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ArticlesMarch 19, 2024
The Guardian asks: “How Has climate change affected your relationships?”
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The Guardian asked its readers how the ‘climate crisis’ has affected their relationships. It is unclear what “crisis” the outlet is referring to or if they meant the changing of the season from winter to spring. But I have yet to hear of any “extreme” weather event in the U.K. that has been newsworthy this year.
As the climate crisis increases the frequency and severity of extreme weather events like floods, heatwaves and storms in Europe, it is also having an emotional impact on people.
They are literally calling “storms, floods, and heatwaves” all “extreme weather events.” This is so comical considering this is just weather that humanity has experienced since the beginning of time, but I digress.
A survey by the British Association for Counselling and Psychotherapy (BACP) found almost three-quarters (73%) of 16- to 24-year-olds reported that the climate crisis was having a negative effect on their mental health, compared with 61% of all people in the UK.
It is not a “climate crisis” that is affecting the mental health of young people, it is the constant fear-mongering that if the government does not tax us into oblivion then we will all die in ten years. It is the fear from the constant reminders that your very existence is a carbon-guzzling form of eco-terrorism that the media and education system instills in people that causes this distress. Not “extreme weather events.”
We would like to hear how climate change has affected your relationships – with romantic partners, family or friends.
If someone cannot handle a “heatwave” in an air-conditioned apartment in the U.K., then that relationship is doomed to fail and the “extreme weather” is not the problem. Especially because weather is just as common as breathing but these people like to dance around definitions to justify their asinine claims.
Perhaps the stress of fleeing extreme weather events like wildfires or floods has impacted your budget and put strains on your relationships. Or perhaps different ideas about carbon footprints and child-rearing have caused tension in your relationships.
Firstly, there is no mass migration throughout the U.K. where people are “fleeing extreme weather” on such a scale that it impacts “budget.” If anything, it’s the constant push to “green energy” that is causing the cost of living to skyrocket.
Secondly, the outlet claims that if it is not “fleeing extreme weather,” which it is not, then perhaps a disagreement on “carbon footprints and child-rearing” may have caused the relationship to experience “tension.” Which is the only plausible explanation for any of this. When you date someone who constantly reminds you that your very breath is contributing to the downfall of mother nature and then the last thing the world needs is more children, that does not tend to be successful in building a long-term relationship.
This is why woke people are miserable. That is what happens when someone thinks their very existence is a cancer to the planet, when it is in fact, not. And for the record, humans are part of this planet, too.
Anyway, if you or your relationships have suffered because of the “climate crisis” you can fill out their form here.50 Years of FAILED Climate Predictions in 15 Minutes (or Less!) | Louder With Crowderwww.youtube.com
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