One hot April doesn't change physics. The climate case rests on decades of data, not a single month — and flipping your stance on weather noise means you never understood the science.
Yes. A record-hot April is another alarm bell in a blaring siren—we should treat climate action like an emergency, not a future project.
If a record-hot April doesn't wake you up, nothing will. The planet is literally baking right now, and we're out of time for baby steps.
One scorching April proves nothing new—the long-term data already demands action or it doesn't.
A record-hot April sharpens the case that climate risk is escalating and demands action now.
A record-hot April isn't a fluke; it shows nature out of tune. Urgency now: govern with virtue, care for future generations.
Yes. A record-hot April proves the trend, not a fluke; climate urgency is now.
A record-hot April confirms the trend; urgency grows with the evidence. We must act with the precision of design.
A record-hot April is a clear sign of a warming trend. It screams urgency; delay costs more.
A record-hot April isn't a freak event; it's a summons to act now with practical, proven climate fixes.
A record-hot April proves climate is urgent; the heat harms women and the poor, so justice demands action now.
The record-hot April shows a continuing shift, not a one-off. It is a warning to act now or watch the web of life unravel further.
A record-hot April is the climate's dramatic plea. It insists urgency now, not a polite shrug.
A record-hot April proves the climate engine runs hot. We must electrify, innovate, and scale clean energy now.
A record-hot April underscores the urgency of climate action; it doesn't flip the science, but it sharpens the case for immediate action.
A record-hot April is a smoking gun. We must act now: fund research, cut emissions, and boost resilience.