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People Tell NYTimes About Their ‘Religious Conversion’ To Climate Alarmism

The New York Times (@NYTimes) spoke to several people from different industries who all associated their conversion to climate activism as at a type of religious epiphany.

Many of the newly converted transitioned from extreme climate skepticism to radical proponents of the belief that global warming must be tackled before it’s too late. The retired coal miner, an evangelical minister, and Miami mayor reporters talked to wrap their new-found position in religious overtones.

“I liken it to a religious conversion, and not just because I saw something I’d never seen before — I felt a deep sense of repentance,” Rev. Richard Cizik said in an interview with the NYTimes. He admitted to membership in the church of the “religious right” before hearing a Rev. Jim Ball, a founder of the Evangelical Environmental Network, wax poetic about the climate activism.

“I heard the evidence over four days, did a fist to the forehead and thought, ‘Oh my gosh, if this is true, everything has changed,’” Cizik said, referring to a climate change conference he attended in 2002. He was hesitant at first, but began structuring his life around a new religious belief: climate activism.

Miami Mayor Tomás Regalado faced a similar experience. The Republican mayor, according to the NYTimes, didn’t think much of climate change until his son, Jose, sat his father down, with a map, to proselytize.

“I realized that if this was happening somewhere in the Pacific, well, it could happen here,” said Regalado, who has waxed poetic about what he sees as the effects climate change has had on the coastal parts of his city. Recent studies show a different story, though.

A study Dutch Deltares Research Institute conducted in 2016, for instance, showed coastal areas had grown, on net, 13,000 square miles over the last 30 years. In total, the study found 67,000 square miles of water was converted into land, and 44,000 square miles of land was covered by water.

Research has also suggested that there are reasons other than global warming that help explain why Regalado’s state is experiencing coastal erosion.

Miami is three-feet above sea level and has an expanding population and industrial center, a reality that results in more water being drawn from the ground for industrial purposes. Water that once filled areas underground disappears and soon settles into these new hollowed-out spaces.

Retired coal worker Stanley Sturgill experienced a similar religious awakening on environmental issues as Regalado and Cizik. Sturgill, who worked for 40 years in the industry, first learned about global warming in the early 1990s when he was working as a federal coal mine inspector in Kentucky.

Read more at Daily Caller

Comments (5)

  • Avatar

    Spurwing Plover

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    A whole bunch of total losers and they tell this to the New York Pravda these types of people are losers there no doupts about it

  • Avatar

    prestigio

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    all this spume
    in the face of
    thermal infrared spectrography
    showing co2 to be
    nearly identical to
    nitrogen oxygen argon

  • Avatar

    David Lewis

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    From Rakooi “The rate of CO2 currently emitted by humans is about 50 times the rate of CO2 injected into the atmosphere by volcanism.”

    It is estimated by geophysicists that only three volcanic eruptions, Indonesia (1883), Alaska (1912) and Iceland (1947), spewed more carbon dioxide into the atmosphere than all of human activities in our entire history. Now I’m sure Rakooi has great faith in the IPCC. These scientists say it takes a thousand years to remove CO2 from the atmosphere. If true, most CO2 in the atmosphere is by volcanism.

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    David Lewis

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    It is too bad that people’s limited knowledge subjects them to being converted.

    The beliefs of most religions are harmless to civilization. A religion that believes everyone who doesn’t belong to their church is going to hell harms no one. Believing in three different heaves has no impact on society. The same is true of having specific beliefs in evolution.

    The climate change religion on the other hand, is very harmful not just to the believers but everyone. They want to eliminate fossil fuels, the very thing that has given us our prosperity. They want to transfer the wealth industrial nations to developing nations. That is taking away from each of our families. The applications of the climate change religion have already had a dire impact such as in Germany.

    • Avatar

      Sonnyhill

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      The Warmists want fossil fuels for themselves and their virtuous lifestyle.

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