Trump Mocks Global Warming Amid Record Cold Wave
President Donald Trump on Friday drew attention to a predicted blast of extreme winter weather across much of the United States, using the forecast to once again challenge warnings about climate change.
Posting on Truth Social, Trump cited projections calling for unusually cold conditions across large swaths of the country. “Record Cold Wave expected to hit 40 States,” Trump wrote.
“Rarely seen anything like it before. Could the Environmental Insurrectionists please explain — WHATEVER HAPPENED TO GLOBAL WARMING???”
The remarks came as utilities, transportation agencies, and emergency responders braced for a powerful winter system pushing toward the eastern two-thirds of the nation. Thousands of utility crews were placed on alert, airlines canceled flights, and consumers rushed to buy bottled water as forecasts warned of potentially widespread damage, extended power outages, and dangerous cold.
Meteorologists say the sprawling storm could unleash a severe ice event stretching from Texas through parts of the South, dump close to a foot of snow from Oklahoma through Washington, D.C., New York, and Boston, and then usher in an Arctic air mass capable of driving wind chills down to minus 50 degrees Fahrenheit in portions of Minnesota and North Dakota.
Weather forecasters cautioned that the destruction — particularly in regions coated with ice — could be comparable to hurricane-level impacts. Roughly 160 million Americans were under winter storm alerts or extreme cold warnings, with many areas facing both hazards at once.
Trump has frequently cast doubt on climate change and has argued that episodes of extreme cold weaken arguments about long-term global warming. In his latest post, he pointed to the looming freeze as evidence, in his view, that climate activists overstate or misrepresent shifts in the planet’s climate.
Climate scientists and meteorologists have consistently emphasized that single weather events, including intense cold snaps, do not contradict the broader trend of rising global temperatures.
Experts regularly stress the difference between short-term weather and long-term climate patterns, explaining that extreme cold can still occur in certain regions even as average global temperatures climb over decades.
Trump’s comments were issued as he continues to campaign while opposing federal initiatives designed to curb greenhouse gas emissions.
During his presidency, Trump reversed a number of environmental regulations and initiated the withdrawal of the United States from the Paris climate agreement, a move later undone by President Joe Biden.
Meanwhile, weather officials across the country urged residents to keep a close eye on local forecasts, plan for possible power outages, and guard against frostbite and hypothermia during prolonged exposure to frigid conditions.
Depending on how long and how intensely the cold wave lasts, officials warned it could disrupt travel, strain energy supplies, and force changes to school schedules.
Emergency management agencies also advised households to ensure adequate heating, safeguard pets and plumbing from freezing, and check in on elderly or vulnerable neighbors as temperatures plunge.
{Matzav.com}
