Yeah, the bears wouldn’t have been as vicious as what the true believers will bring on her for DARING to call them out.
Send more climatologists! They are delicious!...............
Though they are both false prophets as well as being false professors, who will bring them to the emperor-has-no-clothes test? Where "publish-or-perish" is the test for employability, who is it that will review their research papers and find them not worth the ink (or toner cartridges) they will consume. It is an arena where he that speaks loudest speaks best, not he that speaks truth to power.
The atheistic liars who have ensconced themselves across the breadth of university faculty chairs are a form of academic MRSA that cannot be eradicated without amputating the whole system of indoctrinating rather than educating their replacements.
This is why Crockford and keen truth-seekers like her suffer without relief or retribution.
I hate leftards.
There are some interesting comments here:
I especially liked that a first-year masters student in wildlife biology, Ron Kichurchak, makes an unhinged, ad hominen attack on the former adjunct professor who has published papers in Science and PLoS One, two of the most prestigious scientific journals.
Steven Amstrup and other U.S. Geological Survey scientists have predicted two-thirds of the world's polar bears may disappear by 2050, based on moderate projections for the shrinking of summer sea ice caused by climate change,[90][188] though the validity of this study has been debated.[195][196] The bears could disappear from Europe, Asia, and Alaska, and be depleted from the Canadian Arctic Archipelago and areas off the northern Greenland coast. By 2080, they could disappear from Greenland entirely and from the northern Canadian coast, leaving only dwindling numbers in the interior Arctic Archipelago.[90]
However, in contrast to the typical sky-is-falling liberal hype,
Data from conservation groups and the government show that the polar bear population is roughly five times what it was in the 1950s and three or four times what it was in the 1970s when polar bears became protected under international treaty.
In fact, though polar bears were placed under the protection of the Endangered Species Act in 2008 over concerns that its Arctic hunting grounds were being reduced by a warming climate, the polar bear population has been stable for the last three decades.
In 1984, the polar bear population was estimated at 25,000. In 2008, when polar bears were designated as a protected species, The New York Times noted that number remained unchanged: There are more than 25,000 bears in the Arctic, 15,500 of which roam within Canadas territory.
New estimates from the International Union for Conservation of Nature show a mid-point estimate of 26,500 (range: 22,000 to 31,000) in 2015. In The State of the Polar Report 2018, zoologist Susan J. Crockford says updates to IUCN data put the new global mid-point estimate at more than 30,000.
Even accepting the lower figure, the estimate is the highest since the polar bear became internationally protected in 1973. - https://fee.org/articles/the-myth-that-the-polar-bear-population-is-declining/