Friday, April 17, 2026

Dear Daily Disaster Diary, April 18 2026


 




Heat Kills! – Part IV: The Lie of “It’s Just Weather”


By now, you’ve seen the headlines: record-breaking heat in the U.S.

Wrong framing. Wrong language. Wrong level of panic.

What just happened wasn’t “record-breaking.” It was record-shattering—and if that distinction doesn’t scare you, it means you still don’t understand what’s coming.

Let’s fix that.


You Can’t See a Heat Wave — That’s Why It’s Winning

A hurricane announces itself. A wildfire glows on the horizon. A flood drowns cities in plain sight.

Heat? Heat is a silent executioner.

No visuals. No cinematic destruction. Just bodies failing quietly in apartments, crops collapsing invisibly in fields, and ecosystems drying out before anyone points a camera at them.

We package it with beach photos and ice cream B-roll like it’s summer nostalgia. Meanwhile, it’s the deadliest climate disaster on Earth.

And we keep underreacting.


“Record-Breaking” Is Normal. “Record-Shattering” Is Not.

Here’s the truth most media outlets either don’t understand or are too timid to say clearly:

  • Record-breaking heat = expected statistical drift
  • Record-shattering heat = system failure

When temperatures exceed past records by fractions, that’s variability.

When they smash records by multiple degrees across massive regions, that’s not weather anymore.

That’s a rewired atmosphere.

It’s the difference between:

  • Throwing a javelin farther than before
  • Throwing it so far it lands in the crowd

The March U.S. heat wave didn’t nudge the scale. It blew past it:

  • Hottest March temperatures ever recorded
  • Over 1,500 records broken
  • Entire regions behaving like a different climate zone

If you’re still calling that “unusual weather,” you’re lying to yourself.


Canada: Stop Pretending You’re Safe

If you’re reading this in Canada, especially in places like Toronto or Vancouver, there’s a dangerous psychological trap:

“That’s happening in the U.S., not here.”

We already ran that experiment.

In June 2021, the 2021 Western North America heat wave killed hundreds and erased the town of Lytton, British Columbia in a single day.

That wasn’t supposed to happen here.

And now? It’s happening again, just slightly to the south.

Climate change doesn’t respect borders. It doesn’t carry a passport. It doesn’t care about your national optimism.

It’s already inside your weather system.


Heat Doesn’t Just Burn — It Rewrites Water

If you want to see heat, don’t look at thermometers.

Look at water.

Heat waves are predators that attack water in all its forms:

  • Snowpack → melts too early
  • Soil moisture → evaporates faster
  • Plants → sweat themselves dry
  • Storms → get rerouted and intensified

Take the Colorado River Basin:

  • Already low snowpack
  • Then extreme heat hits
  • Snow melts prematurely
  • Water vanishes before summer even begins

That’s not just a bad season. That’s structural dehydration of a continent.

And then comes the irony:

While some regions dry out, others flood—because heat warps atmospheric circulation, sending storms crashing into places like British Columbia.

Flood and drought. At the same time. On the same continent.


This Is the Part We’re Not Saying Out Loud

Let’s drop the polite tone for a second.

This isn’t just “concerning.”
It’s not just “a wake-up call.”
It’s not “something we need to monitor.”

It’s a civilizational stress test—and we are failing it in slow motion.

Because here’s the uncomfortable reality:

  • Our infrastructure was built for a climate that no longer exists
  • Our agriculture depends on water cycles that are breaking down
  • Our cities trap heat and amplify death
  • Our politics moves slower than the temperature rise

And worst of all?

We are still debating whether this is serious enough.


The Psychological Collapse Is Already Underway

The most honest line in this entire discussion isn’t scientific—it’s existential:

How am I supposed to survive the next few decades on this planet?

That question isn’t fringe anymore. It’s becoming mainstream.

Quietly, people are realizing:

  • This isn’t a future problem
  • This isn’t a distant threat
  • This isn’t once-in-a-lifetime

This is the baseline shifting beneath our feet


“It Was a One-Off” — The Most Dangerous Lie

After 2021, many Canadians told themselves:

That was a freak event.

Now we’re watching similar patterns repeat.

Let’s be brutally clear:

There are no more “one-offs” in a destabilized climate.

There are only:

  • early warnings
  • and missed warnings

Heat Kills. But First, It Normalizes Itself.

That’s how this ends if we let it:

Not with one dramatic collapse—but with gradual acceptance of the unacceptable.

  • More “unusual” heat
  • More “unexpected” deaths
  • More “unprecedented” events
  • Until unprecedented becomes routine

And by then?

It’s too late to argue about semantics.


Final Word: Look Directly at It

No more looking away.

No more soft language.
No more pretending geography will save you.
No more calling systemic breakdown “weather.”

The heat didn’t go away after 2021.

It stayed.

It moved.

It grew teeth.

And now it’s circling back.

Be honest enough to face it.


yours truly,

Adaptation-Guide

Thursday, April 16, 2026

Dear Daily Disaster Diary, April 17 2026

 “No nation has ever been bombed into freedom—only into silence, rubble, and a deeper understanding of who its enemies are.”

-adaptationguide.com


Bombing People Into Freedom Is a Lie We Keep Telling Ourselves


There’s a fantasy that refuses to die.

Drop enough bombs. Break enough cities. Shatter enough lives.
And somehow—miraculously—freedom will rise from the rubble.

It didn’t work a century ago. It didn’t work in the last war. It didn’t work in the last decade.

And it won’t work now.

The Original Sin: The Myth of Strategic Bombing

The idea goes back to interwar theorists who believed civilians were the “weak link.” Break them, and governments collapse.

Then came World War II—the ultimate stress test of that theory.

Cities burned. Civilians died by the hundreds of thousands. Entire urban landscapes in Germany and Japan were reduced to ash.

And yet—no mass civilian uprising toppled those regimes.

Not in Berlin.
Not in Tokyo.

Even under relentless destruction, societies didn’t fracture the way strategists predicted. They hardened.

The Blitz Didn’t Break London—It Forged It

During The Blitz, Nazi Germany tried to terrorize Britain into submission.

Instead, Londoners adapted.

They slept in subway tunnels. They joked through air raids. They showed up to work the next morning.

The phrase “London can take it” wasn’t propaganda—it was reality.

Because here’s the uncomfortable truth:

People under attack don’t suddenly become revolutionaries. They become survivors.

Vietnam, Laos, Cambodia: Bombed Into… Nothing

Fast forward.

The United States drops more bombs on Southeast Asia than were used in all of World War II.

That includes the Vietnam War, plus the secret bombings of Laos and Cambodia.

Outcome?

No uprising.
No democratic awakening.
No regime collapse caused by civilian pressure.

Just devastation—and in many cases, stronger resolve against the attacker.

Berlin’s Ruins—and Human Nature

By 1944, Berlin was being flattened day and night.

Yet people still went to concerts. The Berlin Philharmonic played in bombed-out halls.

Why?

Because humans don’t respond to annihilation with political clarity.

They respond with:

  • Survival instincts
  • Community bonding
  • Emotional defiance

Not revolution.

Even when people hate their government—as many Germans did by the end of the war—they don’t rise up while bombs are falling.

They board up windows. They find food. They try not to die.

Let’s Talk About Iran—Without the Fantasy

Today, many outsiders assume that bombing Iran might “trigger” internal revolt against the Islamic Republic.

This ignores everything history screams at us.

Yes—many Iranians oppose their regime. That’s undeniable.

But drop missiles on their cities?

You don’t create a revolution. You create:

  • Chaos
  • Fear
  • Dependency on the very state you want overthrown

Because when everything collapses, the regime becomes the only structure left—for food, for order, for survival.

You don’t weaken it.

You entrench it.

The Iraq Illusion Still Haunts Us

Remember the logic behind the Iraq War?

“We’ll remove the regime, and democracy will follow.”

Instead:

  • State collapse
  • Sectarian violence
  • Long-term instability

The comparison to postwar Germany and Japan was always dishonest.

Those countries didn’t democratize because they were bombed.

They democratized because:

  1. They were completely defeated
  2. Their regimes unconditionally surrendered
  3. Reconstruction was total, sustained, and externally enforced

And even then—it took years, massive resources, and unique historical conditions.

You cannot replicate that with airstrikes and wishful thinking.

Here’s the Brutal Reality

Bombing civilians does three things exceptionally well:

  1. Kills civilians
  2. Destroys infrastructure
  3. Creates long-term trauma

That’s it.

It does not:

  • Inspire democratic uprisings
  • Magically produce liberal institutions
  • Turn populations against their rulers in the middle of crisis

If anything, it often does the opposite.

Why This Lie Persists

Because it’s convenient.

It allows leaders to sell violence as liberation.

It turns destruction into a moral narrative:

“We’re not bombing you—we’re freeing you.”

But people on the ground don’t experience it that way.

They experience it as:

  • Explosions
  • Loss
  • Survival

Not enlightenment.

The Part No One Wants to Admit

If regime change were truly the goal, bombing would be the least efficient, most destructive path imaginable.

But regime change is often just the branding.

Power projection. Deterrence. Domestic politics. Strategic signaling—those are the real drivers.

The rhetoric of “freedom” is the packaging.

So Let’s Drop the Pretense

You cannot bomb people into democracy.

You cannot destroy a society and call it liberation.

And you definitely cannot expect civilians—hiding in basements, searching for food, burying their dead—to rise up and build a better system in the middle of hell.

History isn’t ambiguous on this.

It’s screaming.

We just keep choosing not to listen.


yours truly,

Adaptation-Guide

Wednesday, April 15, 2026

Dear Daily Disaster Diary, April 16 2026

 



War? What Is It Good For… Absolutely Nothing.


Let’s stop pretending.

War is not glory. It’s not strategy. It’s not even, most of the time, victory.
It’s failure—loud, expensive, televised failure.

And right now, watching the slow grind of escalation around Iran, even the most belligerent leaders are being forced to relearn something history has been screaming for centuries: you can start a war anytime you want—but you don’t get to decide how it ends.


The Lie of Control

Leaders love war in theory.

They imagine clean timelines, decisive strikes, and enemies who fold on cue. They picture something like World War II—a total war ending in unconditional surrender, parades, and rewritten maps.

But that kind of ending is the exception, not the rule.

Even in that war, unconditional surrender only came after cities were flattened, millions were dead, and entire nations ceased to function. It wasn’t a “win.” It was annihilation dressed up as resolution.

Most wars don’t end like that. They end like:

  • Vietnam War — tactical dominance, strategic failure
  • Iraq War — rapid victory, endless instability
  • War in Afghanistan — twenty years, then exit

You can win every battle and still lose the war.
That’s not a paradox—it’s the norm.


The Strait That Won’t Stay Open

Right now, the world is being reminded that chokepoints matter more than bombs.

The Strait of Hormuz is not just a shipping lane. It’s a pressure point on the entire global system.

You can bomb radar installations. You can destroy launch sites. You can flex air superiority.

And still—tankers don’t move.

Sound familiar?

It should. Because the Ho Chi Minh Trail wasn’t stopped either. Not by saturation bombing. Not by technological superiority. Not by confidence.

War doesn’t obey logic. It obeys friction.


Oil Is Power. Food Is Oil. War Is Hunger.

Let’s strip this down to something brutally simple:

  • Oil powers economies
  • Gas produces fertilizer
  • Fertilizer produces food

Break one link—and everything collapses.

The Haber-Bosch process is one of the most important—and least talked about—technologies on Earth. It turns natural gas into nitrogen fertilizer.

No gas? No fertilizer.
No fertilizer? No food.
No food? No stability.

So when conflict threatens energy flows through the Persian Gulf, it’s not just about gas prices.

It’s about whether entire regions can feed themselves.

War doesn’t just destroy cities.
It quietly starves them months later.


War Is Not Strategy

This is where most leaders—especially the loudest ones—get it wrong.

War is not a plan. It’s a tool.

As Carl von Clausewitz famously argued, war is politics by other means.

But here’s the part people conveniently forget:

If war starts as politics, it must end as politics.

Bombs don’t resolve disputes. They rearrange leverage.

Eventually, someone has to sit down and negotiate.

And here’s the uncomfortable truth:
If one side thinks it’s winning, it won’t negotiate.


The Myth of Strength

There’s another illusion cracking right now: that overwhelming military strength guarantees control.

It doesn’t.

Iran isn’t winning because it’s stronger in a conventional sense. It’s winning—if it is—because it’s playing a different game:

  • Asymmetric warfare
  • Cheap drones
  • Economic disruption instead of territorial conquest

Meanwhile, countries that assumed war was obsolete—like Canada—are waking up to a harsher reality.

Alliances like NATO were built on collective strength. But collective strength only works if everyone actually shows up prepared.

Right now? Many aren’t.


Leadership in the Age of Spectacle

Modern war has collided with something even more dangerous than bad strategy:

performative leadership.

When optics matter more than outcomes, you get:

  • Massive rescue operations turned into PR events
  • Threats designed for headlines, not results
  • Escalation driven by ego, not necessity

Even Winston Churchill, no stranger to war, understood this. After Dunkirk, he warned that evacuations are not victories.

Today, that lesson feels lost.


The Hard Truth Nobody Wants to Say

Here it is—the part that cuts through all the noise:

War doesn’t solve the problems it claims to solve.

It:

  • Deepens economic fragility
  • Destabilizes food systems
  • Entrenches political deadlock
  • Creates enemies faster than it eliminates them

And most importantly:

It almost never delivers the clean ending leaders promise at the beginning.


So What Is War Good For?

Absolutely nothing.

Not in the way it’s sold.
Not in the way it’s remembered.
Not in the way it actually unfolds.

War is what happens when imagination fails, when diplomacy collapses, and when leaders gamble with systems they don’t fully understand.

It is not strength.
It is not clarity.
It is not resolution.

It is the most expensive way humans have ever invented to admit:

“We couldn’t figure this out.”


yours truly,

Adaptation-Guide

Tuesday, April 14, 2026

Dear Daily Disaster Diary, April 15 2026

 “Pity the nation that no longer conquers enemies abroad because it has learned to conquer its own people at home—through courts bent into weapons, schools drained of thought, medicine priced as privilege, and nature stripped for profit—while the architects of decline grow fat on tax cuts and call the ruin ‘freedom.’ This is not a country in crisis; it is a country feeding on itself.”

-adaptationguide.com


The Day the Safe Haven Exploded: When Even the Rich Ran Out of Places to Hide

The day the promise imploded was February 28.

Debris from a downed drone slammed into Dubai’s crown jewel—the Burj al-Arab. Not metaphorically. Physically. Steel, fire, gravity. The kind of reality money isn’t supposed to touch.

And just like that, the illusion cracked.

Dubai—“the City of Gold”—stopped being a playground for the ultra-rich and started looking like what it always geographically was: a potential war zone wrapped in glass and luxury branding.

The fantasy died mid-air.

For years, Dubai sold itself as the Switzerland of the Middle East—just with better weather, lower taxes, and fewer moral questions. A frictionless paradise where wealth could sunbathe safely, far from the messy consequences that created it.

Turns out: missiles don’t care about tax regimes.


When the Apocalypse Comes, the Rich Rediscover Boredom

And so, like clockwork, the rich did what they always do in a crisis:

They ran somewhere quieter.

Phones started ringing in Zurich and Geneva. Bankers. Trustees. Relocation consultants. The people who specialize in moving money faster than refugees—but with better luggage.

Suddenly, Switzerland—the country once dismissed as too boring, too slow, too… beige—was sexy again.

Because in a world where two nuclear powers flirt with war and geopolitical chaos is basically a subscription service, boredom is the ultimate luxury.

Safety is the new yacht.


Meet the Refugees You’ll Never Feel Sorry For

Take Lapo Elkann, heir to the Fiat empire. He casually mentions in an interview that he moved his family from Lisbon to Lucerne.

Because, you know, things are “complicated.”

They brought the dog, Everest—a Saint Bernard—because nothing says existential dread like making sure the dog enjoys the garden while the world reorganizes itself into conflict zones.

Meanwhile, relocation experts report a surge in wealthy Americans and Gulf elites scrambling for Swiss property.

Luxury real estate? Gone.

Not because people suddenly discovered a love for fondue—but because fear finally caught up with the balance sheets.


The Selling Points of the End of the World

What convinces billionaires that Switzerland is worth it?

Not innovation. Not culture.

No—what seals the deal is:

  • Nuclear bunkers
  • Iodine tablets
  • Recycling rules

Read that again.

The global elite—people who can buy islands and influence governments—are comforted by the fact that Swiss municipalities hand out iodine pills in case of nuclear fallout.

That’s not stability.

That’s organized anxiety with good infrastructure.

And they love it.

Because it signals something they no longer trust anywhere else: competence.


Heidi Land, Now Accepting Billionaires Again

Switzerland still benefits from its most absurd branding success: the Heidi fantasy.

Rolling hills. Clean air. Children walking safely to school.

To outsiders, it looks like a fairy tale.

To insiders, it’s just Tuesday.

But in a collapsing world, even a cliché becomes a competitive advantage.

Because while the rest of the planet experiments with political chaos, Switzerland just… continues.

Slowly. Predictably. Almost offensively calm.


Even the Jet Set Is Getting Nervous

Then there’s Maria.

Early 30s. Ultra-wealthy background. Global lifestyle. The kind of person who treats cities like outfits—London for culture, Marbella for sun, Tokyo for stimulation.

She used to find Switzerland suffocating.

Too quiet. Too structured. Too… dead.

No chaos. No edge. No life.

Now?

She’s staying.

Because suddenly, the absence of chaos feels less like boredom and more like survival.

“I’ve started to like the dullness,” she admits.

That’s not a lifestyle shift.

That’s a psychological pivot from thrill-seeking to risk minimization.


A Country That Profits from Other People’s Disasters

This isn’t new.

Switzerland has been quietly benefiting from global instability for over a century.

World War I? Capital inflows.

World War II? Still standing. Still banking.

Cold War? Discreetly managing everyone’s money—including the kind no one wanted to talk about later.

Historian Jakob Tanner puts it bluntly: Switzerland’s identity is built on being spared.

Not heroic. Not revolutionary.

Just… untouched.

And in a world addicted to destruction, untouched becomes priceless.


The Business Model: Discretion, Denial, and Just Enough Reform

Let’s not romanticize this.

Switzerland’s rise wasn’t just about neutrality and stability. It was also about:

  • Banking secrecy (codified into law in 1934)
  • Low taxes
  • A willingness to look the other way

From Nazi gold to money laundering scandals, the country has repeatedly played host to wealth with questionable origins.

And every time it got caught?

It adapted—just enough to survive.

Never too much.

Because the goal was never morality.

It was continuity.


Dubai Was Winning—Until Reality Intervened

In recent years, Switzerland was losing its edge.

Dubai, the UAE, and other flashy financial hubs were pulling ahead:

  • Golden visas
  • Zero taxes
  • Maximum spectacle

Nearly 10,000 millionaires moved to the UAE in 2025 alone.

Because who wouldn’t choose a futuristic playground over a polite Alpine museum?

Well—until drones start falling out of the sky.


Now the Money Is Moving Again

And just like that, the tide is turning.

Wealth managers are already seeing massive transfers back into Switzerland.

Billions are expected to flow in over the coming months.

Not because Switzerland improved.

But because the rest of the world got worse.

This is the dirty secret of global finance:

Stability doesn’t need to be exciting. It just needs to outlast the chaos.


The Final Illusion Dies

For decades, the ultra-rich believed they had solved the ultimate problem:

That with enough money, they could buy safety anywhere.

Dubai. New Zealand. Private islands. Bunkers.

Pick your escape plan.

But now?

That illusion is collapsing.

Because war, instability, and systemic risk don’t respect wealth the way they used to.

You can diversify your portfolio.

You can’t fully diversify reality.


And So, They Choose… Switzerland

A place where nothing happens.

Where everything is regulated.

Where even the apocalypse comes with instructions and proper waste separation.

As Einstein supposedly said:

“In the event of a world ending, I would choose Switzerland. Everything happens a little later there.”

That’s not a compliment.

It’s a strategy.


The Punchline Nobody Wants to Admit

Here’s the uncomfortable truth:

We laugh at the rich scrambling for safety.

Their bunkers. Their relocations. Their paranoia.

But deep down?

Everyone wants what they’re chasing.

Stability. Security. Predictability.

The difference is:

They can still afford the illusion.

Most people can’t even afford the fear.


yous truly,

Adaptation-Guide

Monday, April 13, 2026

Dear Daily Disaster Diary, April 14 2026

 




More Bread, Less Games: The Climate Lie We’re Choosing to Believe

Let’s stop pretending this is just “another side of the debate.”

It isn’t.

When figures like Lee Zeldin stand in front of a room and applaud the idea that climate change is hysteria, this isn’t skepticism—it’s theater. Political theater. And like all theater, it has a purpose: distract, soothe, and keep the machine running.

Because that’s what this is really about.

Not truth. Not science. Not even ideology.

It’s about buying time.


What’s the Point?

If climate change is “a hoax,” then nobody has to do anything.

No restructuring of energy systems.
No accountability for oil giants.
No economic discomfort.
No sacrifice.

It’s the ultimate get-out-of-reality-free card.

Organizations like the Heartland Institute and the CO2 Coalition aren’t just arguing science—they’re offering emotional relief. A narrative where everything is fine, where the planet is “blessed,” where rising temperatures are just background noise.

That narrative is seductive. Of course it is.

Because the alternative demands something most people—and especially politicians—fear:

Change. Cost. Responsibility.


Short-Term Gains: The Real Currency

Let’s be brutally honest about what people gain in the short term by denying climate change:

  • Cheap energy stays cheap
    Fossil fuels remain the backbone. No expensive transition. No disruption.
  • Political popularity
    Tell people they don’t have to worry, and they’ll cheer. Fear is unpopular; comfort wins elections.
  • Corporate profit
    Oil, gas, and coal industries keep printing money without regulatory friction.
  • Personal convenience
    No lifestyle changes. No guilt. Keep driving, flying, consuming.

It’s a perfect system—if you only care about the next quarter, the next election, the next paycheck.


So… Are People Actually That Stupid?

No. That’s the uncomfortable truth.

This isn’t stupidity. It’s willful blindness.

People aren’t too dumb to understand climate science. They’re too invested not to reject it.

Because accepting reality means confronting a cascade of consequences:

  • The system we depend on is destabilizing the planet
  • The comfort we enjoy is built on long-term damage
  • The bill is coming—and it won’t be evenly distributed

So instead, we get denial. Minimization. Mockery.

“It’s not that bad.”
“It’s natural.”
“It’s too expensive to fix.”

These aren’t scientific positions. They’re psychological defenses.


Who Pays the Price?

Here’s where the mask comes off.

Because the cost of denial isn’t shared equally.

It never is.

  • The wealthy insulate themselves—literally and financially
  • The poor deal with rising food prices, extreme heat, flooding, displacement
  • The elderly die in heatwaves
  • The children inherit a less stable, more hostile world

So when people shrug and say, “It’s not an emergency,” what they’re really saying is:

“It’s not an emergency for me.”

That’s the quiet part no one wants to say out loud.


Do They Hate the Vulnerable?

Not explicitly.

That would be easier to confront.

What we’re seeing is something colder: indifference dressed up as skepticism.

Because if you truly understood the stakes—and accepted them—continuing down this path would be morally indefensible.

So instead, the stakes get downgraded.

Not urgent.
Not proven.
Not worth the cost.

And just like that, the moral burden disappears.


The Circus Continues

Meanwhile, we celebrate technological spectacle.

We send rockets looping around the Moon. Not landing—just circling. Symbolism over substance. A flex.

Programs like Artemis program capture global attention, billions spent to prove we can go further, higher, faster.

But here’s the uncomfortable question:

Why are we so obsessed with leaving Earth when we’re actively refusing to take care of it?

What’s the endgame?

A backup planet for the few?

Or just another distraction—another “game” to keep us from dealing with what’s right in front of us?


More Bread, Less Games

The Roman poet Juvenal warned about bread and circuses—keep people fed and entertained, and they won’t question power.

Today, we’ve flipped it:

We’re getting less bread—rising costs, strained systems, climate-driven instability—
and more games—political theater, denial conferences, culture wars masquerading as policy.

And people are still clapping.


The Uncomfortable Truth

Climate denial doesn’t need to convince everyone.

It just needs to delay action long enough.

Because every year of delay locks in more infrastructure, more emissions, more damage that can’t be undone.

That’s the strategy.

Not to win the argument.

To run out the clock.


So What Now?

You can dismiss this as alarmism.

You can laugh at “doom and gloom.”

You can applaud politicians who promise you nothing has to change.

But understand what you’re choosing:

Short-term comfort
in exchange for
long-term instability.

Convenience
in exchange for
consequences someone else will bear first.


And maybe that’s the real question underneath all of this:

Not “Is climate change real?”

But:

“How much future are we willing to burn to avoid discomfort today?”


yours truly,

Adaptation-Guide

Dear Daily Disaster Diary, April 18 2026

  Heat Kills! – Part IV: The Lie of “It’s Just Weather” By now, you’ve seen the headlines: record-breaking heat in the U.S. Wrong framing....