[We're saved! Hospital allegedly makes us healthier by using an accounting gimmick in response to the greatest scientific fraud in human history]
St. Luke’s Hospital & Health Network has taken a major step towards reducing its carbon footprint. By purchasing 10 percent of its electricity from renewable energy sources, the health system will realize an annual 2,900 ton reduction of carbon dioxide, a significant component of greenhouse gas.Global warming: Manmade or a natural process? | greenbaypressgazette.com
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“The reverse auction process enabled us to buy our electricity from renewable sources for the same price as the traditional electricity generated from fossil fuels,” said Larry Jennings, director of Purchasing and Contracting at St. Luke’s. “This is an important objective around our overall strategy for reducing our carbon footprint and making a positive contribution to public health.”
GREEN BAY — It is assumed and asserted that there is a "consensus" or "settled" science of anthropogenic (man-made) global warming. In contrast, 31,486 American scientists (9,029 Ph.D.s, 3,804 trained in earth physical environment areas and 558 from Wisconsin) have signed a petition urging the federal government to reject the Kyoto treaty.Getting the Olympics Ready, One Snow Delivery at a Time - NYTimes.com
They also stated "there is no convincing evidence of human release of specific gases causing now, or into the future, atmospheric warming and disruption of the earth's climate." They further advised "substantial evidence that increased levels of carbon dioxide produce many beneficial effects to plant and animal life!"
Cypress has long faced questions about its feasibility for holding Olympic events, given Vancouver’s relatively mild weather and the area’s penchant for fog and rain in the winter.Why did horses die out in North America? | Horsetalk - equestrian feature articles
A colder period that ended some 10,000 years ago saw the land bridge reach about twice the size of Texas, and scientists have even given it a name - Beringia.
You could even consider the current state of affairs, with a body of water separating Siberia and Alaska, as unusual. The land bridge has actually been in place more often than not during the past two million years or more.
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