I'd just like to point out that we've had that weird orange haze in the air months before any claims of wildfires started.
I've noticed as well that nobody has been talking about the volcanoes that have been popping off since 2020. In that year alone, there were 52 active volcanoes. I don't think Mount Etna has actually settled down in the past 3 years.
From the Wiki entry about the 1883 Krakatoa eruption:
The ash caused "such vivid red sunsets that fire engines were called out in New York, Poughkeepsie, and New Haven to quench the apparent conflagration"
Sound familiar? Of course, Krakatoa was a massive eruption. But instead of one large eruption, would many smaller eruptions worldwide over a period of a couple of years cause a similar effect?
My thinking is that yes, all the volcanic ash is having an effect on the atmosphere. But you can't blame the volcanoes for "man-made climate change" and raise their taxes/take away their liberties, can you?
I'd just like to point out that we've had that weird orange haze in the air months before any claims of wildfires started.
I've noticed as well that nobody has been talking about the volcanoes that have been popping off since 2020. In that year alone, there were 52 active volcanoes. I don't think Mount Etna has actually settled down in the past 3 years.
From the Wiki entry about the 1883 Krakatoa eruption:
Sound familiar? Of course, Krakatoa was a massive eruption. But instead of one large eruption, would many smaller eruptions worldwide over a period of a couple of years cause a similar effect?
My thinking is that yes, all the volcanic ash is having an effect on the atmosphere. But you can't blame the volcanoes for "man-made climate change" and raise their taxes/take away their liberties, can you?