Absolutely I think man has an effect on the earth. Is it enough to impact temperature, weather, etc? That is a good question. But like MAXX says, the government will use the media to bleed us dry around the world, every single government will use anything they can to take the peoples money and control what they can/cannot do.
People who claim it's not human activity that is changing the earths climate, but it has natural causes: well, name those causes, and come up with evidence. they can't.
I loathe governments / EU / UN (they usually lie, betray, exagerrate etc) but it really is quite simple:
it took nature hundreds of millions of years to create the layers of oil and coal.
Yet we are burning them up in just a few hundred years.
Easy to deny, make fun of, or try to ignore. But insurance companies can't afford such a "we don't care" mentality:
https://www.cnbc.com/2026/06/27/europe-heatwave-uk-temperature-el-nino-invest.htmlThe record temperatures and weather extremes are big news in Germany:
https://www.bild.de/news/inland/hitze-und-wetter-im-live-ticker-heute-bis-zu-38-grad-moeglich-6a3380f47e682fc37fbfebcdas predicted more extremes, but they are happening earlier than forecast:
https://www.bild.de/news/41-4-grad-schon-wieder-hitzerekord-in-deutschland-6a3fde50291c205ad345b960Is there a solution?
Yes, even since the 1950s. It's called nuclear power, but the radical left hates it, so they have been blocking nuclear power plants in every Western country for decades.
Luckily it's changing now, and for instance China is building a lot of new ones. Japan is trying to restart existing ones, and in the US lots of new projects are under way. Especially the small modular powerplants seem very promising.
Solar and wind can be practical, but wind and sun will always remain unpredictable and unreliable.
But it's cool ordinary citizens can produce their own power, independent of energy companies and governments thanks to solar panels. But still too expensive and not economical to store that energy in large home batteries