:12:52,679 --> 00:12:54,840 Speaker 7: wed to lots of impassable roads. 225 00:12:55,080 --> 00:12:59,959 Speaker 2: Yes, down trees would lead to an impassable road. We agree. Categories. 226 00:13:00,440 --> 00:13:03,160 Speaker 2: Did you catch that we go up to a category 227 00:13:03,200 --> 00:13:05,080 Speaker 2: five and this storm had one hundred and eighty five 228 00:13:05,240 --> 00:13:09,760 Speaker 2: mile an hour winds. I mean, it's devastating stuff, but 229 00:13:09,960 --> 00:13:13,079 Speaker 2: really the climate scientists think there should be a category 230 00:13:13,240 --> 00:13:19,120 Speaker 2: six for storms. Oh, because climate change is real and 231 00:13:19,160 --> 00:13:22,800 Speaker 2: the storms are now so much increasing that we needed 232 00:13:22,840 --> 00:13:25,960 Speaker 2: to invent a whole new category to deal with what 233 00:13:26,040 --> 00:13:29,440 Speaker 2: it is climate change has done, thus giving them who 234 00:13:29,440 --> 00:13:33,359 Speaker 2: are in favor of this ideological clap trap more ammunition 235 00:13:33,760 --> 00:13:36,360 Speaker 2: to be able to fire at us, to get us 236 00:13:36,400 --> 00:13:40,680 Speaker 2: to do their bidding and move along their ideological desires. 237 00:13:41,800 --> 00:13:45,000 Speaker 2: That's the only reason for it. There is no other 238 00:13:45,200 --> 00:13:52,160 Speaker 2: reason for it. Change the terminology, change the classifications, so 239 00:13:52,200 --> 00:13:55,319 Speaker 2: you could say, look how bad things have gotten. Bill 240 00:13:55,400 --> 00:14:01,200 Speaker 2: Gates has changed, possibly, but the cult. That's my take 241 00:14:01,240 --> 00:14:04,760 Speaker 2: on environmentalists. They haven't changed at all. They're still members 242 00:14:04,760 --> 00:14:07,520 Speaker 2: of the cult and they still want you if you're 243 00:14:07,520 --> 00:14:10,480 Speaker 2: not willing to believe, they just want you to submit 244 00:14:10,840 --> 00:14:14,360 Speaker 2: and do what they tell you to do. I'm Tony Katz. 245 00:14:14,440 --> 00:14:15,720 Speaker 2: This is Tony Katz today.