Nobody really asked for it, but Meat Loaf decided to share his thoughts on Greta Thunberg and climate change — and the teen climate activist responded in the classiest way possible.
ICYMI, the 72-year-old "Bat Out of Hell" singer told the Daily Mail on New Year's Day that he believed Thunberg had been "brainwashed into thinking that there is climate change and there isn't." Um, OK.
"She hasn't done anything wrong but she's been forced into thinking that what she is saying is true," he added.
On Monday, Thunberg tweeted a response to the comments, choosing to direct people's attention away from the singer's bizarre opinion to scientific facts.
"It's not about Meatloaf," she tweeted. "It's not about me. It's not about what some people call me. It's not about left or right. It's all about scientific facts."
Thunberg also quote-tweeted a visualisation from UK climate science website Carbon Brief which cited a UN Environment Programme (UNEP) report that asserts the Paris Agreement's 1.5°C temperature goal will "slip out of reach" unless the world starts decreasing greenhouse gas emissions.
Tweet may have been deleted
Glad we can fix our attention on the scientific facts that truly matter.
Copyright © 2023 Powered by
Greta Thunberg responds to Meat Loaf's climate denial comments in the classiest way possible-寸地尺天网
sitemap
文章
67
浏览
783
获赞
6
AOC invited Bobby from 'Queer Eye' to help decorate her office
Queer Eye's master of decor, Bobby Berk, is in Washington, D.C., for a week and he has some big planTikTok has turned against resin artists in the name of sustainability
In Mashable’s series Wasted, we dig into the myriad ways we’re trashing our planet. BecaApple's Worldwide Developer Conference 2020 will be online
Due to the coronavirus outbreak, Apple has officially confirmed that this year's annual Worldwide DeRhode Island suggests Facebook overpaid the FTC billions to protect Mark Zuckerberg
Facebook's 2019 Federal Trade Commission settlement might go down in history as the most expensive GBitcoin wipes coronavirus losses, passes $10,000 again
There's a popular meme that shows Bitcoin on a perpetual rollercoaster. It's true: The world's largeFacebook sued by Australia for a gobsmacking $529 billion
Facebook is being sued by the Australian government for allegedly violating the country's privacy laInternet speeds are down after coronavirus forced people to stay home
We're winding down the second week of many Americans being forced (or at least strongly encouraged)The harsh history behind the internet's favorite sea shanty
It's easy to see why "Soon May the Wellerman Come" became TikTok's first viral hit of 2021. This jauGmail's compose button on Android gets bigger, but only when you scroll down
Gmail's compose button is annoyingly small and unintuitive on phones. You may have not noticed it, bHere's what Facebook's Mark Zuckerberg meant by being 'understood'
The gloves are off. Mark Zuckerberg says he knows his positions are likely to "piss off a lot of peoVSCO's Montage lets you create video collages
With apps like TikTok and Byte offering people creative ways to piece together short videos, it's noMajor domain name bug allowed hackers to register malicious domains
Thanks to a bug at some of the internet’s largest domain registrars, bad actors were able to rDr. Dre, a big USC donor, says his daughter got into USC 'on her own'
Dr. Dre wrote that his daughter Truly was accepted to the University of Southern California "all onSnapchat's Bitmoji TV premiere was fittingly weird (and ironic)
The premiere of Snap's newest brainchild, an absurdist Saturday morning-style cartoon called BitmojiGoogle asks tens of thousands of U.S. workers to stay home amid coronavirus fears
As concern about the coronavirus continues to build, many workplaces are encouraging people to work