It couldn’t possibly be due to states legalizing drugs and tons of drugs flowing in across the open border, could it?
5 reasons why climate change may see more of us turn to alcohol and other drugs
Climate change will affect every aspect of our health and wellbeing. But its potential harms go beyond the body’s ability to handle extreme heat, important as this is.
Extreme weather events, such as floods, droughts, storms and wildfires, are becoming more frequent and severe. These affect our mental health in a multitude of ways.
Coping with climate change can be overwhelming. Sometimes, the best someone can do is to seek refuge in alcohol, tobacco, over-the-counter and prescription drugs, or other psychoactive substances. This is understandable, but dangerous, and can have serious consequences.
We outline five ways climate change could increase the risk of harmful substance use.
Interesting: climahysterics at the top and in the media work to scare the congregation, the regular old Warmists, to the point that the top climatahysterics are concerned that the congregation will use too many drugs and drink too much because they’re scared, anxious, and depressed. The first way mentioned is that people with poor mental health could turn to drugs and/or alcohol. Well, most of the Warmists a brain addled. The 2nd worry increases. Well, yeah, because everything is doom and gloom.
Number three is because of physical injuries because of….a slight temperature increase of 1.5F since 1850? Really? Maybe it’s because young folks really just do not get that much exercise, and their constant climate doom anxiety messes with their physical health. The final two, “Our day-to-day lives change” and “It destabilises communities” are just as cultish. And it leads to “Politicians take note”.
Obviously, they are pushing for more government authoritarianism and taxation. Shock.
Read: Your Fault: ‘Climate Change’ Could Cause More Drug And Alcohol Use »
Climate change will affect every aspect of our health and wellbeing. But its potential harms go beyond the body’s ability to handle extreme heat, important as this is.
It’s almost Thanksgiving, that special day of the year when most Americans are forced to spend time with relatives they don’t like in return for large amounts of food they do like.

Plants will absorb 20 per cent more carbon dioxide than predicted by the end of the century, a new study has found, suggesting climate models are overestimating how fast the planet will warm.
Arizona State University canceled a pro-Palestine, on-campus event scheduled for Friday that was to feature remarks from Rep. Rashida Tlaib, D-Mich., whose antisemitic rhetoric earned her a bipartisan censure from the House of Representatives last week.
President Biden invoked a Cold War-era law in a surprising move Friday to pour taxpayer funds into domestic manufacturing of electric heat pumps, an alternative to gas-powered residential furnaces.

