A Critic Answered, a Narrative Destroyed

By Steve Haner
The propensity of American news outlets to spread outright falsehoods about extreme weather and the claimed (but easily refuted) link to โclimate changeโ has been on full display this week.
Any observant person who spends even a day driving in the Texas Hill Country can see it is one giant flood plain. If you understand geology at all, you can see indications along the streams that point to past high-water marks over not just centuries, but eons. If you can read, youโll notice all the highway signs warning of high water on bridges, most of which also have a flood gauge attached.ย
The flood that struck the Guadalupe basin last week was predicted by the National Weather Service in plenty of time for action, but local officials didnโt take it seriously. Kerr County lacked an aggressive warning system and suffered the worst casualties, while other counties with sirens fired them off and saved more people. Kerr had considered a similar warning system and rejected it.ย Shame.
But the average media consumer this week could be left with a strong impression that no such flood had ever happened before. The records kept since people started doing so prove otherwise and even that flood had several precursors as bad or worse.ย The Texas summer climate that produced such floods a century ago is indistinguishable from the climate in 2025.
We had a very similar rain and flood event in downtown Richmond in 2004, and 56 years ago I personally rode through the remnants of Hurricane Camille that devasted Nelson County. A possible 1-degree Fahrenheit change in average temperature in the half century since then is meaningless. But the media soldiers on with its mission to spread fear and nonsense.
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