PodParley PodParley

When Climate Panic Met Woke Imperialist Bureaucracy

Episode 11 of the The Climate Discussion Nexus podcast, hosted by John Robson, titled "When Climate Panic Met Woke Imperialist Bureaucracy" was published on March 19, 2025 and runs 17 minutes.

March 19, 2025 ·17m · The Climate Discussion Nexus

0:00 / 0:00

Dr. John Robson comments on key items from the latest Climate Discussion Nexus weekly "Wednesday Wakeup" newsletter, starting with the strange insistence that without ludicrous USAID spending the whole global fight against climate change will collapse, the ongoing grip of winter outside the palace of red tape dreams, and the ongoing deflation of the hydrogen balloon, and moving on to more weird weather the models can't explain, more feeble excuses for them, more proof that climate variability is natural, some unexpected frankness on the shortcomings of EVs and the huge footprint of their batteries, and the coming collapse of climate alarmism under the combined weight of hypocrisy and indifference to facts, and wrapping up with a handy compendium of said facts, a #LookItUp item on Arctic sea ice volume, a dramatic drop in global temperature as the Hunga Tonga effect fades, and chickpeas that love CO2.

To support the Climate Discussion Nexus, subscribe to our YouTube channel (http://www.youtube.com/channel/UC_egd..., our Rumble channel (https://rumble.com/user/ClimateDN), our newsletter (at http://www.climatediscussionnexus.com/) and our podcast on Spotify, like us on Facebook, follow us on Twitter and Gettr, and make a monthly or one-time pledge at http://www.climatediscussionnexus.com...

Climate Charge Climate Charge The Climate Charge podcast provokes policy discussion on environmental science innovations, global sustainability, and international development in an era of unprecedented change. Jeremiah and Carly interview guests from all perspectives of policy - government, private industry, academia and more! Tune in as the Center for Development and Strategy team ponder ways to solve global issues, one policy, and one pod at a time. The Missing Stone: A Conversation About Conservation Sean Sullivan Each episode features a longform conversational interview with conservation biologists, land managers, climate scientists, and more. Each interview starts with a discussion of how the guest became interested in and navigated their field and the highs and lows of their career. The second half of the podcast features a key area of their research or work and the impact they hope it will have on their field. The podcast will conclude with the guests hopes and fears on the future of conservation, their advice to future conservationists, and how you can get involved. Cutting Edge Issues in Development Thinking & Practice LSE Department of International Development These podcasts are recordings from the Cutting Edge Issues in Development Thinking & Practice lecture series 2023/24, 2022/23, 2021/22 and 2020/21, a visiting lecture series coordinated by Professor of Development Studies, Professor James Putzel and Dr Laura Mann. The Cutting Edge series provides students and guests with fascinating insights into the practical world of international development. Renowned guest lecturers share their expertise and invite discussion on an exciting range of issues, from climate change policy, to pressing humanitarian crises. In 2020, the series took place online, enabling us to host fantastic speakers from around the world and to stream the lectures on YouTube, opening them up to a global audience. Now we are back in person but still recording the sessions to share with our global audience. NATO Review Natochannel NATO Review is a free online magazine offering expert opinion, analysis and debate on a broad range of security issues.It looks at different aspects of NATO’s role in today’s fast-changing and unpredictable security environment. It also covers wider challenges, such as cyberattacks, hybrid warfare, the impact of social media, the security implications of climate change and scarcity of resources, and the need to strengthen the role of women in peace and security.It is important to note that what is published in NATO Review does not constitute the official position or policy of NATO or member governments. NATO Review seeks to inform and promote debate on security issues. The views expressed by authors are their own.This magazine has existed for 70 years and still upholds the task it was given all those years ago: to 'contribute to a constructive discussion of Euro-Atlantic security issues’.
URL copied to clipboard!