lili can i ask the rules here? it s best of five. tucker: incorrect answer puts you down a point. lili okay. tucker: anything can happen. it s a dynamic game and i wouldn t count your points until they are final lili okay. thank you, professor. tucker: another multiple choice, americans still thawing out from intense cold weather. one place in the united states was colder than the surface of the planet mars. was it a in the state of nebraska, flat and cold? b in new hampshire, mountainous and cold or c the northern most state of the east coast maine? leland vittert? i shouldn t have done that based on the rules but i m going with new hampshire. tucker: new hampshire is new hampshire the answer? mount washington, new hampshire, it s so cold they were blowing bubbles and they froze and you can see the guy actually holding those bubbles as if it was a baseball. it feels like minus 100. tied for the second coldest place there. this is the benefit of working on the weekends.
tucker: i don t laugh about narcolepsy. it s best-of-five, right? tucker: but an incorrect answer puts you down a point. anything can happen. i wouldn t count your points until they are final. thank you, professor. tucker: and other multiple-choice. americans are thawing out from intense cold weather. one place in the united states was colder than the surface of the planet mars. was it a, and nebraska? b, new hampshire? or c, the northernmost date on the east coast, maine? leland vittert. i shouldn t have done that based on the rules but i will go as new hampshire. tucker: new hampshire. okay. new hampshire. it is the answer?e, mount washington, new hampshire. it is so cold they were blowing bubbles and they frozen you could see the guy actually holding those bubbles as if it was a baseball. it feels like minus 100. the second coldest place here on
the bubbles as if it was a baseball, it feels like minus 100. just incredible temperatures, tied for second coldest place here on earth. here in the united states incredible temperatures right now, stay warm and stay safe, at least 22 people have died over the last week because of the cold temperatures, so last two weeks, kelly. kelly: i m looking at you but you re standing out there, i see people walking behind you, people in new york are very stout, they are braving the temperatures as yourself, personal question, what does it feel like for you personally? [laughter] you know what, i was in boston two or three days t coldest and new year s eve night was pretty bad. i lucked out this time because i can run into a building this time. it s pretty bad out here, more than ten minutes out here is not fun and here in new york people have no choice. they don t have cars, either you bought tickets to visit new york, you have to visit the
of this idea that, well, it s cold so, to your point it s cold so, therefore, it s not a serious issue. only 40% of people in the u.s. think that congress should be addressing this. and that s because certain conservative groups, especially from the fossil fuel industry, have been very successful in introducing the idea that scientific uncertainty, plus or minus 2%, is the same as plus or minus 100%. now where are we? we are the place for politics. you know, let me follow up on that. this leads to my next question. in president trump s tweet he brought up withdrawing from the paris agreement. just this week, ten more cities signed on to the chicago climate charter where cities pledged to stick to the guidelines of the agreement anyway. so can global warming be helped perhaps without the aid of the federal government? well, it would be better to have everybody working together, wouldn t it? but there s a lot of emphasis from conservatives on what are
two or three less. so the whole basis for the alarmism is not true. it s based on flawed computer modelling. that s completely wrong. and you don t vote on that. say what you will, but you have it absolutely wrong. what happened to that heat, he s cherry picking a certain model. the heat ended up in the ocean. this is not controversial in mainstream science, everybody. so let s really i encourage everyone to look at the facts. we ve got an extraordinary situation here in the united states where climate change deniers have managed to introduce the idea that some uncertainty, say 2%, plus or minus 2%, that the temperature of the ocean is somehow equivalent to plus or minus 100%. everybody, science is political. we use politics to decide where to invest our intellect and