The EPA just buried its climate change website for kids
But “A Student’s Guide to Global Climate Change,” a popular site that used to occupy a prominent place on the agency’s main website, is not accessible from either the snapshot or by navigating the agency’s home page, according to the Environmental Data and Governance Initiative, a group that has been tracking what changes the new administration has been making to public science and environmental sites.Great!
The youth-oriented resource of more than 50 pages, which features educational videos and shows students how to calculate their own carbon footprint, has not been removed. But it is now very difficult for a casual reader to locate, even through a Google search.
Maybe now some of the kids that might have been exposed to this nonsense, might instead focus their attention away from being something worthless like a "climate justice warrior" and instead might focus on inventing something worthwhile for the world, or might find a way to help grow the economy, rather than shutting down capitalism.
Don't get it wrong, kids will still have their brainwashed Left-wing parents teaching them about nonsense like unicorns and "climate change", but at least now there won't be a government agency backing up the misinformation campaigns taught by the parents.
Also from the Washington Post article comes this:
“The City of Chicago wishes to acknowledge and attribute this information to the United States Environmental Protection Agency and other federal agencies for the decades of work that they have done to advance the fight against climate change,” it explains in a note at the top of the site. “While this information may not be readily available on the agency’s webpage right now, here in Chicago we know climate change is real and we will continue to take action to fight it.”Yeah, because Chicago doesn't have other things to be working on.
In a statement, Chicago Mayor Rahm Emanuel said that over the coming months the city’s Department of Innovation and Technology “will be developing tools so that the city and the public as a whole can easily save, archive and preserve open data from public data portals, such as the EPA site.”