【Painful Man And Woman】
NASA scientists,Painful Man And Woman who once engineered spaceships that allowed humans to explore the dusty moon, have also provided evidence, for decades, that humans are unequivocally warming Earth.
This warming — ushered in by the highest atmospheric concentrations of heat-trapping carbon dioxide in at least 800,000 years, though more likely millions of years — has a slew of well-predicted and easily observable consequences.
Still, your uncle, friend, family member, or spouse may refute the reality of human-caused climate disruption. Or, they may argue, ostensibly with great wit, that it snowed recently or the climate has changed before during the planet's 4.5 billion-year-old history.
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Here are some constructive gift ideas for the climate-denier in your life who may have a misunderstanding about what human-caused climate change is, and isn't.
1. Rain Gauge

As the congressionally-mandated National Climate Assessment has concluded, "heavy downpours are increasing nationally, especially over the last three to five decades."
A major reason why is today's atmosphere holds more water vapor than last century. Specifically, for every 1 degree Celsius (1.8 degrees Fahrenheit) of warming, the air can hold 7 percent more water — resulting in more heavy deluges, like this one.
Perhaps your uncle would like to see for himself? It would be a prudent future investment. "Increases in extreme precipitation are projected for all U.S. regions," U.S. scientists concluded.
Price: $37.99 on Amazon
2. Outdoor Thermometer

In 140 years of reliable record-keeping, the last five years have been the warmest five years on record. Zooming out just slightly, 18 of the 19 warmest years on record have all occurred since 2000. And this doesn't yet include scorching 2019, which experienced the warmest month ever recorded by humans.
Indeed, there will always be freezing weather; such is the cruel disposition of winter and vagaries of weather. But it's the long-term warming trend that matters. Would your uncle care to observe for himself?
Price: $9.95 on Amazon
3. "The Uninhabitable Earth"

Unfortunately for Homo sapiensand Earth's profound and still largely unaccounted for biodiversity, human-caused climate change has just commenced. Without curbing global carbon emissions — which may not even peakfor another decade — wildfires, extreme drought, and storms are expected to grow increasingly worse.
Then, of course, there is the potential of events like the catastrophic collapse of Greenland and Antarctic ice sheets, which would unleash almost fictional amounts of sea level rise.
In the 310-page "The Uninhabitable Earth," climate journalist David Wallace-Wells lays out what could come. "It is worse, much worse, than you think," Wallace-Wells begins.
Price: $15.69 on Amazon
4. Neil Young Album "Colorado"

Neil young regrouped his legendary, heavy band, Crazy Horse, to record a new album largely about Earth and climate change. On Colorado, whichat times blares with ragged, gritty distortion, Young also settles down for sentimental, earthly musings:
We heard the warning calls, ignored themWe saw the weather change, we saw the fires and floodsWe saw the people rise, dividedWe fought each other while we lost our coveted prize
"Much of Coloradofocuses on climate change and the environment," AARP said in a recent interview with Young.
"It's the only thing that really matters," Young replied. "People on the streets can't see past the next week."
Price: $14.48 on Amazon
5. New York Times subscription

There's no dearth of terrific climate journalism.
The Washington Post, High Country News, theLos Angeles Times, and a slew of local newspapers produce superb environmental journalism today, but theNew York Times is a well-reported, smart option, too.
TheNew York Timeshas assembled a strong climate team producing explainers, news, features, profiles, and visual tours of Earth's rapidly changing lands.
And, in sharp contrast to President Donald Trump's repeatedly errant claims, this 168-year-old publication is not failing. In reality, the paper's digital subscriptions are at all-time highs, and rising sharply.
Price: $15 per month for a digital subscription (but the first year is only $4 per month)
6. Climate stripes mug

Climate scientist Ed Hawkins has assembled global climate data to produce region-specific stripe visualizations of how your climate has changed (temperature-wise) since the late 1800s.
SEE ALSO: Over 11,000 scientists from around the world declare a 'climate emergency'These warming stripes are now printed on mugs, ties, earrings, notebooks, leggings, and beyond.
A coffee mug, though, is an effective reminder, each morning, that the temperature has been rising, and will relentlessly keep rising — unless civilization slashes its carbon emissions.
Price: ~$21.00 on Zazzle
7. "The Madhouse Effect"

This light read, authored by climate scientist Michael Mann and political cartoonist Tom Toles, illustrates the twisted logic of climate denialism.
Among the politically powerful and well-heeled, climate denialism has been rife for decades, even as climate scientists repeatedly provided proof that humans were significantly disrupting the planet.
Still today, fossil fuel corporations like Exxon buy ads fighting allegations they have distorted or mislead the public on climate science.
Price: $17.22 on Amazon