Quotes about Climate
I play fictitious characters often solving fictitious problems. I believe mankind has looked at climate change in the same way, as if it were a fiction.
— Leonardo DiCaprio
Headship is not rulership; it is leadership. As head, the man is to provide spiritual leadership and direction to the family. He is supposed to chart the course. His spiritual temperature should set the climate for his entire house.
— Myles Munroe
You can create a climate for him according to your attitude, and this is part of your job as a wife. The home you make and the atmosphere of that home is the world he comes back to from the world of his work. Let it be a place of beauty and peace.
— Elisabeth Elliot
It makes no sense to invest in [fossil fuel] companies that undermine our future.
— Desmond Tutu
The most important thing about global warming is this. Whether humans are responsible for the bulk of climate change is going to be left to the scientists, but it's all of our responsibility to leave this planet in better shape for the future generations than we found it.
— Mike Huckabee
Preservation of the environment, promotion of sustainable development and particular attention to climate change are matters of grave concern for the entire human family.
— Pope Benedict XVI
Finally Cub said, They don't call it global weirding. I know. But I think that's actually the idea. Cub shook his head. Weather is the Lord's business.
— Barbara Kingsolver
Every kind of weather is intensified by warming.
— Barbara Kingsolver
Climate change: Never before in history have human beings been called on to act collectively in defense of the Earth.
— Desmond Tutu
The earth's history over the past several million years is that for every 100,000 years, we go through a dramatic climatic cycle where we get 90,000 years of ice age and 10,000 years of a warm period. I think people today just have the expectation that we deserve a perfectly benign climate forever.
— Hugh Ross
The age was the Elizabethan; their morals were not ours; nor their poets; nor their climate; nor their vegetables even. Everything was different. The weather itself, the heat and cold of summer and winter, was, we may believe, of another temper altogether.
— Virginia Woolf
Few are guided by principle any longer, only by what they prefer. "You have to decide what's right for you," we are told. In such a climate, the only remaining virtue is tolerance, and the only philosophies that are wrong are those that believe in truth.
— James Montgomery Boice