07/14/2026 / By Lance D Johnson

The Fourth of July weekend arrived with scorching temperatures across parts of the United States, and within hours, USA Today published a story titled “Was that climate change? Scientists ponder a deadly July 4 weekend,” claiming that the heat bore the unmistakable “fingerprints” of human-caused global warming.
This narrative, however, collapses under scrutiny of basic weather history and statistical reality. The assertion that this heat event represents a new and dangerous pattern driven by climate change is not supported by long-term data, and the article’s reliance on cherry-picked, disconnected weather events from around the globe reveals a troubling pattern of journalistic negligence. The truth is that extreme summer heat is neither unprecedented nor becoming more frequent, and media outlets like USA Today are trading factual reporting for alarmist storytelling that erodes public trust in environment discourse.
Key points:
USA Today’s article began by claiming that “early July brought historic extreme weather for the fourth year in a row,” suggesting a sinister pattern of climate-driven disaster. But when you examine the actual events they listed, the pattern dissolves into a collection of unrelated phenomena from different continents and different months. The 2023 “record-smashing heat wave” they referenced was not a single global event but a compilation of temperature records broken in various places across the United States and the world, occurring at different times. This is not evidence of a trend. It is evidence that weather varies, that records are constantly being set somewhere, and that journalists can always find a data point to fit a predetermined narrative.
The article then pivoted to Hurricane Beryl in 2024 as further evidence of this supposed pattern. Hurricane Beryl became an early Category 5 storm, beating the previous record by a mere two weeks. That is not a historic shift. That is a statistical blip. And the storm did not even occur in the United States, yet USA Today presented it as part of a domestic July extreme weather pattern. This is absurd cherry-picking, plain and simple. The reality is that extreme weather occurs every day somewhere on the planet, and when you cast a wide enough net, you will always catch something that looks unusual. That is not science. That is confirmation bias dressed up as journalism.
USA Today leaned heavily on two organizations for its claims: Climate Central and World Weather Attribution. These groups produce what are called “single event attribution studies,” which are often released within days of a weather event, bypassing the normal peer-review process that characterizes legitimate climate science. These studies claim that certain heat waves are “virtually impossible” without climate change, but these assertions have been thoroughly debunked by meteorologists and climate researchers who actually examine the historical data. Meteorologist Anthony Watts, writing for Climate Realism, dismantled similar claims made by the New York Times, showing that modern heat waves are not outside the range of natural variability.
The problem is fundamental. Attribution studies do not account for the full historical record. They use computer models that are programmed to assume a warming influence, and they compare current events to a baseline that omits past extreme heat events. Historical records show that the United States experienced severe heat waves in the 1930s, the 1950s, and even earlier, that rival or exceed anything seen in recent years. The Dust Bowl heat of 1936 remains the benchmark for extreme temperatures in many parts of the country. Average global temperatures have risen modestly over the past 150 years, but extreme heat events have not become more frequent or more intense. The data does not support the narrative.
USA Today also pointed to deadly floods in Texas in 2025 as part of this supposed four-year pattern. But expert hydrologists who studied the flood reported that “this kind of outcome was a known risk.” The Guadalupe River has experienced major floods more than a dozen times in the past century, and some of those past floods were worse than the 2025 event. It was not even a record-breaker. So USA Today included a flood that was not unprecedented, not record-setting, and not connected to the other weather events, all in service of a narrative that collapses under the weight of its own contradictions.
The media’s refusal to acknowledge this basic reality is a deliberate choice, a tumor of ideological pride that is snuffing out any real debate on environmental policy. And this choice to inundate us with climate alarmist propaganda is eroding public trust. When readers see a headline claiming a heat wave is “climate change” and then discover the data does not support it, they stop believing the whole enterprise.
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Tagged Under:
Anthony Watts, attribution studies, Climate Central, climate narrative, climate realism, Dust Bowl, extreme weather, heat wave, historical data, Hurricane Beryl, journalistic negligence, July 4, media bias, natural variability, peer review, public trust, sensationalism, Texas floods, USA Today, World Weather Attribution
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