CNN senior data reporter Harry Enten revealed on Thursday that Americans really aren’t worried about climate change at all, nor are they are wetting their pants over the possibility of being a victim of a natural disaster. That might be because neither one of those impacts their daily lives. Economic issues and national security on the other hand, do.
Gallup conducted a poll and discovered that 40 percent of Americans are “greatly worried about climate change,” right now, which is a six percent decrease from 2020. Democrats have been trying to hang the blame both climate change and President Donald Trump for the horrific flooding that happened last weekend in Central Texas.
“Are Americans concerned of climate change, and the answer is, Americans aren’t afraid of climate change,” Enten stated on air. “Climate activists have not successfully made the case to the American people. I want you to take a look here. ‘Greatly worried about climate change.’ We have data going all the way back since 1989, and look at it then, it was 39%. In 2000, it was 40%. 2020, 46%. In 2025, 40%, which is the exact same percentage as in 2000, despite all of these horrible weather events. The percentage of Americans that are greatly worried about climate change has stayed pretty gosh darned consistent.”
According to the Daily Caller:
The percentage of Americans who “often [or] sometimes worry” about being the victim of a natural disaster has decreased from 38% to 32% since 2006, Enten said. A minority of Americans of each political party, including only 27% of Democrats, believe that climate change will impact their home areas.
“Look at this, all adults, it’s just 17%. It’s just 17%. The GOP is 6%, Independents is 16%, even Democrats here, it’s just 27% of Democrats who say that climate change will make it harder to stay in our area,” Enten said, continuing his analysis. “And I think this is what’s so important. This is across the aisle in terms of the percentage of who will say it’ll be harder to stay in our area. And it is the exact same thing that we see here, ‘when you’ll be a natural disaster victim.’ Under 50% of Democrats, Republicans and Independents believe that in fact, they could be, or at least worry about the chances that they’ll be a natural disaster victim.”
Several prominent figures, such as Bill Nye, have pointed fingers at climate change and the use of fossil fuels. CNN’s Dana Bash and Democrat Texas Rep. Joaquin Castro suggested that climate change is a factor in the flood during a Sunday segment of “State of the Union.”
Can someone please tell me why anyone is still listening to Bill Nye? The guy hosted a television series in the 1990s. He’s not even a real scientist. And yet, media outlets expect us to take him seriously. Modern culture has become a circus.
The flood in Texas has killed over 120 victims as of Thursday, including 27 campers at the all-girls Christian camp, Camp Mystic. At least 150 individuals remain missing in Kerr County.
To act like floods are some sort of new phenomenon is ridiculous. They’ve been happening since the earliest days of earth’s history. One of the worst floods happened in the state of Pennsylvania on May 31, 1889. A total of 16 million tons of water was unleashed during the catastrophe, leaving over 2,200 people dead.
Another flood, on the Mississippi River in 1927, killed 250 people.
Time for the climate alarmist junk to go bye-bye.
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