In a new interview, the head of the Catholic Church insisted that,
The pope made the comments to CBS Evening News in an interview that aired this week.
Francis decried those described as "deniers of climate change" by CBS's Norah O'Donnell.
The comments from Francis, who is not a scientist, are surprising considering the growing body of evidence that disputes his claims.
As previously reported, Nobel Prize winner Dr. John Clauser has argued that,
CBS noted that Francis' very brief comments will be expanded upon in a longer "60 Minutes" episode on May 19.
Francis has indeed made the talking point of "climate change" a central one in his 11-year pontificate along with the promotion of an "ecological spirituality."
The pope has long promoted,
After many years of climate alarmism rhetoric from the Pontiff, in 2022 the Vatican officially joined the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC) and the WEF's Paris Climate Agreement.
Francis, who is listed as a WEF "agenda contributor," defended the controversial move, saying that,
His continued promotion of the WEF's "Net Zero" agenda as dictated by the Paris Agreement.
The agreement underpins the majority of the globalists' current "climate change" agenda.
Consequently, the Pope's "climate change" rhetoric has also earned criticism from prelates within the Church.
Bishop Athanasius Schneider (below video) joined the late Cardinal George Pell in condemning Francis' concept of,
Meanwhile, the comments from the pope come as the WEF's anti-carbon agenda was thoroughly debunked by a major study this week.
A new peer-reviewed study has provided conclusive scientific evidence proving that carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions in Earth's atmosphere cannot cause "global warming."
Dr. Jan Kubicki led a group of world-renowned Polish scientists to study the impact of increases in CO2 emissions on the Earth's global temperatures.
However, not only did they find that higher levels of CO2 made no difference, but they also proved that it simply isn't possible for increases in carbon dioxide to cause temperatures to rise.
Kubicki and his team recently published three papers which all conclude that Earth's atmosphere is already "saturated" with carbon dioxide.
This saturation means that, even at greatly increased levels of CO2, the "greenhouse gas" cannot and will not cause temperatures to rise.
|