The COP-26 climate conference will soon open in Glasgow, Scotland. So it’s not surprising that extreme weather fear-mongering is ramping up – with political and media treatment of the recent floods in Germany and Belgium being a good example. However, those floods are hardly unprecedented. In fact, Mother Nature vents her wrath on us all too often through floods, droughts, hurricanes, tornadoes and blizzards. Thankfully, warning systems, homes and escape routes are better than in the past. We should take some comfort in that the next time alarmists try to frighten us with tales of “manmade climate disasters.” Thank you for posting my article, quoting from it, and forwarding it to your friends and colleagues. If you prefer a Word version, you can find it HERE. -----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Paul Driessen August 9, 2021
Europe’s ‘unprecedented manmade floods’ Separating myth from reality about extreme weather events today and over the centuries Deadly floods in Germany and Belgium have put climate change back in the news in time for the COP-26 climate gabfest in Glasgow. Not surprisingly, government officials again blamed fossil fuels, greenhouse gases and manmade climate change for the calamities, to deflect attention from their official incompetence – as they did with SuperStorm Sandy and recurrent wildfires. They’re blaming the very fossil fuels that power Europe’s economy; build, heat and electrify homes; and power the boats, ambulances and other equipment that were used to rescue people, recover bodies, and nurse survivors back to health. Those officials could and should have prepared their communities for floods like those that hit Germany every few decades. But failed to do so. They were warned days in advance that the rains and floods were coming – and were told almost exactly where and when the rains and floods would hit. But did nothing. They were supposed to warn people – and get them out of harm’s way. But they failed to warn their citizens that they, their homes and their children would be swept away by raging waters, if they didn’t evacuate immediately. 1