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

