As the Earth’s temperature continues to rise, climate change remains a lower priority for some Americans, and a subset of the public rejects that it’s happening at all. To better understand the perspectives of those who see less urgency to address climate change, the Center conducted a series of in-depth interviews designed to provide deeper insight into the motivations and views of those most skeptical about climate change.
Oh WE know it’s weird, but the simple fact is that the GL states all stayed under 100 this year while the rest of the country, and the rest of the world, took the hottest weather on record, ever, in human history, right to the face. We got off LIGHT this year. But if you’re looking for reasons to justify your denialism, it’s enough. When I said “maybe 90s”, honestly, I haven’t seen it push above 85 this year, and now in August it’s given up. It’s 70s down here in Northern Ohio. THAT’s weird. We really should be sweating harder, but nah, it’s downright crisp in the evening.
I think the End of Winter has shaken some of the old timers. They know. They know this isn’t right. They know that snow is supposed to hit the ground in November at the latest, and stay there until March. Not this. All we get now is Mud Season. Snow doesn’t even hit the ground, really. Everyone has kinda given up on Christmas, because it’s not really Christmas if the weather is in the 50s and damp.
When the snow went away, I feel like they weren’t quite so confident about their bullshit anymore.
So it’s been the winter that’s been getting hotter and hotter up here in the Great Lakes region. But the summer? We keep getting mercy, mercy we have not earned. And the only thing that makes sense is the Lakes getting hot so we don’t have to. Then when it cools down they release the heat and Christmas is muddy and shitty.
But if you’re looking for every possible reason to deny, it’s enough. That’s the problem. Everyone who trusts the data knows that things are insane, but we aren’t talking about those people.
The article doesn’t say anything about the Great Lakes being a determining factor that I can find and there were 7 interviews from the entire midwest, which is a lot more than just the Great Lakes region.
Got any actual data that people from the Great Lakes states are more in denial than other people in the country?