"Crisis" resolution
Tonight’s post will be a brief one, so’s I can get straight to the most important part of the whole exercise: directing you to a likewise-concise essay on the Climate Change (formerly Global Warming, formerly Global Cooling, formerly The Weather)™ scam which amounts to probably the best sum-up of the whole fake phony fraud I’ve seen to date.
About the only truth we can know about the claims surrounding anthropogenic global warming is that it’s “political, not physical, science.”
From choosing carbon dioxide as the villain because it’s a convenient “leverage point” for assuming “control over a society,” as noted by retired Massachusetts Institute of Technology meteorology professor Richard Lindzen, to the effort to smear skeptics as “deniers,” the entire global warming enterprise has been a Trojan horse hauled into society by fanatics who are more than willing to lie about “the science” to advance their anti-capitalist, anti-freedom political agenda.
The zealots will say anything. When they bark and wail, the truth never even gets a chance to put its pants on. They tell us that storms, even those of low intensity, are products of man-made climate change. We saw this with last month’s Hurricane Beryl, attributed by all the right people to human-caused warming. Every time a glacier recedes or the Antarctic loses ice, they say our fossil-fuel use is the reason. When someone miscounts the polar bear population, the screeching about oil and gas is turned up to 11.
Name any event found in nature – wildfires, droughts, floods, heavy rain and snow, rising sea levels, crop losses, famine, disease, all of which there are credible alternate explanations for, and all of which were occurring before man discovered that crude oil was the key to modernity – and they will blame humanity as if it’s a criminal enterprise bent on destruction.
The zealots have no evidence for any of their contentions, but they are rich in speculation, and are driven by envy, anger, social ambition and quite clearly a mental illness that manifests itself in extremism. There is a remedy, but getting these people to take a strong dose of the truth is hardly a manageable task. It would be easier to sandpaper the backside of a bobcat.
Indeed it would be—so why go to the trouble? Much quicker, easier, and more satisfying to just punch them full of .308 caliber holes from a long ways off, then skedaddle before the sound stops reverberating through the distant ether, if you ask me. Not that you did, of course.
The whole I&I article is perusable here, via Mark Tapscott.