60% of U.S. adults said that climate change was “very” or “extremely” important for the federal government to address in a newly released study from Monmouth University. https://t.co/9V63X1OjKm
— FiveThirtyEight (@FiveThirtyEight) October 11, 2021
Hurricane Ida is showing the untenability of offshore oil and gas amid the climate crisis. #ad
— VICE News (@VICENews) October 4, 2021
Google is cracking down on the ability of climate change deniers to make money off its platforms and to spread climate misinformation through advertisements. https://t.co/2Ffet54Bqz
— CNN (@CNN) October 8, 2021
A new Pentagon plan calls for incorporating the realities of a hotter Earth at every level in the U.S. military. That includes making worsening climate extremes a mandatory part of strategic planning and training troops how to treat heat injury. https://t.co/QQuQWvVknE
— The Associated Press (@AP) October 7, 2021
Do you think the U.S. is doing enough to address climate change, doing too much, or do you think more needs to be done to address climate change?
— PollingReport.com (@pollreport) October 5, 2021
REP
Enough 30%
Too much 42%
More to be done 23%
DEM
Enough 4%
Too much 2%
More to be done 91%
(Quinnipiac U. Poll, 10/1-4/21)
In general, do you support or oppose the U.S. government doing more to reduce the type of activities that cause climate change and sea level rise?
— PollingReport.com (@pollreport) October 4, 2021
Support 66%
Oppose 27%
(Monmouth U. Poll, 9/9-13/21)
In general, do you support or oppose the U.S. government doing more to reduce the type of activities that cause climate change and sea level rise?
— PollingReport.com (@pollreport) October 4, 2021
REP
Support 30%
Oppose 59%
IND
Support 67%
Oppose 27%
DEM
Support 92%
Oppose 4%
(Monmouth U. Poll, 9/9-13/21)
“Climate change is back at the top of the agenda.” https://t.co/vXpsDNhbca
— Bloomberg Green (@climate) October 3, 2021
Warming Arctic could spread nuclear waste, unknown viruses: report https://t.co/15zVusQUYZ pic.twitter.com/yKTe61HeeH
— The Hill (@thehill) October 1, 2021
It’s nearly October and the temperature hit 100 degrees in North Dakota https://t.co/UAsbgPXiyq
— The Washington Post (@washingtonpost) September 30, 2021
New research shows that in more than 70% of U.S. counties, low-income, non-white neighborhoods experience more extreme surface heat due to a lack of critical natural infrastructure. (Sponsored by Siemens) pic.twitter.com/EgK92jYdpD
— NBC News (@NBCNews) September 28, 2021