I can’t remember ever seeing any paid tweet from any Skeptic or Skeptic group in all my years on Twitter, but, good news, they’re going to solve this non-existent danger!
Twitter bans ‘misleading’ ads about climate change
Twitter levied a new ban today on “misleading” advertisements “that contradict the scientific consensus on climate change.”
“We believe that climate denialism shouldn’t be monetized on Twitter, and that misrepresentative ads shouldn’t detract from important conversations about the climate crisis,” the company said in a blog post today.
Its decisions about what’s legit content in regard to climate change will be guided by “authoritative sources,” it says, including the United Nations Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC). The IPCC has published a couple of landmark reports on the crisis over the past few months that break down what needs to be done to adapt to the changes that are already unfolding as well as how to avert even more severe consequences in the future, like intensifying weather disasters and ferocious wildfire seasons.
Twitter also said that it will soon share more details about how it plans to “add reliable, authoritative context” about climate change on its platform. Those conversations have gotten much louder over the past year, according to the company. Talk about “sustainability” on the platform has grown by over 150 percent since 2021, Twitter says. Discussions on “decarbonization,” aka getting rid of greenhouse gas emissions that come from burning fossil fuels, are also up 50 percent. Other environmental conversations are heating up, too. Chatter about reducing waste grew by more than 100 percent over the same time period.
See, this is how science works: no one is allowed to question Authority. Ever. No one is allowed to offer different viewpoints, facts, figures. The Cult cannot stand up to scrutiny.
And you know that they next thing will be to ban all those who tweet in opposition to the climate cult’s beliefs.
(Credit Angel) Raffi Krikorian, a developer at Twitter once stated that each tweet consumes around 90 joules, equalling 0.02g of CO2 emissions. Hardly anything right? Correct, however there are approximately 8,000 tweets written and published every single second.
That works out to a carbon footprint of 5.046 billion grams per year. That’s 5,045.76 metric tons per year. The average American’s carbon footprint is 16 metric tons per year, the equivalent of 3,334 diesel cars. Further, that is a number from 2018, and people use a lot more GIFs, videos, and photos now.
Read: We’re Saved: Twitter To Ban ‘Climate Change’ Disinformation Tweets »