Although climate change will have serious consequences—particularly for people in the poorest countries—it will not lead to humanity’s demise,' the Microsoft co-founder says.
Paul Gigot hosts a panel on 'Journal Editorial Report' reacting to Bill Gates' recent changing in stance on climate change and how money spent to combat the perceived threat could be redistributed to ...
In the memo’s first page, Gates dismissed, in his words, the “doomsday view” that climate change would “decimate civilization” ...
His suggestion for a pivot away from emissions reduction and toward lessening human misery makes a kind of sense.
On Tuesday, as the strongest Atlantic storm in 90 years slammed the western coast of Jamaica with 185-mph winds, Bill Gates was downplaying climate change. In a lengthy blog post published on his ...
What Gates is putting forward aren’t legitimate arguments that can be made in good faith. They are shopworn fossil fuel ...
The science never said humanity was doomed. Now, apparently, you’re not obliged to believe it is.
A generation of Americans has grown up believing that climate change is an existential crisis that threatens human existence. Some young adults say they are hesitant to have children because of ...
"Climate change, disease, and poverty are all major problems," Gates wrote, adding, "we should deal with them in proportion ...
After 20 years positioning himself as a climate expert, Gates is now making straw man arguments and exposing the 'audacity' ...
Earlier this week, the Microsoft mogul released “Three Tough Truths About Climate,” a memo that marked a striking departure ...
Bill Gates argues that global efforts should prioritise fighting hunger and disease over strict climate targets, claiming ...