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The speaker states that climate-related predictions are not science but politics. They claim that in the sixties, it was predicted oil would be gone in ten years. In the seventies, it was another ice age in ten years. In the eighties, acid rain would destroy all the crops in ten years. In the nineties, the ozone layer would be destroyed in ten years. In the 2000s, the glaciers would all melt in ten years. In the 2010s, the East and West Coast would be underwater from rising sea levels in ten years. The speaker asserts that none of these predictions came true, but they resulted in higher taxes.

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Sea ice in the Arctic is melting rapidly, leading to the exposure of the Arctic Ocean. Scientists estimate that within the next five years, we will witness the first ice-free Arctic summer.

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Climate experts warn that the next ice age could arrive sooner than expected, with temperatures dropping in the far north for the past 30 years. Summer ice-free sea coasts are now blocked year-round, indicating a significant change in climate. This has led some climatologists to believe that within our lifetime, we might be living in the next ice age. Considering these factors, the speaker suggests the possibility of relocating to avoid the harsh buffalo winter becoming a common occurrence throughout the United States.

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The melting of Greenland's ice sheet could raise sea levels by 7 meters.

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In 5 years, scientists predict the first ice-free Arctic summer. This will expose more ocean to sunlight. Because the ocean is dark, it will consume more heat from the sunlight. This accelerates melting and warming, as opposed to the ice and snow which used to reflect sunlight back into the atmosphere.

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In the past million years, the Earth has faced ice ages regularly. Scientists warn that the next ice age could bring hunger and death on an unprecedented scale. The harsh winter of 1977 in the US is a glimpse of what might come. Climate experts predict Arctic cold and perpetual snow could turn much of the planet into a polar desert within our grandchildren's lifetime. Evidence shows temperatures dropping, suggesting the ice age could arrive sooner than expected. Earth is the only planet in our solar system suitable for human life.

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Climate experts have been making incorrect predictions for decades. In 1969, Paul Ehrlich claimed that everyone would disappear in 20 years, but he is still being cited today. In the 1970s, experts warned of a new ice age caused by air pollution. Leonard Nimoy even made a video about it. However, when the ice age didn't happen, they shifted to global warming. In 1989, a UN official said rising sea levels would wipe out entire nations by 2000. Al Gore also made incorrect predictions in his documentary, "An Inconvenient Truth." Despite these failures, the media continues to amplify these claims. Climate change is a natural process that we cannot control, and there are both upsides and downsides to it.

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Scientists predict that within five years, we will experience the first ice-free Arctic summer. This will expose the dark ocean to more sunlight. The ocean absorbs more heat from the sunlight, accelerating melting and warming. This is because the ice and snow, which used to reflect sunlight back into the atmosphere, will be gone.

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Sea ice is melting rapidly in the Arctic, leading to the exposure of the Arctic Ocean. Scientists estimate that within the next five years, we will witness the first ice-free Arctic summer.

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The world is experiencing an alarming acceleration of climate change. Mega fires in Canada have caused widespread destruction, with smoke traveling across the Atlantic and polluting cities like New York and Montreal. Record-breaking heatwaves are occurring globally, reaching temperatures as high as 51 degrees Celsius in Iran and 41 degrees Celsius in Corsica, France. The Arctic's summer ice is disappearing, exacerbating the situation. Two major studies warn that billions of people could face deadly heat and the Earth may become uninhabitable if action is not taken. Despite these alarming findings, global CO2 emissions remain at record levels. Scientists are frustrated by the lack of political will to implement existing, feasible, and financially viable solutions. It is crucial to understand the consequences of this acceleration and work towards achieving necessary goals to prevent catastrophe.

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Over the past million years, there have been at least eight cycles of glaciation, and scientists now warn that the threat of another ice age is closer than previously thought. If we are not prepared, it could result in widespread death and destruction. In 1977, the coldest winter of the century hit the United States, with Arctic temperatures paralyzing cities and causing fatalities. This experience made people question where they would go if such extreme winters became the norm. Climatologists believe the next ice age is approaching, with temperatures dropping in the northern regions for the past thirty years. Within a generation, we could be living in the next ice age.

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There is a high probability that the entire north polar ice cap could be completely ice free for a few months in the summer within the next 5 to 7 years. This is due to the rapid melting of sea ice in the Arctic Ocean. Scientists predict that in 5 years, we will experience the first ice-free Arctic summer.

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The transcript claims a classified CIA document titled *National Cultural Development Under Communism* (first published June 1957, immediately classified, approved for release 08/24/1999) explicitly mentions “Tartaria,” and uses the document to argue that Soviet communist authorities interfered with Muslim and minority cultural life, including through suppression of religion, confiscation of mosques and literature, and rewriting history. The document is presented as beginning with a Bolshevik proclamation dated 12/07/1917 promising Muslims of Russia—Tatars, Tatars and related groups in Volga, Crimea, Siberia, Turkestan, Transcaucasia, Chechens, mountain peoples, and those whose mosques and prayer houses were destroyed—that beliefs and customs and national and cultural institutions would be “forever free and inviolate,” and that they should organize national life in complete freedom. The transcript states Lenin and Stalin promised equality, sovereignty, self-determination (including secession), abolition of national and national religious privileges, and freedom of development for national minorities and ethnographic groups, followed by Soviet suppression contradicting those promises. The transcript then details a sequence of repressive measures attributed to communists in the Muslim regions of Russia: confiscation of mosque lands (1918); outlawing Muslim religious brotherhoods (1921–1922); ridicule of Islam and undermining spiritual leaders; making Islamic religious life “virtually impossible” (1929); elimination of Islamic leadership via arrest and deportation (and “liquidation”); closing nearly all village and most city mosques; suppressing religious literature through alphabet changes, confiscation of religious texts including the Quran, and suppression of religious publications; dismissal of pious practicing Muslims from responsible positions. It cites a decline in the number of mosques admitted by Soviet authorities: from 7,000 mosques in European Russia alone at the time of 1917, to 1,312 mosques in the whole Soviet Union by 1942, with examples including Tashkent (from 300 to 20), Samarkand (from over 100 to 17, with only one usable), Bukhara (from 360 to one), and Al Maratha (no mosques remaining). It also states communist authorities condemned publication of Muslim literary works except those extolling Russian and Russians. The transcript returns to cultural heritage, arguing that communist interference extended to history. It describes a specific directive dated 08/09/1944 by the Central Committee of the Communist Party, instructing the Tatar provincial committee to conduct a “scientific revision” of Tartaria/Tatar history to eliminate “shortcomings and mistakes” of a nationalistic character by writers and historians, in order to remove references to “great Russian aggressions” and hide the “real course” of Tatar-Russian relations. It further claims historians in Muslim areas of the USSR rewrote history at party orders to portray Russians favorably, and that truthful histories were withdrawn and destroyed to deny Muslims and Tatars access to genuine accounts of the past. The transcript emphasizes that the CIA document’s inclusion of “Tartaria” in the 1950s is presented as important. In addition to the CIA-document discussion, the transcript shifts to historical geography research using early modern books and maps. It describes a “compendium of geography” released in 1691 by Lawrence Ecard and an additional world description (1715) with similar geography, suggesting they copied from shared sources while showing minor coordinate differences. The transcript quotes from the 1690/1691 geography text portraying “Tartary” as the “greatest country in the world,” lying east of Russia and north of Persia, India, and China, bounded by longitudes 83rd to 180th degree and latitudes 39th to 72nd degree, with an asserted length of about 4,000 miles and breadth about 2,000 miles. It states Tartary had ancient provinces (Scythia, Sake, Sogdania, and part of Cimatia Asiatica, plus some Old Persia) and had remained unconquered until “Anno eleven sixty two,” when the Tatars and “obscure people” overran it and elected a monarchy, with “a good part” later “fallen away.” The transcript discusses claims that Tartary is related to Mongol rule and uses the name “great sham of Tartary” as associated with China, asserting the emperor is “also the famous country of China.” It further claims that “Shambalu” (presented as the imperial seat) is not Peking/Beijing, proposing that commonly asserted identifications are mistaken. It argues using references to “Kambalu,” “Khanbaliq,” and “Kambaluk,” and compares placement with the Great Wall, claiming Kambalu is north of the Great Wall and that “Beijing/Peking” is south of it. To support its geographic argument, the transcript quotes from a printed book (1679) attributed to Tamerlane’s historian, describing a conflict involving Calyx and the city of Kambalu/Kambaluk/Kumbalu, and then describes an invasion of China beginning with references to “Liyotom and Pekin,” using repeated references to wall-crossing as evidence that “Kambalu” and “Pekin/Beijing” are presented as distinct. It maintains that if the same locations were involved, the narrative of crossing the wall and the sequence of revolt and conquest would not align. It then discusses plotting the claimed Tartary coordinates on maps and connects coordinate ranges to areas where Russian expansion and treaties (e.g., Treaty of Natchinsk) are said to have affected Tartaria’s location, arguing that exact location around the time of the document is “debatable.” The transcript develops further geographic assertions about “Cathay” versus “Manji,” stating that Cathay is north of the Great Wall and Manji is south of it. It references multiple maps (including those from 1689 and 1570) to claim “Cathay” corresponds to areas beyond the Great Wall and that Kambalu is located in Cathay. It describes river names and regions (including references to Obi and other rivers/lakes difficult to locate today), and it ties these claims to how Tamerlane is said to move to Cathay and then “jump the wall” into China. It then moves into “American Tartary” discussions. Using references from 1652 and other materials (including Uzziah Priest and later authors), it argues that some 17th–19th century sources used the phrase “American Tartary” (or “an American Tartary”) to describe areas in North America that resemble “Asiatic/Tartary.” It addresses claims that one map (1652) suggests Tartary-controlled North America by matching coloration but argues it does not indicate full continental control. The transcript then expands into multiple “lost city” and “gold” narratives (e.g., Quivera/Quivera stories tied to Coronado, and alleged connections to “King Tartarax”), also citing an 1851/1830s style literature tradition that portrays indigenous peoples as having Tatar/Scythian origins or characteristics. The transcript repeatedly states that learned people in the 1700s–1800s believed connections between Tatars/Scythians and indigenous North American peoples, tying this to Bering Strait crossing theories and various scholarly arguments. Later, the transcript returns to Greenland and ice. It begins with claims that satellite imagery appears to show Greenland as “completely” covered in ice, and discusses an asserted ice-free history: it states beryllium-10/aluminum-26 dating suggests Greenland bedrock was exposed for more than 280,000 years until about 1,100,000 years ago, and it summarizes claims of long-term ice-sheet coverage “for the last eighteen million years,” with periods of reduction. It argues that if Greenland’s ice disappeared, it would most likely appear as an archipelago due to bedrock depression under ice weight. The transcript connects this to references in older literature (e.g., Burton’s *Anatomy of Melancholy*) describing Greenland as frozen for “half the year,” and it discusses old maps showing possible passages or canals through Greenland. It claims forums and maps (including ones from 1747/1592 and later) suggest a central passage “formerly passable” but later choked with ice. It mentions a 1888 expedition by Friedrich Nansen and notes that Nansen’s planned route aligned with the location of the alleged canal. The transcript concludes by stating that its Greenland and canal information is attributed to external forums, and frames the central question as whether there could have been ancient ruins or a once-passable Greenland corridor, then transitions back to broader Tartaria/indigenous-origin discussions and ends.

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A federal report predicted possible catastrophic warming of the Earth by the 1990s due to strong climate change. Scientists claim that if action isn't taken within the next eight or nine years, major cities worldwide could go underwater.

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Between 2007 and 2012, scientists drilled deep into Greenland's ice as part of the NIEM project to uncover the climate story of the last interglacial around 125,000 years ago. What they found puts today's climate panic into perspective. Back then, Greenland was around eight degrees Celsius warmer than today. Sea levels were four to eight meters higher. Yet the planet didn't collapse and Greenland didn't melt. There were no tipping points and no mass extinctions. The planet was far warmer and life flourished. So when activists claim that two sea of modern warming spells catastrophe, the ice, the data, and the history, all say otherwise.

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In the past million years, the Earth has experienced regular cycles of advancing and retreating ice ages. Scientists now warn that the threat of another ice age is closer than previously believed. If unprepared, this could lead to widespread hunger and death. The severe winter of 1977 in the United States, with Arctic cold and blizzards, serves as a reminder of what could become more common. Climate experts have observed dropping temperatures in the far north for the past three decades, and summer ice is now present year-round in some coastal areas. This evidence suggests that we might be living in the next ice age within our lifetime. Earth is the only planet in our solar system with conditions suitable for human life.

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It's not science. It's politics. I've been listening to this bullshit for fifty years. In the sixties, it was oil will be gone in ten years. In the seventies, it was another ice age in ten years. In the eighties, it was acid rain will destroy all the crops in ten years. In the nineties, it was the ozone layer will be destroyed in ten years. In the February, it was the glaciers will all melt in ten years. In the twenty tens, it was the East And West Coast will be underwater from rising sea levels in ten years. None of this fear mongering nonsense came true, but it did result in higher taxes every time.

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Scientists claim the Earth's atmospheric temperature has been rising over the past 100 years, Antarctic ice sheets are melting faster, and sea levels have been rising more swiftly over the past 40 years. If correct, about 25% of Florida could be flooded in the next century, along with other low-lying areas. Climate changes could disrupt agriculture, potentially making the American farm belt too dry and shifting wheat and corn crops to Canada. Scientists attribute these changes to carbon dioxide gas, which creates a greenhouse effect by trapping heat and preventing it from rising into space. They maintain that burning coal, oil, and gas for a century has increased carbon dioxide levels, overheating the Earth. Some express concern that sufficient research isn't being conducted to determine the accuracy of these alarming assessments. Scientists are using computer models to predict the melting rate of Arctic ice and its impact on ocean levels, which could affect millions and the survival of cities.

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The era of global warming has ended; the era of global boiling has arrived, with claims of a sixth mass extinction. This video addresses climate change myths, starting with the claim that the Arctic will soon be ice-free. While some scientists predicted an ice-free Arctic by 2030 and the Greenland ice sheet melting could raise sea levels by 22 feet, others argue that Arctic sea ice has stabilized in recent years and returns in winter. Land ice in the Arctic shows minimal decline. Another myth is that polar bears are going extinct. Data indicates their populations have increased, contrary to environmental groups' claims. The third myth addressed is that climate change will create massive global food shortages. Agricultural output is at record highs, and increased carbon dioxide can benefit plant growth. NASA data shows the Earth has significantly greened. While the UN warned of a climate crisis famine in Madagascar, the issues are mostly due to bad governance, not climate change. Despite media claims linking climate change to food shortages and rising prices, global coffee production has increased since the 1990s. The next video will cover myths about infernos and more.

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In 1977, the United States experienced a harsh winter, leading to concerns about the next ice age. Climate experts believe that the next ice age may come sooner than expected, as temperatures in the Arctic have been dropping for the past 30 years. The average temperature in the Arctic has fallen by about 2 degrees centigrade, and if this trend continues, ice age temperatures could be reached in less than 200 years. Evidence from ice core studies suggests that a volcanic event 89,000 years ago caused a rapid shift to glacial conditions. The threat of an ice age is not as remote as once thought, and preparations need to be made to survive the change.

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Antarctic sea ice levels have experienced a significant decline, referred to as a 5 sigma event. Scientists are concerned that the ice may not recover this time. The cause of this change is not yet known, with some experts suggesting changes in sea temperature and others mentioning a combination of atmospheric and oceanic factors. The impact of human activity is also believed to play a role. While the original story mentioned the possibility of the ice not recovering, it failed to highlight that similar events have occurred multiple times in the past. Visuals in the video show the extent of the decline in sea ice levels.

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Scientists claim the Earth's atmospheric temperature has been rising over the past 100 years, Antarctic ice is melting faster, and sea levels have risen swiftly in the last 40 years. If correct, 25% of Florida could flood, along with other low-lying areas globally, and agriculture could be widely disrupted, potentially moving the American farm belt to Canada. These changes are blamed on carbon dioxide, which traps heat like a greenhouse. Scientists maintain that burning coal, oil, and gas for a century has increased carbon dioxide, overheating the Earth. Some political leaders support more carbon dioxide monitoring stations and share scientists' anger over Reagan administration budget cuts, hindering research to determine the accuracy of these alarming assessments. The findings could affect millions and the survival of cities.

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There is a 75% chance that the North Polar ice cap could be completely ice-free during summer months within the next 5 to 7 years. The melting sea ice is exposing more of the Arctic Ocean, and scientists predict that in 5 years, we will experience the first ice-free Arctic summer.

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The Earth's temperature is too low based on sunlight absorption and infrared radiation. There's a 75% chance the north polar ice cap could be ice-free in 5-7 years. The planet is facing extreme climate change, with floods in the Midwest and oceans boiling. Scientists warn of potential ice age threats and climate refugees reaching 1 billion. The speaker wishes they had been wrong about these predictions.

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Twenty years after Al Gore warned of imminent polar melt, the transcript argues that Antarctic sea ice extent is now greater than it was when that claim was made, with satellite records dating back to 1979 showing long periods of stability and even overall expansion. The same pattern is reported in Antarctic wildlife: Gentoo penguins have expanded their range and increased in number, and Adelie penguins also demonstrate long-term population growth. On a global scale, the text asserts that extinction rates are far lower today than a century ago, citing a recent biodiversity study that attributes most species losses to hunting, habitat destruction, and invasive species in the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, rather than climate change. The narrative further points to temperature data that allegedly contradicts alarming climate claims: in December 2025, Antarctica was colder than average, and more recently, on January 15, 2026, Concordia Station recorded a low of minus 43.4°C, described as an exceptionally frigid midsummer value for the Antarctic Plateau. The speaker contends that the Doomsday Brigade was wrong in its predictions, asserting there is zero accountability for those forecasts. The overall message contrasts alarmist climate narratives with what the speaker characterizes as evidence of stability or even improvement in Antarctic ice, wildlife populations, and broader extinction trends, while noting unusually cold conditions in specific recent measurements.
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