As wildfires were eating away at Colorado and New Mexico last month, Katharine Hayhoe, a Christian geoscience professor at Texas Tech University, said in a column for Sojourners that “the answer is clear: God has given us the freedom and the ability to make choices. These choices have consequences.”
Hayhoe, who described friends praying fervently that their homes would be saved, recently co-authored a study published in Ecosphere that connected energy choices, such as coal-burning electricity, to climate change and ultimately an increased risk of wildfire in the western U.S.
Young conservatives seek fixes for climate change | The Greenville News | GreenvilleOnline.com
Choices do have consequences. Her friends chose to build homes in the middle of an incendiary device known as pine forest, and their houses burned down.
Shutting down the national power grid will not stop the natural forest cycle from occurring. Katherine appears to have the critical thinking skills of a rhubarb root.
What exactly is a Christian geoscience professor? I missed that class when I was in college.
“What exactly is a Christian geoscience professor?”
One of several thousand different ways people can use as an excuse for getting “picked on” by “deniers” for “telling it like it is”
She wants to be one with nature. That should include not suppressing wildfires as that allows fuel to build up.
“Christian Geoscience Professor” means that you would like to prove that the World was created in 4004 B.C. ???
Uh, are you trying to say that the world existed prior to 1970? Because you would be contradicting 80 years of settled sience.
Hey Stark , You’ve got their terminology down pat . How many IQ points did you have to pretend to drop to achieve that ?
Maybe they settled it 12,000 years ago at Gobelki Tepe. Just have to do mass excavation to look for old weather records…
I am going to have to mention this to the next alarmist who assails me
with 99% of climate scientists but cannot name a single one.
Because frequently these fools are also atheists.