When the Trump administration began taking down federal resources on climate change, I started pre-emptively archiving reports and data sets in the event that they’re no longer accessible. That proved to be a smart move, as the NCA5 website just went dark this week. That’s a huge blow to the layperson, as that was one of the most comprehensive resources on climate change for our nation. Thankfully I had the data backed up on multiple hard drives and cloud servers, so we can continue to provide this information to those who need it.
So far I’ve archived the following resources (which are no longer available from their official websites):
- CDC Environmental Justice Index | Google Drive | Proton Drive
- CDC Social Vulnerability Index | Google Drive | Proton Drive
- FEMA Future Risk Index | Google Drive | Proton Drive
- NCA5 Reports | Google Drive | Proton Drive
- NCA5 Data Atlas | Google Drive | Proton Drive
The following resources are still live, but I’ve archived them pre-emptively for safety:
- CDC Effects of Climate Change on Health
- EPA Climate Resilience Screening Index
- EPA Cumulative Resilience Screening Index
- FEMA National Risk Index
- NCICS State Climate Summaries
What other US government resources might be on the chopping block? I’m primarily looking for reports and data related to climate change, resilience, and adaptation, and ideally in a downloadable format (PDF, Excel, CSV, etc.).
Oddly, my post has vanished. Who could ever have imagined? Here is the original comment I made with most of the information about the program, that inspired me to start doing the research that led me to the discovery that it had been pulled down from nasa.gov
https://sh.itjust.works/comment/18525935
EDIT: I found the text of the post that I had saved:
It appears that nearly all content related to the Soviet Venera Venus program has been scrubbed from nasa.gov. Pages that were clearly there—based on existing links and references—are now dead or redirect to generic pages. For a program that achieved the first landing on another planet, the first photos from a planetary surface, and the only audio ever recorded on Venus, this sudden erasure is… suspicious.
Given our president’s weird nostalgia for the Cold War and general fondness for Russia, I genuinely can’t figure out the angle here—maybe it’s just about downplaying non-American accomplishments in space? No idea. But it’s strange.
When I asked ChatGPT to generate a post about this, it danced around the fact for several tries, repeating vague lines about the importance of remembering historical missions but refusing to directly say the content had been scrubbed from nasa.gov. Which, honestly, isn’t surprising—but it’s still dismaying. I wasn’t expecting this particular bit of weirdness, and I don’t love what it suggests.