CNN Anchor Asks With a Straight Face If Global Warming Is to Blame for Asteroid
“A 150-foot-wide asteroid will come
remarkably close to Earth next week, even closer than high-flying
communication and weather satellites,” The Associated Press reported earlier this week. “It will be the nearest known flyby for an object of this size.”
And for those of you who want to know
more about this floating “megarock,” dubbed “2012 DA14,” CNN’s Deb
Feyerick has got you covered. Indeed, she was there on Saturday to ask
the tough questions: Did global warming cause this asteroid?
Yup.
“Every time we see a storm like this
lately, the first question to pop into a lot of people’s minds is
whether or not global warming is to blame?” Feyerick said, referring to
snowstorm Nemo.
“I’ll talk to Bill Nye, ‘the science guy,’ about devastating storms and climate change,” she added.
After going to a quick commercial
break, the CNN anchor jumped right into discussing climate change and
“2012 DA14″ with Nye: “Talk about something else that’s falling from the
sky and that is an asteroid. What’s coming our way? Is this an effect
of, perhaps, of global warming or is this just some meteoric occasion?”
Oddly enough, Nye — who has made it his mission to challenge what calls scientifically inaccurate claims — didn’t see fit to inform Feyerick that the asteroid has been around for a lot longer than carbon-emitting SUVs and jets.
Maybe he was at a loss for word.
Oh, and in case you were wondering,
scientists say the rock “will be at least 17,100 miles away when it zips
past next Friday,” the AP notes. So no need to worry.
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