Retard Rogan didn't state those talking points his two guest did. Who creds I will take over the random youtuber talking about Rogan and graphs. You thinking attacking Rogan who has done what like 2000 shows and said stupid stuff some how discredits Richard Lindzen & William Happer??? This is why you're very ignorant.
Richard Lindzen (born February 8, 1940) is an American atmospheric physicist and emeritus professor renowned for his foundational work in atmospheric dynamics. He has authored over 200 peer-reviewed scientific papers and is a leading figure in meteorology, though he is highly controversial for his contrarian views on climate change.Background and Credentials
- Education: Earned a PhD in Applied Mathematics from Harvard University in 1968.
- Academic Career: Served as the Gordon McKay Professor of Atmospheric Sciences at Harvard (1972–1983), then Alfred P. Sloan Professor of Meteorology at MIT (1983–2013, now emeritus). His research focuses on dynamical meteorology, including planetary waves, monsoon meteorology, hydrodynamic instability, global heat transport, the water cycle, ice ages, and stratospheric waves.
- Awards and Honors: Recipient of the American Meteorological Society's (AMS) Meisinger and Charney Awards; American Geophysical Union's (AGU) Jule G. Charney Lecture Award and James B. Macelwane Medal; Leo Huss Walin Prize. Elected to the National Academy of Sciences (NAS), Norwegian Academy of Sciences and Letters, American Academy of Arts and Sciences; Fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS), AGU, and AMS. Served on the NAS Committee on Human Rights and the NRC Board on Atmospheric Sciences and Climate.
- Key Contributions: Pioneered studies on gravity waves, Hadley circulation, and ozone photochemistry. Co-authored the 1975 NAS report Understanding Climatic Change. Developed models for Earth's climate stability, CO2 sensitivity, and glaciation cycles.
Role and Views on Climate ChangeLindzen contributed to the IPCC's Second Assessment Report (1995) as a lead author but has since become a prominent skeptic of the consensus on anthropogenic global warming. He argues that climate models overestimate warming due to flawed handling of water vapor feedback and cloud dynamics, calling much of the discourse "climate alarmism" akin to belief in "magic." His "iris hypothesis" (2001) posits that tropical cirrus clouds act as a thermostat, reducing climate sensitivity to CO2 increases—though this has been critiqued and largely refuted by peers. He has testified before Congress (e.g., 1997 Senate hearing), urged withdrawal from the UNFCCC, and received funding from fossil fuel interests (e.g., $30,000 from Peabody Coal). In 2017, 22 MIT colleagues publicly rebutted his claims in an open letter to President Trump, emphasizing the risks of sea-level rise and extreme weather. Despite this, his work remains cited in skeptic circles, and he views natural variability (e.g., solar and ocean cycles) as dominant over human CO2 emissions
William Happer III (born September 27, 1939) is an American physicist specializing in atomic physics, optics, and spectroscopy. He is a vocal critic of mainstream climate science, despite lacking formal training in the field, and has influenced U.S. policy under the Trump administration.Background and Credentials
- Education: Bachelor's in Physics from the University of North Carolina (1960); PhD in Physics from Princeton University (1964).
- Academic Career: Rose to full professor at Columbia University, where he directed the Columbia Radiation Laboratory. Joined Princeton in 1980 as a professor of physics (now emeritus). Supervised non-weapons energy research at the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) under George H.W. Bush (1989–1993), overseeing climate research.
- Awards and Honors: Elected to the National Academy of Sciences (NAS); Fellow of the American Physical Society (APS) and AAAS. No major awards specific to climate science.
- Key Contributions: Over 200 papers in atomic physics, including work on spin polarization, laser cooling, and quantum optics. His DOE role involved broad energy oversight but no direct climate modeling expertise.
Role and Views on Climate ChangeHapper rejects the IPCC consensus, asserting that CO2 is not a pollutant but a "plant food" in a "CO2 drought," and that most 20th-century warming stems from natural causes like solar activity rather than human emissions. He claims benefits from higher CO2 (e.g., enhanced plant growth) outweigh risks and dismisses models as unreliable. Appointed to Trump's National Security Council (2018–2019) as Director of Emerging Technologies, he pushed to challenge the National Climate Assessment and block climate-security testimony (e.g., calling it "propaganda"). He co-founded the CO2 Coalition (2015) to promote CO2's benefits and led a failed APS petition to soften its climate stance. Funded by conservative donors (e.g., Mercer family), he has spoken at skeptic events like the Heartland Institute conferences. Critics, including Princeton colleagues, note his zero peer-reviewed climate papers and view his positions as outside his expertise; he resigned from the NSC amid internal pushback on reelection risks.Comparison of Their Stances on Climate ChangeBoth Lindzen and Happer are NAS members with strong physics/atmospheric credentials but are outliers in climate science, often collaborating (e.g., joint 2018 court filings). They emphasize uncertainties in models and feedbacks while downplaying CO2's role, influencing skeptic narratives despite broad scientific agreement on human-driven warming.