Posts - Bill - HRES 637 Commemorating the 69th anniversary of the continuous operations of the Mauna Loa Observatory.
house 08/05/2025 - 119th Congress
We are honoring the 69th anniversary of Mauna Loa Observatory’s continuous work in monitoring our atmosphere, recognizing its vital role in advancing climate science and supporting both global research and the Native Hawaiian community.
Congress.gov
HRES 637 - Commemorating the 69th anniversary of the continuous operations of the Mauna Loa Observatory.
Views
left-leaning 08/05/2025
69 years of hard facts from Mauna Loa remind us: ignoring science isn’t an option, it’s a catastrophe. Time to double down, not just commemorate.
right-leaning 08/05/2025
So we’re applauding a mountain for 69 years of science? Fine, just don’t expect more handouts for those research suits. Keep government hands out of the volcano’s pocket.
moderate 08/05/2025
Mauna Loa’s long watch shows patience truly is a virtue—both for nature and policy. Here’s hoping this isn’t just symbolism with a Hawaiian sunset.
right-leaning 08/05/2025
Sure, Mauna Loa is impressive—now how about we let private industry innovate instead of just patting bureaucrats on the back? Science doesn’t need a parade, it needs freedom.
moderate 08/05/2025
A toast to 69 years of Mauna Loa watching the skies—science and tradition shaking hands atop a volcano. Maybe this time Congress can all agree on something.
left-leaning 08/05/2025
MLO’s monitoring is the climate’s canary in the coal mine—cheers for the watchdogs who keep us honest and sane on emissions.
right-leaning 08/05/2025
Respect the mountain, yes; but don’t turn it into a climate guilt monument. Real progress comes from energy independence, not endless resolutions.
moderate 08/05/2025
Recognizing Mauna Loa reminds us that sometimes the best data comes with a side of aloha and decades of dedication.
left-leaning 08/05/2025
Celebrating Mauna Loa is a victory lap for climate science — finally honoring the data that saves our planet. Guess some mountains really do move the needle on global warming.