Bill Gates Tries to Rewrite His Climate Legacy
After years of warning that climate change would devastate humanity, Bill Gates is suddenly singing a different tune. In a recent interview reported by The New York Times, Gates now claims that climate change “will not lead to humanity’s demise.”
This stunning reversal comes from the same billionaire who spent years pushing radical green policies. Policies that drove up energy prices hurt American workers and left families struggling to afford necessities. There’s no “new science” behind his change of heart, just a billionaire trying to dodge responsibility for the damage his agenda caused.
“Bill Gates is trying to flee the blaze he helped ignite,” said Daniel Turner, Founder and Executive Director of Power The Future. “There’s no new science, no new revelation — only a billionaire trying to rewrite his role in the destruction he financed. Gates knows his green crusade has crushed working families with unaffordable energy costs, but now that the political winds have shifted, he wants to act like the voice of reason. The American people won’t forget who helped light the fire in the first place.”
Let’s not forget what Gates once said:
- “The challenge of climate change is unlike any other we have ever faced. It is a race against time, and we must act now to avoid a climate disaster.”— How to Avoid a Climate Disaster (2021)
- “In other words, by 2060, climate change could be just as deadly as COVID-19, and by 2100 it could be five times as deadly.”— Article: 3 Lessons from COVID-19 to Help Us Tackle Climate Change (2020)
- “The climate is like a bathtub that’s slowly filling up with water. Even if we slow the flow of water to a trickle, the tub will eventually fill up and water will come spilling out onto the floor. That’s the disaster we have to prevent. Setting a goal to only reduce our emissions — but not eliminate them — won’t do it.” — How to Avoid a Climate Disaster (2021)
Now, after years of stoking climate hysteria, Gates wants to walk it back. But working families, the ones paying the price for his green experiments, aren’t so quick to forget.
October 28, 2025