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Katharine Hayhoe shares her unexpected journey to becoming an evangelical Christian climate scientist, discusses evidence for climate change, and explains why working to solve our climate problems doesn't mean "Big Government!". We explore optimistic ways to address global warming, and the incredible economic and health benefits of clean energy.
Katharine Hayhoe is an atmospheric scientist, a Professor of Political Science, and Director of Client Science at Texas Tech University. She is also the founder and CEO of Atmos Research, has been named one of Christianity Today’s 50 Women to Watch, and has been recognized by Time Magazine as one of the 100 Most Influential People. Her Twitter bio reads: "First in line for cloning".
Quotes:
“We are designed to be part of the body of Christ, to work in community with each other, to express God’s love to each other and to the world.”
“If we act now we can avoid the worst of the impacts. If we put this off a couple of more decades we’ll be in serious trouble.”
“If we agree on the solutions, I don’t care what we think on the science.”
By Micah Redding4.8
2323 ratings
Katharine Hayhoe shares her unexpected journey to becoming an evangelical Christian climate scientist, discusses evidence for climate change, and explains why working to solve our climate problems doesn't mean "Big Government!". We explore optimistic ways to address global warming, and the incredible economic and health benefits of clean energy.
Katharine Hayhoe is an atmospheric scientist, a Professor of Political Science, and Director of Client Science at Texas Tech University. She is also the founder and CEO of Atmos Research, has been named one of Christianity Today’s 50 Women to Watch, and has been recognized by Time Magazine as one of the 100 Most Influential People. Her Twitter bio reads: "First in line for cloning".
Quotes:
“We are designed to be part of the body of Christ, to work in community with each other, to express God’s love to each other and to the world.”
“If we act now we can avoid the worst of the impacts. If we put this off a couple of more decades we’ll be in serious trouble.”
“If we agree on the solutions, I don’t care what we think on the science.”

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