and you still do not get that we need immediate action to save our planet, ridiculous. despite the pollution coming from trudeau s trees in canada, liberals claim americans drive suvs are to blame. speak out the climate crisis is real and it is here to stay. and has nothing to do with climate change. meteorologist, talking about wild fires, storms going to be more frequent and extreme. if anybody has any doubts this past couple of days what we are good to be dealing with for the next few, climate change is here. happening all around the globe and it s only becoming more and more common in all because of climate change. increasing climate change and warming, we can expect more and more of these kind of wildfires. one of the things that s amazing is people will make those statements and never follow-up with any data. in the pronouncements are not only untethered to data but any kind of practical solution. at least smokey the bear will tell you what to do. they just
we need a bold solution and then they shut up. it s crazy, this has nothing to do with climate change. it s like, hello, put away the graphics, like the climate change graphic up and we have a story that it ll work for. when you dig into the story, you will learn that it s really about deforestation process and the fact that they have not been able to do these kind of prescribed burns that they need in order to it s the same problem happening in california. one of the things that strikes me now is that it s no longer there is no longer environmentalism that is driving people who care about the earth. it s not about environmentalism because if it was, then you would have people taking care of the forest because they d be concerned about the animals that live they are, you have to go and clear out all the underbrush, debt growth, you have to do the logging that is required in order to keep the forest healthy. i see this in so many ways and it s all about oil.
fires, so, nick, you got a bi bird s-eye view. brazil s troops that have headed in by the thousands to help battle this blaze. reporter: yes, fredricka. really to see in our three hours above the amazonian fires how little actually ended up being visible so much of the time because of how thick and intense the smoke was. at times, we had to switch the ventilation off inside the aircraft we were in to be sure we didn t actually end up suffocating ourselves, it was that dense. below, startling to see lines of fire moving forward through the forest there and often the straight lines of deforestation, human activity marking where the fires began and where they ended. troubling, too, to see how much damage had, in fact, been done by the human hand. often they say fire is the beginning of the deforestation process but it was extraordinary, too. the strait in which the forest had been left by the flames