This film exposes climate alarmism as a fictional scare with no scientific basis. It demonstrates that mainstream studies and official data do not support the claim that we are witnessing an increase in extreme weather events - hurricanes, droughts, heat waves, wildfires and more. It strongly refutes the claim that current temperatures and atmospheric CO2 levels are unusually and worryingly high. On the contrary, both current temperatures and CO2 levels are extremely and unusually low compared to the last half billion years of Earth's history. We are currently in an ice age. It also shows that there is no evidence that changes in CO2 levels (which have changed many times) have ever 'driven' climate change in the past.
So why are we told over and over again that "catastrophic climate change caused by man" is an irrefutable fact? Why are we told that there is no evidence to contradict this? Why are we told that anyone who questions 'climate chaos' is a 'flat earth man' and a 'science denier'?
The film explores the nature of the consensus behind climate change. It shows the origins of the climate finance bandwagon and the rise of the trillion dollar climate industry. It shows how hundreds of thousands of jobs depend on the climate crisis. Explains the enormous pressure on scientists and others not to question climate alarmism: withdrawal of funding, rejection of scientific journals, social ostracism.
But climate alarm is much more than a funding and job creation bandwagon. The film explores climate politics. Climate alarmism has been political from the start. Free market industrial capitalism was the culprit. The solution was higher taxes and more regulation. From the beginning, the climate alarmism appealed to, and was accepted and supported by, the larger pro-government groups.
This is the unspoken political divide behind the climate alarmism. Climate alarmism is particularly appealing to those who belong to the sprawling system of publicly funded institutions. This includes the largely publicly funded Western intelligentsia for whom climate has become a moral issue. In these circles, criticising or questioning climate alarmism is a breach of social etiquette.
The film includes interviews with a number of very prominent scientists, including Professor Steven Koonin (author of the book "Unsettled", former director and vice president of Caltech), Professor Dick Lindzen (former professor of meteorology at Harvard and MIT), Professor Will Happer (professor of physics at Princeton), Dr. John Clauser (winner of the 2022 Nobel Prize in Physics), Professor Nir Shaviv (Racah Institute of Physics), Professor Ross McKitrick (University of Guelph), Willie Soon and many more.