Remember When We Used to Care About Climate Change?
The Crisis Presidency has managed to shove climate change off our radar
“The situation is so frightening it’s hard to describe. Smoke has covered the entire city. I have severe shortness of breath and burning in my eyes and throat, and many others feel the same. But people still have to go outside because they have no choice. Many places reopened today, but closed again because it’s impossible to stay outdoors.”
That’s an Iranian citizen describing what happened after U.S. and Israeli missile strikes on oil depots in Iran. Israel bombed fuel depots in Tehran, causing fires that burned for hours. Tehran, a city of 10 million people, found itself plummeted in darkness from black clouds of soot.1
Then, an apocalyptic black rain full of toxic fuel compounds fell to the earth and covered the city in a form of black, sooty paint filled with nasty hydrocarbons and sulfurs.2
According to the Guardian:3
Four oil depots and a petroleum logistics sites in and around Tehran were hit. Local authorities said six people were killed and 20 wounded at one of the sites.
This event occurred almost during the precise moment that the rampaging Christo-Nazi Pete Hegseth, responding to the fact that a U.S. Tomahawk missile killed as many as 200 children, claimed that only Iranians target civilians.
Many folks are calling this attack a war crime, one that used chemical warfare under the guise of whatever Trump’s excuse for the day is (these excuses change hourly because his mind is an unyielding fireworks display of shattered neurons).4
For Israel, the Tehran bombings on civilian infrastructure were just another Tuesday. Emeritus Professor Paul Rogers from the University of Bradford, in the UK, says Israel’s aerial assault on Gaza amounted to the “equivalent of six Hiroshimas.”5
“Back in the Cold War days, we used to say a kiloton is equivalent to a thousand tons of TNT. We are now using explosives that are much more powerful than TNT.
But if we do use that figure – 70 kilotons of weapons dropped across Gaza – Hiroshima was about 12 kilotons, so we are talking about the equivalent of six Hiroshimas... but because these bombs drop individually, they are spread much more, so you get an extraordinary level of devastation. It’s certainly more than Dresden, certainly more than the other 2,000 bomber raids in the Second World War.
“This is about as bad as it [gets] outside the Second World War. Very few people realise just how intense this has been, and how continual. We’ve not seen much of it on the television here, compared to channels in the Middle East, which means right across the Arab world, the degree of anger – and, I have to say, hatred - of what is happening, is palpable.”
Now, this firepower is being unleashed on Iran.
The stricken Iranian citizen continued her description of the black rain:
“Even masks are becoming difficult to find. This is a huge mistake. I ask those who have the ability, especially foreign media, to reflect on this situation. What are people supposed to do under these conditions? This is truly a crime against humanity.
This is no longer just a human rights violation. It is truly anti-human behaviour. If someone has a problem with the Islamic Republic government, that is one thing – but not with us, the people. You cannot attack water systems or refineries. Most of Tehran’s water comes from dams. If those become polluted, what happens then? The government has basically left people on their own.”
If you’re adept at reading between the lines, here’s what I believe you can take from this: “We actually wouldn’t mind if Western nations took out this horrible regime, but this is not the way to do it. You don’t do it by killing us, too. We’ve suffered enough.”
Americans, however, apparently have NOT suffered enough
In September 2024, I was freaked out by numbers. These numbers were from presidential election polls. They showed a dead heat between Kamala Harris, a normal person, and Donald Trump, an abnormal psychotic whose policies directly led to a million American deaths:
The post bounced around just a tad in our echo chamber, like most of our anti-Trump screeds, then died. Then 78 million Americans voted for the psycho.
When they did this, they knew who they were voting for. If they claim they didn’t, they are lying. None of what he is doing is a surprise to anyone paying attention to his first four years, and anyone who wasn’t paying attention must have missed the pandemic. He tortured Americans with his psychosis every morning with a new, insane social media post.
His behavior patterns are the same now as they were during Mad Clown 1.0. The only difference is that, this time, he hired Susie Wiles, his chief of staff, to help fill the Cabinet with more yes men and women than in his first term. That’s it. That’s the only difference between the two installments of Mad King Donald.
This time, he has full compliance from a cowardly, traitorous Republican Congress, with not a small assist from mealy-mouthed Democrats who mostly issue strongly worded memos while claiming outrage as they rack up PAC funds and send you emails begging for five, twenty, or a hundred dollars.
The lethal attacks on Tehran’s atmosphere are just one of a million other crises the lunatic has created.
And all these distractions have created the ultimate distraction: our concerns about climate change have mostly been removed from public discourse.
The pace of global warming has doubled since the 1970s
Right around the time Israel and the U.S. rained oil on Tehran’s 10 million residents, Nature Magazine reported that the rate of climate warming has doubled since the 1970s.6

The last three years were the hottest on record. During the last decade, worldwide temperatures have risen 0.35 ºC, double the rate from the 1970s, when environmentalists first began making enough noise about global warming to be heard.
The research was published in a peer-reviewed article in Geophysical Research Letters.7
This being a peer-reviewed research study means that it will be rejected out of hand by the regime that is currently raining toxic black soot on Iran.
At a minimum, were they to bother with such a study (they won’t), they’d barf out something about El Niño or some such. But the study accounts for that:
The analysis removes the impact of the powerful El Niño weather phenomenon that contributed to record-high global temperatures in 2023 and 2024. Even with that subtracted from the data, the acceleration of warming is clear, Rahmstorf says. Their research took five of the most widely used global temperature data sets into consideration, including one produced by NASA (see ‘Rate hike’).
Ruh-roh, did you say, “NASA?”
“Cut NASA climate funding!!!” the troglodytes will scream in reply.
By 2030, the planet is on track to breach — and stay above — the threshold of the 2015 Paris agreement: 1.5 ºC above pre-industrial levels.
“Fire the scientists!”
The Paris agreement established a threshold that, if met, might only prevent an extinction-level event. It won’t prevent massive displacement and pain.
Some climate scientists disagree with the high numbers in this study, but they all agree that the rate of climate warming is accelerating at an unsustainable pace, with the rate of change anywhere from 0.20 to 0.30 C per decade. No climate scientist believes that the earth will escape damage, partly because the damage has already begun in earnest.
World Weather Attribution, an international research group, has reported that millions of global climate refugees were created by climate-related weather events in 2025.
(See the footnotes for some details and links describing events over the last decade that can be attributed to climate change.8)
Back we go to the Iran War
Now, let’s head back to Iran. The Iranians have shut off the Strait of Hormuz. Trump and Hegseth will blather something about U.S. Navy ships escorting oil tankers that need to squeeze through the Strait at its narrowest width of 20-30 miles, but that’s laughable under today’s drone-infested skies.
A massive U.S. Navy gunship is no match for a swarm of Costco drones, much less those perfected by an Iranian military that has been cranking out drones for the Russians for several years. The drones won’t target the U.S. Navy ship. They’ll target the tankers. Fifty of those drones might fail to get through. The fifty-first will obliterate the tanker and unleash plumes of black smoke into the atmosphere.
Most oil exporters will either quit trying to slip their tankers through the Strait (most already have) or try to take a longer route. Either way, farmers waiting for the fertilizer that comes from Middle East refineries will miss their shipments.
American farmers (and foodies) will suffer plenty, but many of them will figure something else out. But worldwide, we’ll see farmers in poorer countries watch their fields dry up and become victimized by the droughts and hurricanes that are already increasing in ferocity.
We can pretend climate change isn’t happening, but that won’t stop Greenland from melting enough to expose its rare earths or Siberia from melting enough to release new clouds of methane gas into the air. It won’t stop the Antarctic glaciers from disappearing into the ocean, or the Arctic Ocean from becoming navigable 365 days a year. It won’t stop wildfires from consuming homes and choking people with their soot, or hurricanes and tornadoes from increasing their power and taste for human fatalities.
Meanwhile, in a worst-case Iran scenario, entire agricultural regions in places like India, Pakistan, Bangladesh, and Asia will be completely wiped out, replaced by the loose soil of abandoned farmland.
And if Trump is good at anything at all, it’s worst-case scenarios.
Thanks for reading! Don’t forget to check out the footnotes!
Footnotes
Parent, Deepa. “‘Dark, like Our Future’: Iranians Describe Scenes of Catastrophe after Tehran’s Oil Depots Bombed.” the Guardian. The Guardian, March 8, 2026. https://www.theguardian.com/world/2026/mar/08/dark-like-our-future-iranians-describe-scenes-of-catastrophe-after-tehrans-oil-depots-bombed.
Democracy Now. “Toxic Black Raindrops Fall on Tehran Following U.S.-Israeli Attacks on Fuel Depots.” Democracy Now!, March 9, 2026. https://www.democracynow.org/2026/3/9/headlines/toxic_black_raindrops_fall_on_tehran_following_us_israeli_attacks_on_fuel_depots.
The Guardian, ibid
I know. I didn’t realize that neurons could shatter, either. You can count on Ruminato’s crack (addicted?) scientific team to make discoveries like this, which is yet another reason you should consider becoming a paid subscriber.
Bradford, University of. “Gaza Bombing ‘Equivalent to Six Hiroshimas’ Says Bradford World Affairs Expert.” University of Bradford, April 16, 2025. https://www.bradford.ac.uk/news/archive/2025/gaza-bombing-equivalent-to-six-hiroshimas-says-bradford-world-affairs-expert.php.
Witze, A. (2026). Climate change is speeding up — The pace nearly doubled in ten years. https://doi.org/10.1038/d41586-026-00745-z
World weather events affected by climate change over years, according to the Research Group, World Weather Attribution:
https://www.worldweatherattribution.org/by-year/
2026
12 Mar 26 – Unplanned urbanisation fuels landslide disasters amid emerging rainfall trends
26 Feb 26 – Increasingly severe rainstorms put people and structures built on floodplains at risk
11 Feb 26 – Climate change fuels the destruction of world’s oldest trees
22 Jan 26 – Climate change eclipses La Niña cooling in Australia to drive extreme heatwave and heightened fire risk
2025
29 Dec 25 – Unequal evidence and impacts, limits to adaptation: Extreme Weather in 2025
16 Oct 25 – Ten Years of the Paris Agreement: The Present and Future of Extreme Heat
04 Sep 25 – Extreme fire weather conditions in Spain and Portugal now common due to climate change
14 Aug 25 – Intense two-week heatwave in Fennoscandia hotter and more likely due to climate change
20 Jun 25 – Climate change turns warm summer days in England into health threat
04 Jun 25 – Mixed rainfall trends highlight the importance of climate adaptation in coastal New South Wales
30 May 25 – Heat Action Day Report: Climate Change and the Escalation of Global Extreme Heat
30 Apr 25 – Climate change made weather conditions leading to deadly South Korean wildfires about twice as likely
04 Apr 25 – Extraordinary March heatwave in Central Asia up to 10 °C hotter in a warming climate
13 Mar 25 – Increasing extreme rainfall and rapid urbanisation, major drivers behind Gaborone’s deadly floods
28 Jan 25 – Climate change increased the likelihood of wildfire disaster in highly exposed Los Angeles area
2024
27 Dec 24 – When Risks Become Reality: Extreme Weather In 2024
04 Nov 24 – Extreme downpours increasing in southeastern Spain as fossil fuel emissions heat the climate
31 Oct 24 – 10 years of rapidly disentangling drivers of extreme weather disasters
30 Oct 24 – Can we come up with a meaningful number?
16 Oct 24 – Rapid urbanisation and climate change key drivers of dramatic flood impacts in Nepal
11 Oct 24 – Yet another hurricane wetter, windier and more destructive because of climate change
04 Sep 24 – Climate change key driver of extreme drought in water scarce Sicily and Sardinia
31 Jul 24 – Deadly Mediterranean heatwave would not have occurred without human induced climate change
20 Jun 24 – Extreme heat killing more than 100 people in Mexico hotter and much more likely due to climate change
03 Jun 24 – Climate change, El Niño and infrastructure failures behind massive floods in southern Brazil
28 May 24 – Heat Action Day Report: Climate change and the escalation of global extreme heat
23 May 24 – Urban planning at the heart of increasingly severe East African flood impacts in a warming world
01 May 24 – Low water levels in Panama Canal due to increasing demand exacerbated by El Niño event
18 Apr 24 – El Niño key driver of drought in highly vulnerable Southern African countries
21 Mar 24 – Dangerous humid heat in southern West Africa about 4°C hotter due to climate change
30 Jan 24 – Climate change increased heavy precipitation associated with impactful Storm Bettina over Black Sea
24 Jan 24 – Climate change, not El Niño, main driver of exceptional drought in highly vulnerable Amazon River Basin
2023
22 Dec 23 – Climate change fuelled extreme weather in 2023; expect more records in 2024
10 Oct 23 – Strong influence of climate change in uncharacteristic early spring heat in South America
22 Aug 23 – Climate change more than doubled the likelihood of extreme fire weather conditions in Eastern Canada
25 Jul 23 – Extreme heat in North America, Europe and China in July 2023 made much more likely by climate change
31 May 23 – Limited net role for climate change in heavy spring rainfall in Emilia-Romagna
05 May 23 – Extreme April heat in Spain, Portugal, Morocco & Algeria almost impossible without climate change
27 Apr 23 – Human-induced climate change increased drought severity in Horn of Africa
16 Feb 23 – Vulnerability and high temperatures exacerbate impacts of ongoing drought in Central South America
2022
21 Dec 22 – Climate change made record breaking early season heat in Argentina and Paraguay about 60 times more likely
16 Nov 22 – Food crisis in Central Sahel in 2022 driven by chronic vulnerability with uncertain role of climate change
12 Oct 22 – Twelve months – WWA without Geert Jan
05 Oct 22 – High temperatures exacerbated by climate change made 2022 Northern Hemisphere droughts more likely
14 Sep 22 – Climate change likely increased extreme monsoon rainfall, flooding highly vulnerable communities in Pakistan
28 Jul 22 – Without human-caused climate change temperatures of 40°C in the UK would have been extremely unlikely
04 Jul 22 – Climate change increased heavy rainfall, hitting vulnerable communities in Eastern Northeast Brazil
23 May 22 – Climate Change made devastating early heat in India and Pakistan 30 times more likely
18 May 22 – Climate change added $4bn to damage of Japan’s Typhoon Hagibis
13 May 22 – Climate change-exacerbated rainfall causing devastating flooding in Eastern South Africa
2021
16 Dec 21 – Limited role of climate change in October 2020 Vietnam flooding
01 Dec 21 – Factors other than climate change are the main drivers of recent food insecurity in Southern Madagascar
14 Oct 21 – Geert Jan van Oldenborgh, 1961–2021
23 Aug 21 – Heavy rainfall which led to severe flooding in Western Europe made more likely by climate change
07 Jul 21 – Western North American extreme heat virtually impossible without human-caused climate change
15 Jun 21 – Human-caused climate change increased the likelihood of early growing period frost in France
13 May 21 – Pathways and Pitfalls in extreme event attribution
2020
15 Jul 20 – Siberian heatwave of 2020 almost impossible without climate change
10 Jan 20 – Attribution of the Australian bushfire risk to anthropogenic climate change
2019
27 Sep 19 – Rapid attribution of the extreme rainfall in Texas from Tropical Storm Imelda
02 Aug 19 – Human contribution to the record-breaking July 2019 heatwave in Western Europe
02 Jul 19 – Human contribution to record-breaking June 2019 heatwave in France
20 May 19 – A limited role for unforced internal variability in 20th century warming
15 Mar 19 – The August 2017 Bangladesh floods
2018
14 Sep 18 – Super Typhoon Mangkhut heading for the Philippines
13 Sep 18 – Hurricane Florence, September 2018
24 Aug 18 – Exceptionally high monsoon rainfall in Kerala, 2018
28 Jul 18 – Heatwave in northern Europe, summer 2018
17 Jul 18 – Extreme rainfall in Japan, 2018 – a quick look
13 Jul 18 – Likelihood of Cape Town water crisis tripled by climate change
25 Jun 18 – Devastating rains in Kenya, 2018
16 Mar 18 – Stormy January over western Europe, 2018
28 Feb 18 – Trends in weather extremes
29 Jan 18 – A cold winter in North America, December 2017 to January 2018
2017
15 Dec 17 – UK Storm Desmond revisited, December 2017
02 Nov 17 – Assigning historical responsibilities for extreme weather events
27 Sep 17 – Euro-Mediterranean heat, summer 2017
31 Aug 17 – Climate change fingerprints confirmed in Hurricane Harvey’s rainfall, August 2017
29 Jun 17 – Record June temperatures in western Europe
30 Mar 17 – Rapid analysis of drought in Somalia, 2016
23 Mar 17 – Severe drought in Kenya, 2016–17
08 Mar 17 – Warm Februaries becoming much more common in the US
21 Feb 17 – Extreme heat in southeast Australia, February 2017
12 Jan 17 – Extreme cold in south east Europe, 2017
2016
21 Dec 16 – Unusually high temperatures at the North Pole, winter 2016
08 Dec 16 – Deep freeze in the US, December 2016
14 Aug 16 – Downpours in Louisiana, August 2016
09 Jun 16 – Rainstorms in France and Germany, May 2016
01 Jun 16 – Record high temperatures in India, 2016
18 Mar 16 – Great Barrier reef bleaching, 2016
2015
16 Dec 15 – Storm Desmond brings heavy rain to the UK, December 2015
01 Dec 15 – Chennai floods, December 2015
24 Nov 15 – 2015 – a record breaking hot year
10 Sep 15 – Main drivers of drought in south east Brazil, 2014–15
24 Jul 15 – Ethiopia drought, 2015 – a livelihood crisis
10 Jul 15 – European heatwave, July 2015




Am a boomer who has never been able to drive, spent all my time outside all seasons, saw climate change with my own eyes by late 90's in Midwest garden; Pacific Northwest mtns. I saw as child totally white w/glaciers, piles of rock by 2010. Jimmy Carter gave everyone in this country big ⚠️⚠️⚠️, got vilified and ignored after Raygun cheated in election...Al Gore also vilified and ignored...u. s. population complacent and willing to believe endless ",we're #1, rah-rah b.s.", until exactly 💯 we are no longer #1, we are in serious trouble
Bravo. You expressed our predicament masterfully. Thank you.