Share
Commentary

This 2008 ABC Special Pushed Insane Climate Predictions - Look How Bad Their Predictions Were

Share

The left is hell-bent on calling anyone who dares question the data on global warming as a “climate denier.”

The implication from the left is that all the data is crystal-clear, and therefore, there is no room for debate on either the bias, the source, the results or implications of the “data.”

But let’s be honest. The left’s game is more emotional than academic. The left’s environmental appeal is more to fear than to fact. From recent occurrences such as Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez’s prediction of universal doom within 12 years to older fallacies such as Life magazine claiming we would all be wearing gas masks by 1980.

The appeal to paranoia explains why there are articles upon articles covering decades of wildly inaccurate climate predictions. Leftists realize the best tactic is emotional, not rational.

You can add to the fear-based tactics this ABC trailer from 2008. The video, a promo for a then-upcoming show, was envisioning the world in 2015 if the world didn’t increase its urgency to address the purported dangers of global warming.

The claims made in the promo were made by talking head “experts” and teenagers’ homemade videos recording their predictions of life in 2015. Listen to the language used in this paranoia-inducing horror flick and see if you agree that fear is the prominent tool of the left’s environmental strategy.



“We’re going to see more floods, more droughts, more wildfires,” one said. The 2015 predictions continued — the seas will rise, the temperatures will become dangerous, crop production will plummet and a billion people will be starving.

Then the video gets really desperate. It shows teenagers make more absurd and, we now know, completely false predictions:

Is the left inducing panic about the end of the world?

“It’s June 8th, 2015. One carton of milk is $12.99,” the first teenager said.

“Gas has reached over $9 a gallon!” the second exclaimed.

The third teen appealed to fear — because that’s all he said: “I’m scared as [bleep] right now.”

The visuals of the promo are also meant to induce fear — about flames, floods and Manhattan half-underwater.

The tactic did not go unnoticed, or unforgotten, by El Rushbo himself. Recently on his show, Rush Limbaugh said about the 11 year-old video, “it illustrates just how wrong and fear-mongering the entire climate change, global warming (now ‘extreme weather’) crowd is.”

Related:
Climate Scam Unraveling: World Bank Really Doesn't Know Where $41 Billion in Funding Goes

As a conservative and a Christian, I believe that we should be responsible with God’s creation.

And that starts with a rational discussion based on unbiased facts. It doesn’t start with trying to scare the ever-lovin’ [bleep] out of everyone.

Truth and Accuracy

Submit a Correction →



We are committed to truth and accuracy in all of our journalism. Read our editorial standards.

Tags:
Share
G.S. Hair is the former executive editor of The Western Journal.
G.S. Hair is the former executive editor of The Western Journal and vice president of digital content of Liftable Media.

After graduating law school from the Cecil C. Humphries School of Law, Mr. Hair spent a decade as an attorney practicing at the trial and appellate level in Arkansas and Tennessee. He represented clients in civil litigation, contractual disputes, criminal defense and domestic matters. He spent a significant amount of time representing indigent clients who could not afford private counsel in civil or criminal matters. A desire for justice and fairness was a driving force in Mr. Hair's philosophy of representation. Inspired by Christ’s role as an advocate on our behalf before God, he often represented clients who had no one else to fight on their behalf.

Mr. Hair has been a consultant for Republican political candidates and has crafted grassroots campaign strategies to help mobilize voters in staunchly Democrat regions of the Eastern United States.

In early 2015, he began writing for Conservative Tribune. After the site was acquired by Liftable Media, he shut down his law practice, moved to Arizona and transitioned into the position of site director. He then transitioned to vice president of content. In 2018, after Liftable Media folded all its brands into The Western Journal, he was named executive editor. His mission is to advance conservative principles and be a positive and truthful voice in the media.

He is married and has four children. He resides in Phoenix, Arizona.
Birthplace
South Carolina
Education
Homeschooled (and proud of it); B.A. Mississippi College; J.D. University Of Memphis
Location
Phoenix, Arizona
Languages Spoken
English
Topics of Expertise
Culture, Faith, Politics




Advertise with The Western Journal and reach millions of highly engaged readers, while supporting our work. Advertise Today.

Conversation