Man Made Global Climate disasters have an annoying habit of not happening. The predictions of experts never come to pass. And that’s great for blogging. One sad tale of demise we are particularly fond of is the disappearing beaches.
In 1995, 2500 experts got together and decided they could make a comfortable living if they said things like in 25 years, “most of the beaches on the East Coast would be gone.”
Tony Heller uses Jones Beach on Long Island as his example, showing satellite photos from 1994 and 2023. The beach looks bigger today than before the doomsday predictions. We prefer the shoreline closer to home. Hampton Beach is a top-shelf, well-maintained strip of sand. It’s clean, and it’s still there. It hasn’t shrunk at all, not since 1995 or, as we showed here, 1950.
My wife made a few trips this past summer and assures me it’s the same beach she’s been visiting since she was a child. The prediction wasn’t just bad or wrong; we’re three years past the end of East Coast beaches, and there’s not only no there there, but there might be more there than in 1995. A result common when considering the armageddon predicted by those who – predictably – have a fiscal interest in precipitated fear.
We also spent a lot of time boating over Portsmouth Way and out into the ocean, and high tide or low, and there is zero evidence of the apocalypse predicted by the Climate Cult or the myriad globalist beneficiaries of those fears.
It’s a scam. An expensive one. And it is not going away unless we make it so.