Owusuwaa Weekly Health Magazine
Presents : Bold Truths for Bold Thinkers:
A Magazine for Health & Empowered Thinking
This Week’s Feature: The Climate Scam — Let’s Talk Global Warming.
Featuring: Gwen-Addo at The Leading Hair Senta
🗓️ Special Edition – Friday, August 22, 2025
📍 Read exclusively at assumptagh.live
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Gwen-Addo: A Catalyst for Change
Gwen-Addo wears many hats: business strategist, entrepreneur, author of the book Direction, and co-founder of Owusuwaa Weekly Health Magazine. She is also the founder and CEO of Hair Senta, HIBS-Africa, and TLS—The Leading Senta.

With a passion for transformation, her work is rooted in uplifting others and helping them unlock their full potential. Gwen-Addo is not just building businesses—she’s shaping a movement toward holistic wellness and empowered communities.
Gwen Addo —is also Certified Entrepreneur, Wellness Coach & Food Educator she will be
Hosted by Serwaa Amihere.
In this week’s exclusive dialogue, Gwen Addo joins Serwaa Amihere to break down one of the most hotly debated topics in global health and policy — climate change, or as many are now calling it, the climate scam.
Yes, we said it.
A growing number of people are waking up to the reality that global warming may not be the urgent, human-caused catastrophe we’ve been sold. Others still cling tightly to the mainstream narrative — and that’s fine. But today, let’s break it down in what we call Barney Rubble style — simple, stone-age clarity. If you don’t know Barney Rubble, he’s Fred Flintstone’s buddy from the classic cartoon The Flintstones. And that’s where we’ll start: with simple truths.
1. CO₂ Is Not the Enemy — It’s Life

Carbon dioxide has been unfairly demonized. But here’s the fact: CO₂ is the lifeblood of our planet.
Plants need CO₂ to grow. Trees breathe it in. Our food chain depends on it. Without CO₂, life as we know it would cease. Far from being a pollutant, it’s a vital part of Earth’s natural system.
2. The Earth Has Always Run on Cycles
Before factories, before cars, before humans — the Earth went through extreme heating and cooling cycles. When dinosaurs roamed the earth, the Earth was hotter, greener, and lusher than it is today.
Then came the Ice Ages. Glaciers formed. Glaciers melted. Sea levels rose and fell. No factories. No fossil fuels. Just natural planetary rhythms doing their thing.
3. Recycled Fear, New Labels
For the past 50 years, we’ve been warned:
“We’ve only got 12 years to live.”
Sound familiar? It should. The slogans keep changing:
Global Cooling. Acid Rain. The Ozone Hole. Global Warming. Climate Change.
Each decade gets a fresh name for fear. Yet we’re still here. The climate crisis has become more of a marketing campaign than a scientific certainty.
4. Green Energy — Green for Who?
Let’s talk about wind turbines. Despite the fanfare, many are financially unsustainable, heavily propped up by government subsidies. In some parts of Scotland, turbines are reportedly hooked to diesel generators to stay operational.
Electric car charging stations? Many rely on — you guessed it — diesel-powered backups.
Carbon credits? Just paperwork gymnastics. Germany buys credits from Congo — as if you can transfer clean air across continents. It’s not science. It’s a cash grab.
5. Carbon Taxes: Profiting Off Fear
You’re taxed for flying. You’re taxed for heating. You’re taxed for simply existing. They create panic, then monetize it. Want to breathe? Pay up.
And here’s the final red flag: If the world were truly ending due to climate collapse, ask yourself:
- Why are we still building high-rise properties on coastlines?
- Why are billionaires and banks investing billions into real estate that “should” be underwater soon?
They’re not acting like the world is ending — because they know it’s not.
In Conclusion: Nature Is Smarter Than We Think
The Earth warms. The Earth cools.
It did before us, and it will after us. That’s not a crisis. That’s nature.
Stay informed. Stay empowered.
Featuring Gwen-Addo
Visionary entrepreneur, author, and motivational speaker, Gwen-Addo transitioned from a successful banking career to founding The Hair Senta — a trailblazer in Africa’s hair processing industry. Through her work, she empowers beauty and wellness brands to thrive, while inspiring others to live boldly, dream big, and challenge the status quo.
This Week’s Spotlight: The Climate Scam
Some call it Global Warming. Others prefer Climate Change.
But more and more people are waking up and calling it what it truly is — a scam.
Yes, some still cling to the old story — and that’s fine. But today, we’ll break it down Barney Rubble style — stone-age simple.
🔹 CO₂ is Not the Villain
- Plants, trees, and food crops depend on carbon dioxide.
- No CO₂ = no photosynthesis = no life.
- Calling CO₂ “pollution” is like calling oxygen poison.
🔹 Nature Runs on Cycles
- Long before cars and factories, the Earth heated and cooled.
- The dinosaur era was far hotter and greener.
- Then came ice ages: glaciers formed, melted, seas rose, seas fell.
- Nature, not humans, drives climate.
🔹 The Changing Slogans of Fear
For 50 years, we’ve been told: “12 years until the end.”
- 1970s: Global Cooling
- 1980s: Acid Rain
- 1990s: Ozone Hole
- 2000s: Global Warming
- 2010s: Climate Change
Different names. Same fear. Same agenda.
🔹 The Green Energy Mirag
- Wind farms & solar survive only on subsidies.
- Many are secretly backed by diesel generators.
- Electric cars? Often powered by fossil fuel grids.
- Carbon credits? Paper shuffling. Germany “buys clean air” from Africa — as if it can be shipped across borders.
👉 This isn’t science. It’s a cash grab.
🔹 Carbon Taxes: Paying to Breathe
- Flying ✈️ → taxed.
- Driving 🚗 → taxed.
- Heating your home 🏠 → taxed.
It’s less about “saving the planet” and more about finding new ways to extract money from ordinary people.
Are We Entering a Little Ice Age?
Our current weather extremes don’t point to warming. They match the conditions of a developing little ice age.
And worse — green policies are killing people right now.
The Hidden Costs of Green Policies
- Deindustrialisation: Jobs lost as emissions are “exported” abroad.
- Energy Poverty: Soaring costs and blackouts in developing countries.
- Wildlife Loss: Wind farms kill bats, birds, and pollinators.
- Unsafe Housing: EU “green” insulation led to tragedies like Grenfell Tower.
- Africa Blocked: Millions of women still cook over open fires because “sustainable” policies stop coal-powered electrification.
⚖ The Verdict
If coastlines were truly sinking, why are:
- Billionaires buying beachfront mansions?
- Banks approving seaside loans?
- Developers building coastal hotels?
Because they know the truth.
The Earth warms and cools — all by itself.
What’s man-made is fear, taxation, and control.
Conclusion: The Climate Scam Must End
This isn’t about science.
It’s about money, power, and control.
The victims are not “future generations.”
They are the poor, the vulnerable, and the voiceless — dying today from destructive climate policies.
Owusuwaa Weekly Health Magazine
Bold Truths for Bold Thinkers
A Magazine for Health & Empowered Thinking
Dialogue with Serwaa-Amihere and Gwen


Serwaa-Amihere (Host):
Hello and welcome, dear readers from across the world! I’m your host, Serwaa Amihere — journalist, broadcaster, and passionate advocate for truth in storytelling.
Today, I have the pleasure of speaking with a remarkable woman: Gwen-Addo. She’s a visionary entrepreneur, author, and motivational speaker who left a successful career in banking to create The Hair Senta, one of Africa’s leading names in the beauty and hair processing industry. Through her work, she empowers others to embrace health, success, and self-belief.
And now, she’s behind Owusuwaa Weekly Health Magazine — a platform for health, wellness, and bold thinking.
Welcome to the Feature

Serwaa-Amihere (Host):
Gwen, welcome to your own magazine — Owusuwaa Weekly Health Magazine!
This week’s headline feature is:
“The Climate Scam: Bold Truths for Bold Thinkers.”
Before we take readers through the full article, let’s talk about one of the most hotly debated topics in global health and policy — climate change, or as many are now calling it, the climate scam.
Yes, we said it. A growing number of youth are waking up to the possibility that maybe global warming is not the urgent, human-caused catastrophe we’ve been sold. Of course, many still hold fast to the mainstream narrative — and that’s fine.
But today, Gwen, you’ve promised to break this down in Barney Rubble style — stone-age simple truths.
Gwen, I want us to dive straight into the first and perhaps most misunderstood subject: carbon dioxide. For decades, people have been told CO₂ is a poison, a pollutant, a danger to humanity. Every schoolchild grows up with the image of smoke rising into the air and destroying the planet. But you’ve been bold in saying “CO₂ is not the enemy — it’s life itself.” That statement challenges everything many of us were taught. So help us out: what exactly do you mean by that, and why should readers around the world rethink the way they see CO₂?

Gwen-Addo (Guest):
That’s a powerful way to start, Serwaa. Let’s look at it with fresh eyes. Carbon dioxide is the backbone of life on Earth. Without it, plants cannot grow. Without plants, animals cannot eat. Without that chain, humans would not survive. Trees literally breathe in CO₂ and, in turn, give us oxygen. It’s a divine cycle
But here’s where it gets twisted: in the effort to create fear and control, CO₂ has been branded as an enemy. If you remove CO₂, you remove life. The truth is, we don’t need less of it — we need balance. Nature already knows how to regulate this balance through oceans, forests, and soil.

Serwaa-Amihere:
That’s a perspective that isn’t often heard in mainstream conversations. But let me challenge you here. Many scientists argue that our industrial era has disrupted that balance, making CO₂ levels “unnatural” and therefore dangerous. How do you respond when people insist human activity is to blame for today’s so-called crisis?

Gwen-Addo:
I respond with history. The Earth has always run on cycles. Long before a single factory or airplane existed, the Earth went through extremes.
Millions of years ago, during the age of dinosaurs, the planet was warmer, more lush, and teeming with plant life. Then came the Ice Ages. Glaciers formed and later melted, sea levels rose and fell — no human intervention required. These weren’t signs of doom, but of nature’s rhythm.
So yes, humans leave footprints. But to think that we can override the majesty of Earth’s natural systems is arrogance. The climate changes because the climate always changes.

Serwaa-Amihere:
And that’s where many readers may pause. Because growing up, we’ve been fed slogans: “We’ve only got twelve years left,” or “This is our final chance.” Gwen, these urgent warnings stick in people’s minds, especially young people. Do you believe these messages are exaggerated — even recycled?

Gwen-Addo:
Exaggerated and recycled, absolutely. For the past 50 years, there’s always been a new fear label.
First, it was Global Cooling — scientists warned of a coming Ice Age. Then it was Acid Rain — we were told crops would die. Then the Ozone Hole — we were assured the sun would burn us alive. After that, Global Warming, and when that lost steam, the more flexible phrase Climate Change.
Every decade, the crisis gets rebranded. The only constant is fear. But if these warnings were accurate, we wouldn’t be here to have this conversation. Instead, life goes on. Humanity adapts. Nature recalibrates. Fear sells headlines, but truth sustains life.

Serwaa-Amihere:
That leads us into solutions — or what people are told are solutions. Everywhere we look, governments are promoting wind turbines, electric cars, and carbon credits as the “green” answer. But you’ve boldly said this isn’t really about saving the planet, but saving profits. Tell us why you call it a scam.

Gwen-Addo:
Because when you peel back the curtain, you see the cracks. Wind turbines sound beautiful, but in reality, many are financial disasters that collapse without subsidies. In some regions, they’re even hooked up to diesel generators to keep spinning — think about that irony! Electric cars are praised as clean, yet their charging stations often run on diesel backups. And carbon credits? That’s perhaps the most absurd. Germany buys “clean air credits” from Congo. But can you bottle air and ship it across continents? It’s accounting trickery, not science.
What we are seeing is not an environmental rescue plan, but an economic game — one that ordinary people pay for while a few grow richer.

Serwaa-Amihere:
That’s sobering, Gwen. And it makes me want to push harder. People are also being taxed left and right — for flights, fuel, heating, even plastic bags — all in the name of fighting climate change. Some argue this is the price we must pay for survival. Do you see these taxes as fair, or as something else?

Gwen-Addo:
Let me put it plainly: it’s monetizing fear.
We are told, “The world is ending, so pay us to save it.” You fly? Tax. You heat your home? Tax. You drive? Tax. They scare us into compliance, then take money from the very poorest.
And here’s the hypocrisy no one dares to point out: if the seas are truly rising, why are billionaires and banks investing billions in coastal properties? If they believed their own warnings, they wouldn’t touch that land. Their actions prove their words are a façade.

Serwaa-Amihere:
So, Gwen, let’s conclude with this. You’ve shaken the table with your answers. But beyond the controversy, what final truth do you want readers of Owusuwaa Weekly Health Magazine — from young students in Accra to global leaders in New York — to take away from this conversation?

Gwen-Addo:
The takeaway is freedom. Nature is wiser than we think. The Earth warms, the Earth cools — with or without us. That’s not a crisis. That’s the dance of creation.
My call is simple: Stay informed. Stay bold. Don’t surrender your life or your freedom to fear. Ask hard questions. And most importantly, live empowered — because people who are not afraid cannot be controlled.

Serwaa-Amihere (Host):
Gwen, let’s get uncomfortable for a moment. You’ve made the case that CO₂ is life-giving, that nature has its own cycles. But let me ask the hard question that many critics will throw at you: If you’re wrong, aren’t we risking the survival of humanity by downplaying climate change? Shouldn’t we take extreme precautions just in case — even if it costs us billions?

Gwen-Addo (Guest):
Serwaa, that’s the “insurance argument” — and it sounds safe until you look closely. When we funnel billions into so-called green policies that don’t work, we’re not buying insurance — we’re burning resources that could save real lives today.
Think of the mothers in rural Africa still cooking over open fires because coal-powered electrification has been blocked in the name of “sustainability.” They die by the millions from smoke inhalation — not in the future, but right now. That is the true cost of this false narrative.
We cannot gamble with lives under the excuse of “just in case.” True responsibility means investing in what works — affordable energy, health systems, innovation — not fear-based policies that keep people poor and powerless.

Serwaa-Amihere:
You’re saying fear policies hurt the poorest most. But here’s another strong pushback: If nature runs in cycles, as you say, what about the melting Arctic ice and rising sea levels we’re seeing on the news every year? Are those not undeniable signs of human-driven catastrophe?

Gwen-Addo:
Great question, Serwaa. Let’s look at the full picture. Glaciers have melted and regrown throughout history. Sea levels have risen and fallen long before human industry. What we’re seeing is not unusual — it’s natural variability.
The media shows dramatic images of melting ice, but rarely mentions that in other regions, ice is expanding. They highlight rising seas, but don’t mention that global measurements vary by millimeters — changes well within natural patterns.
And here’s the deeper point: If this were truly a doomsday crisis, why are world leaders still building luxury resorts on coastlines? Why are insurance companies still covering billion-dollar beach homes? Their money tells the truth louder than their speeches.

Serwaa-Amihere:
Let’s go harder. You’ve called green energy a “cash grab.” Some would say that’s unfair. They argue it’s a transition — yes, imperfect now, but necessary for a cleaner future. So I’ll ask directly: If not wind and solar, then what? What is Gwen-Addo’s real solution?

Gwen-Addo:
I love that, because it forces us to be practical. My solution is this: let nations choose energy that works for their people, not for political agendas.
If coal is abundant and affordable in Africa, let us use it responsibly while we develop. If natural gas can provide stable energy for millions, let’s use it. Renewable energy has a role — but it must be honest, not forced.
We must stop pretending that expensive solar panels shipped from Europe are the salvation of villages in Ghana or Nigeria. Empowerment means energy independence — not dependency on foreign subsidies. True clean energy is the one that keeps the lights on, keeps food cooking, and keeps hospitals running. Anything else is empty symbolism.

Serwaa-Amihere:
That’s a bold call, Gwen. Let’s zoom out as we close. Beyond the politics, beyond the science debates, what’s really at stake here? Why should the youth in Ghana, in Africa, and around the world care about this issue at all?

Gwen-Addo:
Because it’s not about climate — it’s about control.
When you convince people the air they breathe is killing them, you can control how they live, what they eat, where they work, even how they think. Climate fear has become a lever of global governance, and if the youth don’t wake up, they’ll inherit a future of higher taxes, fewer freedoms, and endless panic.
But here’s the hope: the youth are questioning more than any generation before. They’re demanding evidence, not slogans. They’re seeing through recycled fears. And once you stop being afraid, you become unstoppable.
So to the young readers, my message is this: Stay curious. Stay bold. Don’t be intimidated by titles or “experts.” The Earth is stronger than fear — and so are you.

Serwaa-Amihere (Host):
Gwen, let me strip this to the bone. If what you’re saying is true — that climate change is exaggerated, that CO₂ is life, that policies are scams — then why do the world’s most respected scientists, universities, and institutions say the opposite? Are you suggesting that all of them are wrong… or worse, that they’re deliberately misleading us?

Gwen-Addo (Guest):
Serwaa, this is the heart of it. And yes — many of them are wrong, and some are deliberately misleading. Let me explain.
Science is not meant to be worshiped; it’s meant to be questioned. But what we have today is not open science — it’s funded science. Billions of dollars flow into climate research every year, and it almost always goes to studies that reinforce the mainstream narrative. Why? Because fear brings money, and money brings control.
This does not mean every scientist is lying. Many are sincere, but they’re working inside a system that rewards alarmism. When your career, your grants, your reputation depend on producing the “right” conclusion, what choice do most have?
So the issue isn’t whether scientists are evil — it’s whether science has been captured by politics and profit. And my answer is yes. The evidence speaks louder than the slogans.

Serwaa-Amihere:
That’s powerful — but let me challenge you harder. You say climate policies are scams. Yet, many young activists believe they’re fighting for justice — for clean air, for oceans without plastic, for a healthier world. Are you saying their passion is misplaced? Are climate activists part of the problem?

Gwen-Addo:
No, Serwaa, their passion is real, and I respect it. In fact, they are some of the most sincere voices on the planet. But here’s the tragedy: their passion is being hijacked.
When a young person marches with a sign that says “Save the Planet,” their heart is pure. But behind the scenes, their voice is used to push policies that do not save the planet — they enrich corporations. Plastic waste? Pollution? Deforestation? These are real issues. But notice how the media always steers the conversation back to CO₂ and carbon taxes. Why? Because that’s where the money is.
So I say to young activists: don’t stop caring. But shift your fight. Fight for clean rivers, sustainable farming, real waste management, and honest innovation — not for carbon credits that mean nothing to the child inhaling smoke in a Ghanaian village.

Serwaa-Amihere:
Let me go deeper still, Gwen. Some will say — fine, maybe elites exaggerate climate fears, maybe policies are flawed — but isn’t the bigger danger that by rejecting these mainstream ideas, you risk fueling denial, cynicism, or inaction? How do you answer critics who say your message could make people careless?

Gwen-Addo:
That’s the hardest question yet, Serwaa. And the answer is: I’m not calling for denial, I’m calling for discernment.
Carelessness is pretending carbon taxes will save us. Carelessness is shutting down factories in Africa while importing goods from polluting countries abroad. Carelessness is leaving children in darkness because we want to look “green” on paper.
True responsibility is facing reality: the Earth’s cycles are bigger than us, and our job is not to play gods, but to live wisely within those cycles. That means preparing for floods, preparing for droughts — just as humans have done for thousands of years. It means adapting, not panicking.
Denial is fear. Discernment is strength. And strength is what our generation needs.

Serwaa-Amihere (Host, closing Part III):
Gwen, what you’ve shared is bold, disruptive, and deeply challenging. Whether readers agree or disagree, one thing is certain — this conversation cannot be ignored.
Feature Dialogue – Bold Truths for Bold Thinkers (Part IV: The Grand Finale)

Serwaa-Amihere (Host):
Gwen, let’s get real. If the world is truly collapsing, as the headlines warn — rising seas, sinking coastlines, unbearable heat — why then are the same globalists and billionaires investing billions into real estate along coastlines? Why are banks financing luxury developments on shores that are supposedly about to disappear? Doesn’t that expose a double standard — or even a scam?

Gwen-Addo (Guest):
Serwaa, you’ve hit the bull’s-eye. If the elites truly believed the seas were rising, they wouldn’t be buying waterfront properties — they’d be fleeing them. But instead, what do we see? Billionaires purchasing islands, building luxury marinas, investing in coastal cities.
This is the greatest contradiction of our time: those who preach the loudest about catastrophe behave the least like it’s real. Because they know the truth — nature is not ending, but fear is profitable.
They profit from every tax, every regulation, every subsidy. They profit when you pay more for electricity, when your business is strangled by “carbon compliance,” when developing nations are told to stay “sustainable” instead of industrializing.
And here’s the sting, Serwaa: while they’re making billions, the poor are paying with their lives. Mothers in Africa inhale smoke from wood fires because they’ve been denied coal plants. Children walk in darkness because so-called green policies block electrification. Meanwhile, those globalists sip champagne in beachfront villas they claim should be underwater. Its hypocrisy turned into empire.

Serwaa-Amihere:
That’s sobering, Gwen. But let me ask you: if this scam is so powerful, so entrenched — what can ordinary people, especially Africans, really do? Aren’t we too small to resist such global forces?

Gwen-Addo:
No, Serwaa. We are not small. We are powerful — if we wake up.
First, we must reclaim the right to think for ourselves. Not everything shouted from Western media is truth. Africa must ask: does this policy serve us, or does it chain us?
Second, we must fight for energy independence. Reliable electricity is not a luxury; it’s survival. Without it, no factories, no jobs, no innovation. If globalists say we must stay “green” while they stay rich, we must boldly say: no. Africa’s future is not negotiable.
Third, we must empower the youth with truth. Fear is their weapon, but knowledge is ours. If young Africans stop being paralyzed by doom narratives and instead focus on solutions — clean water, sustainable farming, local industries — we will rise stronger than any imposed agenda.
Serwaa, history shows us: every empire built on lies eventually collapses. The climate scam is no different. But only if we refuse to kneel to it.

Serwaa-Amihere (Host, closing):
Gwen, your words are not just critique — they are a call to arms, a manifesto for empowerment. Whether readers agree or disagree, one thing is clear: your message forces us to confront the uncomfortable truths and ask the hard questions.
Closing Feature – Bold Truths for Bold Thinkers

Serwaa-Amihere (Host):
And there we have it — today’s feature, “The Climate Scam: Bold Truths for Bold Thinkers.”
We’ve unpacked myths, challenged fear-driven narratives, and highlighted the urgent need for empowered thinking. Whether readers agree or not, the essence of this dialogue is clear: to think boldly, to question deeply, and to recognize that health, prosperity, and freedom demand truth.
Gwen-Addo, on behalf of Owusuwaa Weekly Health Magazine and our global readers, we say a heartfelt thank you. Your courage to speak, your wisdom to clarify, and your passion to empower have left us all with a challenge — to live boldly, to think independently, and to never settle for convenient lies when truth is available.
This isn’t the end of the conversation, but the beginning of a global awakening.


Serwaa-Amihere (smiling):
Thank you, Gwen, for being with us. And to our readers worldwide — stay tuned, stay bold, and stay empowered. “Health, prosperity, and freedom demand truth — not fear.” — Owusuwaa Weekly Health Magazine
SGI-Our Shared Humanity.


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