Friday, May 29, 2009

Can human rights be the climate [fraud] movement’s moral guide? | Grist
I’m spending this Thursday and Friday at the Three Degrees conference on climate change and human rights, hosted by the University of Washington School of Law. Some 40 speakers—mostly legal scholars, but also public health experts, NGO leaders, trial lawyers, and political organizers—are gathered to debate the future of the law as it applies to victims of climate change. The first day was though-provoking, sobering, and occasionally bewildering. Oddly enough, the biggest moment of clarity for me was a story one of the speakers told about another conference.
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* Finally, on a completely different note, my biggest mistake of the day might have been arriving too late to hear the morning performance of Climbing Poetree, a spoken-word/artists-of-many-stripes duo. They were listed as “conference inspiration,” which I figured was an oxymoron. But I’m told they floored the 200 or so attendees. You just don’t hear many stories of people moved to tears at law school conferences.
united states weather 1950-2009 - Wolfram|Alpha

Report that 315,000 deaths per year from effects of CO2 concentrations "deeply flawed". Meantime, 800,000 really do die each year from H20. | GORE LIED
So, the Global Humanitarian Forum report “is a lie”, but the fact that more than 800,000 die from H20 every year is very, very true:

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