Climate Change and Global Warming: Why Are Politicians Still Debating?

1397 Words3 Pages

Portions of the United States experienced an exceptionally cold winter this year. Here in North Carolina we had three months of overnight temperature below freezing with temperatures in the 20s. I have lived in the Raleigh area for 25 years and have never experienced a winter so consistently cold with thick layers of ice on windshields every morning and frost on the roofs of homes that remained frozen until the middle of the morning. The act of cleaning up snow and ice brought back memories of growing up in the 1960s in the far north of New Jersey where temperatures remained below freezing for months and the ice on local lakes was solid enough to support the weight of a tractor to plow away the snow so everyone could ice skate, and we did skate there for at least two months. Recent winters in my hometown have been so mild that the lake did not freeze at all and even the Canada geese did not migrate south, but remained there in NJ. This winter, while we were freezing inside our homes back here in Raleigh, the news media continued to debate the global warming issue. The conflict between the weather outside for me vs. the news reports of global warming made me pause and question where the truth lies. My research uncovered that global warming is very real and, in fact, explains the shift in air currents that caused the extreme weather this winter that is negatively impacting millions of lives. In conclusion, the time is now when politicians must legislate strong actions to minimize man’s contribution to global warming and enact measures to provide emergency assistance wherever these violent weather patterns cause crises.
The U.S.A and other industrialized nations have spearheaded a movement to study to the threat of global warm...

... middle of paper ...

... of climate change. Time is running short for the world to take action to preserve the equilibrium that maintains our atmosphere conducive to nurturing all life on earth.

Works Cited

Amos, Jonathan. “Deep Ice tells Long Climate Story.” BBC News. BBC News. 9/4/2006. Web. 4 Apr. 2014.
Duke, Alan. “Frigid air from the North Pole: What’s this polar vortex?” CNN.com. Cable News Network, January 6, 2014. Web. 3 Apr 2014.
Howard, Brian. “New Climate Change Report Warns of Dire Consequences.” National Geographic Mar 2014: Web. 3 Apr 2014.
MarketWatch, The Wall Street Journal, WSJ. March 24, 2014. Web Apr 2014.
Miller, Debra. Ed. Global Warming. Farmington Hills, MI: Greenhaven Press, 2013. Print.
Pollack, Henry. A World Without Ice, New York: Penguin Press, 2009. Print
Sinclair, Matthew. Let Them Eat Carbon. London: Biteback Publishing, 2011. Print

Open Document