See: https://wattsupwiththat.com/2019/11/27/apocalypse-deferred/
And from the comments on that post, here is a link to a video with more explicitly highlighted ideas here for senior pupils doing projects on climate alarmism:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZUVqZKBMF7o&feature=youtu.be
(hat-tip: CO2 is Life, https://wattsupwiththat.com/2019/11/27/apocalypse-deferred/#comment-2856368)
And for pupils doing a project on English lit and climate change, or journalism and climate, might well find inspiration here:
https://www.thegwpf.org/content/uploads/2017/07/Clive-James.pdf
And to mark the recent passing of Clive James, here is a relevant poem of his:
Imminent Catastrophe
The imminent catastrophe goes on
Not showing many signs of happening.
The ice at the North Pole that should be gone
By now, is awkwardly still lingering,
And though sometimes the weather is extreme
It seems no more so than when we were young
Who soon will hear no more of this grim theme
Reiterated in the special tongue
Of manufactured fright. Sea Level Rise
Will be here soon and could do such-and-such,
Say tenured pundits with unblinking eyes.
Continuing to not go up by much,
The sea supports the sceptics, but they, too,
Lapse into oratory when they predict
The sure collapse of the alarmist view
Like a house of cards, for they could not have picked
A metaphor less suited to their wish.
A house of cards subsides with just a sigh
And all the cards are still there.
Feverish Talk of apocalypse might, by and by,
Die down, but the deep anguish will persist.
His death, and not the Earth’s, is the true fear
That motivates the doomsday fantasist:
There can be no world if he is not here.
-- Clive James, The Times, 17 March 2016
[This grand wee poem was also published on this blog in March, 2016:
https://climatelessons.blogspot.com/p/climate-culture-poetry-and-song-from.html]
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