Parler
Gab
"It is already too late for the world to avoid a long period of famine, a Stanford University biologist said," the paper noted. "Paul Ehrlich said the 'time of famines' is upon us and will be at its worst and most disastrous by 1975."
That, of course, did not happen. Over the ensuing decades, the United States would go on to become an agricultural powerhouse, easily feeding Americans and exporting more food than 100 other countries combined.
The Great Pollution Disintegration
The same academic, now being referred to as a "population biologist," predicted in 1969 that the world's population would disappear in a blue plume of carbon dioxide. "The trouble with almost all environmental problems is that by the time we have enough evidence to convince people, you're dead," Ehrlich claimed. (How can you refute that?)
The New York Times added: "While Dr. Ehrlich is gathering that evidence in his laboratory at Stanford University, he is wasting no time trying to convince people that drastic action is needed to head off what he foresees as a catastrophic explosion fueled by runaway population growth, a limited world food supply, and contamination of the planet by man."
Well, the world's population today is declining in the most advanced countries; 'pollution' in the form of emissions in the U.S., supposedly the 'worst polluter' in the world, is dropping; and again, global food supplies are stable, the war in Ukraine notwithstanding.
The Next Ice Age
The reasons for the 'next ice age' -- higher consumption of oxygen than replacement back into the environment -- has also not happened. Neither has overpopulation, a climate apocalypse, the total destruction of the ozone, or mass starvation.
By now it should be evident that the 'experts' who were all pushing this nonsense were either not experts at all, or were pushing politicized propaganda due to an agenda. Either way, they were wrong.
Sources include:
CEI.org
ClimateAlarmism.news
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