The climate PsyOp is replacing the covid PsyOp and we are entering a phase when global “boiling” replaces “warming” – with all the advantages that offers for those running the show. 

Last week, The New York Times declared that climate change is going to end summer vacations.  But it gets worse.  On Wednesday, the White House unveiled an “EMS HeatTracker” to track heat-related illnesses.

The Climate ‘Psychological Operation’ is Beginning

In an article titled ‘Is This the End of the Summer Vacation as We Know It?’, The New York Times wrote: “For decades, science has confirmed that unabated climate change will cause more misery, more hardship and cost millions of lives in the years to come … Our relationship to travel has reached a tipping point.”

On Fox News, Climate Depot publisher Marc Morano reacted to The New York Times’ article:

“This is the covid PsyOp is ending, in terms of all their restrictions, and the climate PsyOp is beginning.

“This is The New York Times signalling that the ruling class is telling us that vacations are now a thing of the past. They’re trying to set our mindset to give up on vacations. And they’re giving up our freedom of movement.

“What The New York Times is claiming is that somehow people have to stay home, and it is literally in the article, [suggesting] people need to huddle around their air conditioners at home because the weather is too extreme – because our previous travel has made the earth uninhabitable. This is insane, unscientific, silly.”

White House to Unveil a System for Tracking Heat-Related Illnesses

NBC News reported on Wednesday that the Biden administration plans to announce a new federal system to track heat-related illness nationwide.  Officials said the “EMS HeatTracker” will break down patient characteristics by age, race, gender and urbanicity so local officials can better understand which populations are most at-risk for heat-related illness or death.

The “EMS HeatTracker” is intended to help ensure sufficient medical aid gets to Americans who need it most during severe heat, officials said.

“Heat is no longer a silent killer. From coast-to-coast, communities are battling to keep people cool, safe and alive due to the growing impacts of the climate crisis,” Health and Human Services Secretary Xavier Becerra said in a statement.

Biden is under increasing pressure from lawmakers, local and state elected officials and Americans across the country to do more to address an extreme heat crisis that has defined the summer of 2023.

While the president hasn’t formally declared a climate emergency, he argued in a recent interview that his administration has “in practice.” “We already done that. Nationally, we’ve conserved more land. We’ve moved into rejoining the Paris Climate Accord. We passed a $360 billion climate control facility,” he said.White House to unveil a system for tracking heat-related illnesses nationwide, NBC News, 9 August 2023

The “EMS HeatTracker” has now been launched and is run by the Department of Health and Human Services in collaboration with the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration.