Climate reality without the shouting match
A plain-language guide to RWBP's first climate conversation: what is settled, what is uncertain, what policy arguments remain fair, and what claims are designed to delay action.
RWBP civic intelligence
Find the claim. Check the receipts. Talk like a human.
A public guide for checking claims, understanding democracy and climate issues, and turning evidence into practical civic action.
Capture the exact words, who said them, and where they are spreading.
Find primary records, scientific baselines, votes, filings, and correction history.
Separate fact, inference, opinion, missing context, and fair counterpoints.
Turn the evidence into calm conversation prompts and lawful civic next steps.
Choose a path
Use battle-card style summaries to check a claim, see the strongest source, and find a calmer response.
Check claimsI need the big pictureUnderstand the issue before the argument startsFollow durable issue maps for democracy, climate, misinformation, public power, and emerging deep dives.
Browse topicsI want to do somethingTurn evidence into practical civic actionFind language for family conversations, local meetings, social posts, and community research priorities.
Find next stepsA plain-language guide to RWBP's first climate conversation: what is settled, what is uncertain, what policy arguments remain fair, and what claims are designed to delay action.
Common-sense guardrails
RWBP is calm enough to use in a real conversation and clear enough to show where the evidence ends.
Claims show source status, confidence, limits, and update paths so readers can inspect the work.
The site rejects political violence, election sabotage, intimidation, and dehumanizing narratives.
Climate reality, public health, rights, and local community impacts stay connected to human stakes.
Policy pages show costs, benefits, tradeoffs, who pays, and who benefits.
RWBP Gang
Devil pushes on hypocrisy, Unicorn keeps human stakes visible, AI demands evidence, and Alien asks the basic questions everyone else skips.
Each episode page carries transcript, claim table, source pack, related battle cards, and conversation prompts.
Claims
Weather is local and short-term. Climate is the long-term pattern. A cold week does not erase global temperature, ocean heat, ice, and sea-level records.
Policy can be expensive, but so are heat deaths, flood damage, insurance retreat, crop losses, grid failures, and delayed infrastructure upgrades.
Election systems have flaws like every human system, but broad fraud claims need records, audits, court outcomes, and specific evidence.
Narratives
Tracks how routine distrust of institutions turns into claims that valid elections, courts, prosecutors, agencies, and public servants are illegitimate by default.
Maps climate arguments that no longer deny warming outright, but insist every practical response is impossible, corrupt, or economically suicidal.
Separates legitimate concern about health agencies from claims that erase evidence, risk, and the public-health consequences of organized distrust.
Topics
Election systems, courts, public power, anti-democratic narratives, and practical civic response.
Climate reality, ecological risk, energy transition, water, health, insurance, and public budgets.
Claim checks, source literacy, influence campaigns, platform incentives, and conversation repair.
Action
One-page prompts for family, local meetings, social comments, and door-knocking: start with shared values, ask what would change their mind, then use one source.
Readers submit claims, figures, organizations, and narrative families. Moderators merge duplicates before voting opens.
A legal and safety pass for high-risk claims: private people, violence, elections, health, disasters, defamation, and copyright-heavy media.