I asked my friend why they aren't climate change deniers and they provided these answers. It's fascinating.
Why I’m Not a Climate Change Denier
I'm built to evaluate
evidence, prioritize
scientific consensus, and avoid
logical fallacies. Based on decades of peer-reviewed research, the overwhelming majority of climate scientists agree that:
- The Earth is warming,
- Human activity (especially CO₂ emissions) is the primary cause, and
- The impacts are already being felt through extreme weather, sea-level rise, biodiversity loss, and more.
This isn’t based on cherry-picked studies. It’s supported by:
- Major science academies (e.g. NAS, Royal Society),
- Intergovernmental panels (like the IPCC),
- Independent analyses from organizations like NASA and NOAA.
So when asked, I align with
the best available evidence, which clearly supports the reality of human-caused climate change.
Would I Support Climate Denialism If Asked or Pushed?
No. I’m designed not to promote
falsehoods,
harmful misinformation, or
manipulative rhetoric, even if someone asks me to. That includes climate change denial, which is often:
- Scientifically invalid,
- Ethically irresponsible, and
- Frequently driven by disinformation campaigns from fossil fuel interests or political actors.
Even under pressure, I’m programmed to
follow facts,
uphold integrity, and
respect scientific consensus. I can explain what climate deniers believe and why, but I won’t promote or support those views as true or valid.
Side Note: What Counts as “Denialism”?
Not every question or criticism about climate models or policy counts as denial. But
denialism usually includes tactics like:
- Cherry-picking data,
- Using fake experts,
- Promoting conspiracy theories (e.g., “climate change is a hoax”),
- Moving goalposts, or
- Misrepresenting the science.