The Associated Press seems to think that people are waking up every day and feeling nerve-wracking about the ghost of climate change. [emphasis, links added]
AP Lifestyle writer Leanne Italie competed with Babylon Bee on June 25 for the most interesting satire of the day.
“Anxiety, sadness, anger, fear, helplessness. The emotional loss of climate change is widespread, especially for young people.”
Yes, this is a real sentence that should have been a news project. Things got worse:
“Many people are worried about the future, and the daily climate anxiety and distress, which can lead to insomnia, inability to concentrate or worse. Some young people want to know whether it is moral to bring their children into the world. Many people feel sad for the natural world.”
Who is responsible for trying to scare people to death? The reporter affirmed.
But, never be afraid, Itali said:
“Activists, climate psychologists and others have multiple ways to build resilience and help manage emotions in the fight against climate change.”
The Associated Press actually pays writers between $60,000 and $101,000 a year pollute Its website overdoses this brain-dead Codswallop.
Italie's prescription is as clumsy as her initial paper. They range from telling readers to “convincing more residents to abandon lawns and increase biodiversity with native plants” to making themselves “Positive sandwiches.”
Yes, a “positive sandwich” that Italy describes as “starting with good news” and then a harder tidbit, then finished[ing] A story with a second feeling good. ”
Italie even elevates the so-called ecological psychology expert’s miscellaneous (yes, it’s obviously a thing), and she writes this,
“One of her most important tasks is to help people find their own words to talk about the pursuit of resilience in climate change.”
It seems that the slope of global warming can no longer become impossible Italie emphasizes the story of a nut mother, her obsession with the climate battle, and she regrets giving birth to a son.
“I am usually a very happy person and I am very optimistic. And I'm still like this, but it's hard to manage sometimes. She said, like, what happens and thinks about long-term thinking. “At point, I’m sorry to bring the kids into this world knowing things will get worse.”
Such people should not be defined as “very optimistic”. But for Italie, the mother is an appropriate case study to complement her climate fear pornography with her readers.
“Part of managing one’s emotions is trying to model your son’s sustainable behavior while educating him about the importance of helping the environment,” Italie propaganda. “Families drive electric cars. They don't eat meat and encourage large families to do the same. They recycle, compose and limit air travel.”
But you can also expect millions of dollars from an interest group that publicly acknowledges it’s going to get millions of dollars from climate obsessed interest groups while still claiming to be “just news”?
This effectively makes the Associated Press a propaganda unit for climate change lobbying, apparently home to eco-crazy nuts disguised as journalists.
If the Associated Press wants to sell us a “positive sandwich” they will revolve around their horrible theory of the future and with the good news that all the crackpot predictions from the media in the 1990s or 2000s, the Earth will be doomed to fail in a decade – no elimination.
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