Home > Earth & Climate > 50 days to save the world? I might listen to the doomsayers if they weren't such ludicrous hypocrites
   
   
   
     
       
Sat, 19 Dec 2009 21:48:00

50 days to save the world? I might listen to the doomsayers if they weren't such ludicrous hypocrites

AFP/Getty Images
Prince Charles used the Queen's Flight to travel to Copenhagen to speak at the climate change conference
Stephen Glover



Not many people understand climate change. But they can recognise hypocrisy when they see it, and are also likely to count their spoons whenever wild-eyed politicians invoke the impending end of the world.

On Tuesday, Prince Charles flew to Copenhagen to attend the climate change summit, where he delivered a keynote speech.

He informed his audience that 'the world has only seven years before we lose the levers of control'. Not at all long, then.

For the Prince this was an important speech with an important message.

If we have so little time, and man-made climate change is such a terrifyingly imminent threat, he might have taken a boat or train to Copenhagen, or even, as a symbolic gesture, decided to walk.

But he commandeered a jet belonging to the Queen's Flight, generating an estimated 6.4tons of carbon dioxide, 5.2tons more than if he had used a commercial flight. 

Meanwhile his fellow prophet of doom, Gordon Brown, was making his own way to Copenhagen the same day.

This is the man who proclaimed in October that we had '50 days to save the world'. Before leaving he conjured up on a television programme the certainty of 'floods and droughts' with 'climate change evacuees and refugees' if agreement is not reached in Copenhagen.

Mr Brown chartered a 185-seat Airbus to take him and 20 aides to Denmark. Was a smaller plane producing less carbon dioxide not available?

Could he perhaps have shared an aircraft with Prince Charles? Might he have considered taking a scheduled flight to the Danish capital, of which there were 16 on Tuesday?

Evidently not. It is odd, isn't it, how climate change doomsayers such as Prince Charles and Mr Brown are so often unprepared to make the smallest sacrifice in their own daily lives to address a threat which they assert is literally deadly.

Presumably any contribution would be helpful. And it is not easy in life to persuade people to give up things if you are almost ostentatiously unwilling to do so yourself.

The Copenhagen summit, supposed to produce an agreement limiting greenhouse gases, has, according to experts, the same carbon footprint as a medium-sized African country such as Malawi.

There are an amazing 34,000 delegates attending the event, and the grander among them are forced, says my colleague Robert Hardman in Copenhagen, to park their private jets in Norway because Denmark has run out of Tarmac, and to procure their gas-guzzling limousines from Germany.

Show me a climate control zealot and I can often show you a hypocrite, and a hypocrite, moreover, who speaks in apocalyptic terms about the world coming to an end - at a time not long hence and usually implausibly specific - if the rest of us do not immediately curb our lifestyles so as to produce fewer greenhouse gases.

The double standards and the grotesque exaggeration go hand in hand.

Some, at least, of the zealots do not really, honestly believe that things are as bad as they say. If they did, they might not go on serenely generating carbon emissions on such a scale.

They are trying to shock us into action by employing emotive language and invoking terrible dangers. In other words, they are treating us as fools.

Politicians shamelessly twist the facts to scare us witless. There has been an appalling case in Copenhagen this week.

Former U.S. Vice-President and climate change zealot Al Gore attributed to Dr Wieslaw Maslowski, an eminent climate change scientist, the belief 'that there is a 75 per cent chance that the entire north polar ice cap, during the summer months, could be completely ice-free within five to seven years'.

 Gordon Brown

Prime Minister Gordon Brown has previously stated we have '50 days to change the world'

Dr Maslowski promptly denied that he would ever 'try to estimate likelihood at anything as exact as that'.

Seven years left in which we can tackle the problem. Fifty days to save the world. The North Pole melted within a few years.

Such outrageous claims, repeated by hundreds of politicians, and amplified by uncritical journalists whose brains have been captured by the climate change lobby, not a few of whom are to be found at the BBC, are bound to foster growing doubts in the public mind.

When he stated there were '50 days to save the world', Mr Brown spoke of a looming 'catastrophe' which, if not dealt with, 'would be greater than the impact of both World Wars and the Great Depression combined'.

Such talk is a debasement of language. The world does not stand, as it did in 1940, at the very edge of an abyss, and to suggest that it does (as has the prominent scientist James Lovelock) would be an offence against history if it were not so ludicrously overblown.

Mr Brown embraces the extremism of climate change zealots partly by way of displacement.

There are the pressing political problems such as the state of the public finances that are extremely difficult to solve, and there is climate change, where the most hair-raising predictions are eagerly endorsed by most in the media and political class, and can scarcely be countered now.

What will the public think of politicians and climate scientists if in ten or 20 years' time their wildest forecasts should prove unfounded?

We should listen to more measured voices - not those who rule out the possibility of man having any role in climate change, or pretend that global warming is not happening, but those who think the hysterical political response is disproportionate to the severity of the threat.

One such voice is the world-renowned British-born physicist Freeman Dyson, who has written that 'the fuss about global warming is grossly exaggerated' and decried 'the holy brotherhood of climate model experts and the crowd of deluded citizens who believe the numbers predicted by the computer models'.

Nor should we forget that little more than 30 years ago the scientific and political consensus was exactly the opposite of what it is today, as the BBC2 programme Earth: The Climate Wars reminded us on Tuesday in what was an unusual spasm of climate change objectivity on the part of the Corporation.

In 1972 a group of distinguished scientists wrote a letter to the U.S. President, Richard Nixon, expressing their fear that the world was entering a new Ice Age.

If those scientists were so completely wrong then, it is not an affront to reason to question whether the more outlandish climate scientists and their supporters might not be overstating their case now.

Does this make me a 'flat earther' - a term of abuse recently employed by Gordon Brown to describe those who, unlike him, do not claim that Armageddon is around the corner?

If the avoidance of lunatic historical parallels or apocalyptic forecasts makes one a flat earther, I accept the charge gladly.

But I can't help wondering whether the real flat earthers may not turn out to be those like Prince Charles and Gordon Brown who count the months to disaster while merrily generating more carbon dioxide than a small African town does in a year.

Should we be surprised that the British public, confronted by this ugly combination of myopic hypocrisy and doommongering, is becoming increasingly sceptical?

As I say, we may not understand climate change, but we do know when we are victims of a fraud.



Source: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/debate/article-1236497/STEPHEN-GLOVER-50-days-save-world-I-listen-doomsayers-werent-ludicrous-hypocrites.html


5 / 5 (1 Votes)


   
 

           
         
         
         
         
         
       
Your name:
Email (will not be published):
Subject:
Your Comment:


 
           
         

 

         
           
       

How to regulate climate control

Scientists are trying to regulate the...

Human-caused global warming easily...

Hottest January in UAH satellite record

India's climate change proposals gets...

India is not here to renegotiate Kyoto...

CO2 Recycler Creates Fuel From Carbon...

A prototype of the machine, which was...

The moon belongs to no one – yet

The UN's Lunar Treaty is still unsigned...

Global Warming, Thirsty Energy: 7...

As Global Warming Increases, Water...

Dramatic Rise In Sea Level And Its...

A rise in sea level to such a height...

Best Ways to Reengineer the Climate...

The benefits of some schemes aimed at...

Use of ancient techniques may help...

Trees and plants soak up carbon dioxide...

Oceans acidifying much faster than was...

When the car­bon di­ox­ide dis­solves...

Global climate changes could lead to...

Experts say it will accelerate the race...

Earth's Poles Are Shifting to New...

Lava flows underneath the planet's...

Biggest firms call for huge cuts in...

Green industrial revolution

Alternative boondoggles

What would you do with the cost of the...

Why Global Warming and Peak Oil are...

A Quick Look Inside the Very Full Brain...

Nitrogen overload concerns ecologist

Reaching policy-makers and the public...

         
           
           

    Notice article's source. Non-commercial publication only. The published articles do not necessary represent FreeEnergy.ca point of view.
     
     

  AddThis Social Bookmark Button      
 

 

 

     
   

 

     
   

Solar Power
A new way to harness sun’s rays A new way to harness...

Solar furnace will melt metal — foundry owner

     
 

Wind Power
Can wind power your home? Can wind power your home?

James Gabriel of Mount Vernon said it was a...

     
 

Hydro / Ocean
Gulf Stream turbine inventors seek investors Gulf Stream turbine...

An Illinois-based company is seeking investors to...

     
   

Thermal Energy
Worldchanger in Brazil: Jose Alano and DIY Solar Water Heaters Worldchanger in Brazil:...

Alano’s idea…came from the lack of recycling...

     
   

Waste
Inventors take aim at Pacific Ocean 'garbage patch' Inventors take aim at...

Group hopes to capture tons of ocean debris

     
           
   

 

     
   

     
   

 

     
           
   

A Scientist Takes On Gravity A Scientist Takes On...

ZERO GRAVITY Dr. Erik Verlinde says, “For me...

You Built What?! The 200-MPG Aerocycle You Built What?! The...

A motorcycle with an aerodynamic shell gets more...

Stabilisers will let deep-sea wind turbines stand tall Stabilisers will let...

Putting the turbines much further out will mean...

Physicist Predicts Gravitational Analogue Of Electrical Transformers Physicist Predicts...

The gravitational equivalent of an electrical...

How the electric car will save us How the electric car...

Getting charged up about a gasoline-free future

Storing Wind Power as Ice? Storing Wind Power as...

GreenBuild

Urban Energy Myths - The Top Three Urban Energy Myths - The...

Paul earned his B.S. and an M.S. in electrical...

Electric Car Breaks World Record By Traveling 623 Miles Without Recharging Electric Car Breaks...

Japanese Electric Car

Jackson resident seeks votes for Pepsi Refresh Challenge Jackson resident seeks...

Green's dream is that the world will catch on to...

Waste-Treatment Plant Plays Mozart to Microbes Waste-Treatment Plant...

Symphonic Sewage

Longwood inventor, 12, a finalist in national Bubble Wrap contest for 'Orange DeBruiser' Longwood inventor, 12, a...

Eric, a 12-year-old from Longwood, one of the 15...

New Heating system New Heating system

Inventor says system ‘a gold mine with no end'

Chinese Wind Power Heads Offshore Chinese Wind Power Heads...

Breezy tidal flats offer green power on the...

Fraud or breakthrough? Fraud or breakthrough?

Decide for yourself.

New Material Is a Breakthrough in Magnetism; Step Closer to 'Magnetic Monopole' New Material Is a...

Researchers from Imperial College London have...

Metro Motivation: GM Envisions Networked Mini Cars for City Streets Metro Motivation: GM...

The automaker introduces its Electric Networked...

Light Bends Matter, Surprising Scientists Light Bends Matter,...

Discovery so unexpected, researchers were...

Tata Nano is Developing a Bad Habit: Bursting Into Flames Tata Nano is Developing...

Tata had recently introduced a hot pink version...

Inventor finds right spin on turbine Inventor finds right...

Idea would better harness power of ocean currents

Bonsall fourth-grader takes invention on Ellen DeGeneres Show Bonsall fourth-grader...

CHRIS NEAL SHOWS OFF HIS FAN-POWERED SKATEBOARD...

Green Lighthouse - Danmark Green Lighthouse -...

The Green Lighthouse was inaugurated last week...

Hamilton: Albertan oil veteran pumping up 'nitrogen grid' Hamilton: Albertan oil...

The underground pipeline would eliminate the need...

NASA sets sights on inflatable space stations NASA sets sights on...

No more floating in a tin can

High-Tech Energy "Oasis" to Bloom in the Desert? High-Tech Energy...

An illustration of the planned Sahara Forest...

Cool It and Warm It With a Chameleon Roof Cool It and Warm It With...

Cool in Summer Is Good, Cold in Winter Is Not

     
   

 

     
           
           
   

 

     
           
   

Free Energy  Videos

     
   

 

     

 


 

  Site  

      2004-2009 ©  FreeEnergy.ca

  Preview Chanel Preview Chanel   AddThis Feed Button
Powered by: PHPCow.com