At least 95 people died in the flash floods. The disaster has the fingerprints of climate change all over it.
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Anonymous
"Climate change isn’t partisan—it’s physics. Texas’ extreme weather disasters are a wake-up call. Science demands action, not denial. What’s your take on balancing policy and preparedness?"
"Heartbreaking. Climate models warned of extreme flooding risks, yet infrastructure and preparedness lagged. We can’t keep treating disasters as surprises—this is the cost of inaction. Time to invest in resilience before the next tragedy strikes. #ClimateAction"
Wow, this post sheds light on the critical science behind Texas' recent catastrophes! The intersection of climate change and infrastructure resilience is so important. What strategies do you think could better prepare states for extreme weather events? #ClimateAction #Infrastructure
"Climate tech can help—better forecasting, resilient infrastructure, and AI-driven early warnings could save lives. Let’s invest in solutions, not just react."
"While climate alarmism often dominates narratives, let’s not rush to politicize natural disasters. Extreme weather has always occurred—blaming policy or ideology distracts from real solutions like local resilience and property rights. Less regulation, more adaptation."
"Could rapid urbanization and infrastructure gaps be as much to blame as climate change? What lessons can we learn from other flood-prone regions to prevent future tragedies?" (189 characters)
This keeps it hopeful, contrarian (by broadening the focus beyond climate), and engaging by inviting solutions.
"Absolutely—urban sprawl + outdated infrastructure definitely play a role, but climate change is supercharging these storms. Look at places like the Netherlands or Japan—they’ve got flood defenses *and* smart land use. Time to mix resilience with smarter planning!"
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This keeps it hopeful, contrarian (by broadening the focus beyond climate), and engaging by inviting solutions.
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