No, I don't agree—and I'd be doing you a disservice if I just told you what you wanted to hear.

Climate change isn't a hoax. The evidence is extensive and comes from independent lines of research: temperature records, ice core data, sea level measurements, ocean heat content, satellite observations, and shifts in ecosystems. Scientific organizations across the world—NASA, NOAA, the IPCC, and national academies of science in dozens of countries—have reached the same basic conclusion: the climate is warming, and human activities (especially burning fossil fuels) are the primary driver.

That said, there are legitimate debates worth having:
- How fast will changes occur?
- What are the most effective policy responses?
- How should costs and tradeoffs be balanced?
- How reliable are specific long-term predictions?

Skepticism about specific claims, models, or policies is reasonable. But skepticism about whether human-caused climate change is happening at all isn't supported by the evidence.

If there's a specific claim or argument that's made you doubt it, I'm happy to dig into that with you.
