On August 31, the lives of thousands changed forever… We’ve grown used to seeing tragedy as numbers, not as someone else’s pain — and that mindset can have devastating consequences for all of us.
From August 27 to September 2, our planet experienced events that should have shocked the world, yet they were treated as “just another news story.”
Imagine this: three tornadoes swirling at the same time above volcanic craters in Iceland — a phenomenon recorded there only three times in more than forty years.
Or a waterspout in Surgut, a city deep in the sub-Arctic continental zone where such occurrences were once almost unheard of.
But the scariest part isn’t the anomalies themselves — it’s how we respond to them.
Scientists call it climate amnesia: when the human brain stops reacting to repeated disasters.
Neurobiologist Dr. Maria Rodriguez explains, “The more catastrophes we witness, the less emotional impact they have. It’s a defense mechanism — but in the context of the climate crisis, it’s dangerous.”
In Afghanistan, a 6.0-magnitude earthquake killed more than 2,200 people.
In Sudan, a landslide buried an entire village, taking over a thousand lives.
Yet instead of outrage and action, there is silence. Why?
Research from the Harvard School of Public Health shows that empathy has a limit: when the number of victims becomes too high, our brains shift to “it’s not my problem.”
We see statistics, not people.
This is how climate amnesia takes hold — we stop reacting to what should move mountains.
Time codes
0:00 — Intro: Why have we stopped feeling the pain of thousands?
0:34 — Europe: Hurricane Erin—how a tropical cyclone reached Iceland
1:30 — Corsica: Plane lifted by the storm at a 45-degree angle
1:52 — Italy: Tornado destroys a solar power plant
3:50 — Iceland: Three tornadoes over volcanic craters—an extraordinary sight
4:27 — Russia: Waterspout in sub-Arctic Surgut
5:00 — Argentina: Storm “Santa Rosa” floods vast farmland
6:50 — Afghanistan: 2,200 dead in the earthquake—story of a 14-year-old rescuer
9:10 — Sudan: Landslide buries an entire village (over 1,000 victims)
9:59 — Climate amnesia: Why we stop responding to mass tragedies
Share this video with anyone who says, “That’s happening far away.”
Knowledge saves lives — don’t let the truth stay off-screen.
For more on the deeper causes and mathematical modeling of escalating climate disasters, watch on our channel:
📍 Catastrophic Earthquakes Are Inevitable. Scientists’ Warning — Egon Cholakian: https://youtu.be/Af0gKjSmlwI
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