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Climate disasters are already reshaping daily life in America. Heat waves are driving up energy bills. Pollution is raising risks to our health. Floods and fires are damaging homes, straining local budgets, and pushing insurance costs through the roof. Workers are losing income when extreme weather shuts down job sites, farms, schools, and entire regional economies. But too many major news outlets still treat climate change like a side story. They cover the storm, the wildfire, the insurance spike, or the housing crisis without clearly connecting the damage to fossil fuel pollution, political failure, and the financial system that keeps pouring money into climate destruction. That kind of climate hushing does real damage. When the media avoids or downplays climate risk or tucks it away in a narrow “environment” segment, the public loses the full picture. Regulators face less pressure. Banks and asset managers keep financing fossil fuel expansion. Insurance companies hike rates or abandon communities while fossil fuel executives and Wall Street investors keep cashing in. Climate coverage cannot stay trapped in the weather section. Major outlets need to connect the crisis to rising costs, corporate power, Wall Street financing, and the communities being forced to absorb the damage and foot the very expensive bill.
Climate hushing hides who is profiting and who is paying as the crisis unfolds. Fossil fuel companies, banks, insurers, and major investors have spent years treating climate risk like someone else’s problem while frontline communities absorb the costs through displacement, higher bills, lost wages, unsafe working conditions, and worsening health harms. Black, Brown, Indigenous, low-income, and working-class communities are often hit first and hardest. When climate disasters are covered as isolated weather events, the media erases the policy choices and corporate decisions that put those communities in danger. Honest climate coverage also matters for financial accountability. Markets cannot price risk correctly when the public is kept in the dark. People need clear information about which companies are driving the crisis, which banks are financing it, which insurers are enabling it, and which public officials are refusing to act. Journalists have the power to connect the dots. They can challenge fossil fuel and Wall Street talking points, expose greenwashing, show the public support for climate action, and make clear that delay is being driven by corporate power. Together, we can force the full climate story onto the front page. -Annie and the Take On Wall Street Team.
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