At the end of the news conference I asked Trump whether he believed in climate change. He walked away from the stage and didn’t answer the question.
— Jim Acosta (@Acosta) August 26, 2019
Exclusive: More than a century of temperature data examined by The Post reveals the fastest-warming places in the United States.
— The Washington Post (@washingtonpost) August 13, 2019
Extreme climate change has arrived in America. https://t.co/4VkGfP1eEL
Oh look, huge swaths of the legendary German forest are suddenly dying from excessive heat and lack of rain–they're weakened so much that they easily collapse in the face of storms or bugs. https://t.co/dwioh0V8vS
— Alec MacGillis (@AlecMacGillis) August 17, 2019
"Climate change should be a definitive issue for Black voters," writes @Bakari_Sellers https://t.co/SeDHbgGUFa
— CNN Opinion (@CNNOpinion) August 15, 2019
Dead lobsters, toxic bacteria in bodies of water, rapidly warming winters: The Washington Post’s Chris Mooney explains that extreme climate change is already affecting parts of the US https://t.co/pWF79BYHKT
— MSNBC (@MSNBC) August 14, 2019
The effects of the climate crisis are not evenly distributed—this gives some blank ammunition to the denialist side—and the most seriously affected places can come as something of a surprise, at least to anyone who doesn't live there. https://t.co/mJ2TPwzen8
— Charles P. Pierce (@CharlesPPierce) August 14, 2019
The dominant greenhouse gases released into the Earth's atmosphere reached record levels in 2018, and their global warming power is now 43% stronger than in 1990, according to a new report by the American Meteorological Society https://t.co/jbxxJEg94X
— CNN (@CNN) August 15, 2019
Salmon dying in Alaska Rivers because of warm water. @CBSNews reports: https://t.co/1Xx6DRzAoA
— Jeff Berardelli (@WeatherProf) August 13, 2019
Back in 1991, during the first Bush presidency, there was true bipartisan consensus that that there was a climate crisis and that something needs to be done.
— The New Republic (@newrepublic) August 25, 2019
Then, the Koch brothers got involved. https://t.co/RJriUKyIfW
Back in 1991, during the first Bush presidency, there was true bipartisan consensus that that there was a climate crisis and that something needs to be done.
— The New Republic (@newrepublic) August 25, 2019
Then, the Koch brothers got involved. https://t.co/RJriUKyIfW
Why are American right wing voters being trained to not believe in climate change? Because protecting the planet could get in the way of plowing through the melting ice, and indigenous people, for oil & gas profits. https://t.co/2faasKdlIR pic.twitter.com/MExyArpQAg
— Joy Reid (@JoyAnnReid) August 25, 2019
Take a road trip with @MitchKSmith across 1,234 miles, four states, two time zones and 34 counties. In town after town, higher waters were leaving damage, interrupting routines and stirring fears that the worst may be yet to come. https://t.co/FYqMdqgvzv
— John Schwartz (@jswatz) August 24, 2019
Water levels on the Great Lakes have risen to heights not seen in decades. Climate scientists say more extremes could lie ahead. https://t.co/2zvk1ziZ23
— NYT Climate (@nytclimate) August 24, 2019