It was in early 2021 when The New York Times described Sen. Ron Johnson as “the Republican Party’s foremost amplifier of conspiracy theories and disinformation.” It’s unfortunate how much effort the Wisconsin senator has put into proving the assessment correct.
Johnson has cultivated a truly cringeworthy record, peddling bizarre claims about Covid-19. And the Jan. 6 attack. And Russian disinformation. And the 2020 presidential election.
But let’s not forget that the GOP senator has a bizarre perspective on the climate crisis, too.
Johnson: All this climate alarmism is based on bad science completely ignoring the impact of clouds… These windmills are killing the whales pic.twitter.com/uTEGtAyEMB
— Acyn (@Acyn) September 10, 2023
Johnson appeared on Fox News on Sunday, where viewers initially heard guest host Dagen McDowell launch into an odd rant about the Biden administration pushing a “racist” agenda in sub-Saharan Africa because the White House supports a solar project in Angola. But that merely paved the way for the Wisconsin Republican to endorse climate denialism:
Dagen, there are 1,600 scientists from around the world that just joined in declaration with — led by two Nobel laureates that said, we are not in a climate emergency, that all this climate change alarmism is based on bad science, completely ignoring the impact of clouds to basically be a heat sink. Again, the climate has always changed, always will. I’m not alarmist. I’m not in denial. But we have spent over $5 trillion globally on climate change. We haven’t moved the needle, according to climate alarmists. How much more are we going to waste? These windmills, according to an earlier report on your network, are killing the whales.
The senator added that those who believe climate science are “driven” by the desire to take “control over our lives.” He went on to suggest that the focus on the climate is “why we are experiencing inflation.”
To be sure, it’s not easy to pack in this much nonsense in such a short amount of time, but “the Republican Party’s foremost amplifier of conspiracy theories and disinformation” is a special kind of politician.
There’s probably little value in fact-checking every error of fact and judgment Johnson presented to Fox News’ audience — though I’m certainly curious about the lawmaker’s cloud-related ideas — but I found myself stuck on the idea that windmills “are killing the whales.”
Why, exactly, would Johnson think that? Or more specifically, why would he take seriously Fox’s coverage suggesting that whales are dying as a result of windmills?








