Wednesday, April 22, 2009

Disney's 'Earth' helps to promote the greatest scientific fraud in history
...some of the harsher realities of life in the wild emerge when those elephants are stalked by lions and when a polar bear's food supply disappears, courtesy of global warming.
Joe Soucheray: It's Earth Day. So have a pizza before the sun explodes. - TwinCities.com
Fat people can take some comfort in the idea that any year now, the Earth is going to be hit by a giant solar storm that will so thoroughly devastate the developed world that there won't be any need or time to blame fat people for anything, much less global warming.

That's the latest of what passes for science as we approach secular religion's highest holy day, Earth Day, today. Fat people are now blamed for global warming, which, if true, would only cause me to wish for more fat people around these parts because spring has been slow to arrive, as usual.

Keeping in mind that what the followers of environmentalism as a secular religion truly share is a dislike of people, fat people have got to go. They don't come right out and say that fat people should be rounded up, but some true believer named Dr. Phil Edwards of the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine said, "Moving about in a heavy body is like driving a gas guzzler."
Lost NSF staffer avoids freezing to death in Greenland
While the search was taking place, the missing man used survival techniques taught to all NSF and CH2M HILL-affiliated personnel in polar regions to stay alive, including digging a hole to get out of the wind and frequently moving his body to keep blood circulating. The man is now being treated at a hospital in Nuuk, the capital of Greenland, and is expected to recover.

The station is located in central Greenland atop 3200 metres (2 miles) of ice, and is nearly 418 km (260 miles) from the nearest point of land. Summit supports a diversity of scientific research, including year-round measurements of air-snow interactions used to interpret data from deep ice cores drilled both at Summit and elsewhere - research that is crucial to building our understanding of our climate, global warming and other phenomena.

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