The books invite the readers to draw connections between the incomprehensible scales of environmental changes and the intimate details of our private lives.
doom and gloom. it happens more than you might think. this is gonna really sock. but it does not have to go down that way. together, we can say birth. science. join me as i take on six world and in disasters. h1 leading to my imminence do. brace yourself. so, yeah. i guess you could say i really am dying to save the world. that man really knows how to have fun, even in the middle of a disaster. in the midst of extreme natural disasters happening in every corner of the globe, bill nye s new show seems very timely, and i m delighted to say that bill nye the man himself joins me now. bill, thank you so much for coming back on the show. and you are new shows truly mentioned how often scientists warnings are ignored, especially in disaster movies. and indeed, we still have a lot
the lone pediatrician in the small town of uvalde, texas, is a local who attended robb elementary school. he opened up about what it was like having to treat shooting victims he s taken care of since birth. dr. guerrero spoke to today.com for us, saying, quote, it was a mad house, what you see in disaster movies. doctors and nurses in every single room. people running around like maniacs, he said. kids in the hallway bleeding and screaming. surgeons working on kids. the horrible part, i guess, was seeing parents i knew outside screaming, asking me to look for their kids. you never really get that out of your head. five of the children who were murdered were his patients. several more were witnesses to the massacre. one 11-year-old girl told dr. guerrero what she saw. quote, she said she saw people being shot and falling dead. her best friend was next to her, so she grabbed some of her blood
the area in west texas. during the interview, he also talked about the future of the school. robb elementary. i don t think anybody thinks it shouldn t be torn down. i would never ask or expect any child to walk in those doors again, that building needs to be gone, taken away and gone. the only pediatrician in this small town of uvalde is a local who attended robb elementary school. he opened up about what it was like having to treat shooting victims that he has taken care of since birth. dr. guerrero told today.com this, it was a complete madhouse, what you see in disaster movies. he added, doctors and nurses in every single room, people running around like maniac, kids in the hallway, bleeding and screaming, surgeons working on kids. the most horrible part i guess was just seeing parents i knew
seek shelter immediately. dan: love those movies. can t get enough of them. we have all seen these disaster movies. could something crazy like that actually happen? giving us a defense reality, philip lubin. thank you for taking the time. one of these things, these comets or asteroids where they hit earth. what would it look like? is it possible it could happen in our lifetime or the coming generation? it s a question of time scale. this has happened before. the dinosaurs exited because of this. and it will happen in the future. it s not a question of if it