By Alan Caruba
Let us begin with the understanding
that there is no connection between the climate and health. The climate is
something measured in decades and centuries, so what happened in the last
century has nothing to do with whether you are sneezing today.
The weather surely can help generate
health problems. For example in the northeastern states, the Lyme disease season
is beginning. Between 1992 and 2010 reported cases of Lyme disease doubled to
nearly 23,000 according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, but
CDC officials believe the actual number of those infected may have been three
times that number.
Lyme disease is transmitted by deer
ticks and since these tiny insects will hitch a ride on birds, squirrels, mice
and small animals as well, even if you live in an area without deer, the
possibility of being bitten by a deer tick is just as likely. This increases for
people who love gardening or outdoor recreational activities such as hiking and
camping. Children, too, are particularly susceptible.
The fact that Lyme disease shows up in
the Spring simply tells you that the warm weather facilitates the tick
population. The weather has always been tied the mating habits and activities of
various species, but that does not mean that is constitutes a massive threat to
everyone’s health.
That’s not the way the White House
sees it. On April 7 the administration made it official. It announced that it is
“committed to combating the health impacts of climate change and protecting the
health of future generations.”
Since the climate changes over
extended periods of time, not just month to month, one has to wonder what
“health impacts” the White House has in mind. The last Little Ice Age lasted
from around 1300 to 1850. It was cold all over Europe and North America. Does
the White House propose that it can “protect” us from a new one? If so, that’s
absurd.
Let us understand, too, that there has
always been what the White House announcement calls “extreme weather
events.” Notice the change from
“climate” to “weather”? Among the events identified are “severe droughts and
wildfires to more powerful hurricanes and record heat waves…” Has there been a
time when such weather-related events have not occurred? In fact, there are
times when they don’t. For example, there hasn’t been a single Category 3-5
hurricane hit the U.S. mainland since 2005!
The White House has launched a massive
brainwashing effort using many elements of the federal government to frighten
Americans using the “climate” and the “weather.” How deceptive is it?
One example is sufficient. The President has claimed that climate change was the cause of one of his daughter’s asthma. In its announcement, it claimed that “In the past three decades, the percentage of Americans with asthma has more than doubled and climate change is putting these individuals and many other vulnerable populations at greater risk of landing in the hospital.”
One example is sufficient. The President has claimed that climate change was the cause of one of his daughter’s asthma. In its announcement, it claimed that “In the past three decades, the percentage of Americans with asthma has more than doubled and climate change is putting these individuals and many other vulnerable populations at greater risk of landing in the hospital.”
Here’s what the Asthma and Allergy
Foundation of America has to say about the various causes of asthma.
“Since asthma has a genetic origin and
is a disease you are born with, passed down from generation to generation, the
question isn’t really ‘what causes asthma’, but rather ‘what causes asthma
symptoms to appear?’ People with asthma have inflamed airways which are
super-sensitive to thinks which do not bother other
people.”
What the Asthma and Allergy Foundation
of America is telling us is that there is no direct connection between either
the climate or the weather and the illness called asthma.
Those who suffer this disease however
can be affected by a range of triggers such as irritants in the air, pollens,
molds, and even cockroach droppings. Infections such as colds, flu, and sore
throats are among the leading triggers for asthma attacks in
children.
The facts, the truth, were no
deterrent to the April 7 White House twelve-page announcement of all the things
it intends to do to brainwash Americans into believing that there is a
connection between the “climate” and health.
Here’s just a few of the dozens of
events and programs it will initiate so that the media will report on them and
thus convey the message that climate change is the greatest threat to Americans
today:
“The Administration is expanding its
Climate Data Initiative to include more than 150 health-relevant datasets…this
is intended to help communities and businesses reduce the health impacts of
climate change.” Only there are no such
impacts.
The Administration is announcing a
coalition of Deans from 30 medical, public health, and nursing schools around
the country, who are committing to ensure that the next generation of health
professionals is trained to address the health impacts of climate change.” Only there are no such
impacts.
“Announcing the White House Climate
Change and Health Summit.” It will feature the Surgeon General who will lead
discussions to “the public health impacts of climate change and identify
opportunities to minimize these impacts.” Only there are no impacts and nothing that
could be done if there were.
From the Department of Homeland
Security to the Department of the Interior and the Environmental Protection
Agency, many elements of the federal government will be integrated into this
massive brainwashing effort.
What can be done to ignore a
government determined to lie to everyone about a “threat” that does not exist?
Not much.
© Alan Caruba, 2015
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