Saturday, March 13, 2010

Global warming summit shows need for Good News: Franklin Graham
President Obama and other world leaders came to Copenhagen for a United Nations climate summit, where the topic of global warming took center stage. I think all of us would certainly agree that steps can be taken to preserve the fragile environment we live in.

What is happening, however, in gatherings like this is frightening to me. A legitimate concern for the stewardship of our resources has been replaced by a radical, godless worldview that elevates the creation to idolatrous status.
Slide in climate change belief is a temporary glitch | Damian Carrington | Environment | guardian.co.uk
It has taken a perfect storm of snow, scientific doubt and political failure to dent public acceptance of the reality of global warming - but these factors will pass
...
Looking forward, the critical category will be those people who accept climate change is occurring but think natural cycles – not humans - are more likely the cause. That position allows people to reject green measures as futile. The size of that group is large, perhaps 30-50%, but varies a lot between polls, probably due to different questions. The IPcC's landmark 2007 report concluded that it was 90% certain that we are causing warming. Whether people can be persuaded of that may be the key to whether meaningful action on climate change actually happens.
YouTube - Monty Python And The Holy Grail- The Black Knight
[It's only a flesh wound]
[Pachauri in Bhutan]- Climate change [scam] heads the agenda
16th SAARC Summit 13 March, 2010 - The 16th SAARC summit, scheduled to be held in Bhutan in April, will provide an opportunity where politics, hopefully, will not come in the way of cooperation, according to Nobel laureate and chairman of the intergovernmental panel on climate change (IPCC), Dr Rajendra Kumar Pachauri.

Climate change is the main agenda of the Summit.

Dr Pachauri, who is on a two-day visit, said that the summit will provide an opportunity for SAARC countries to discuss common problems related to climate change that will affect all the countries. “I think politics won’t come in the way, because the theme is a problem all the countries are dealing with,” he said in a brief press conference yesterday.
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On the request of Lyonchhoen, Dr Pachauri agreed to help explore the proposal of the Lyonchhoen to make the capital city into a bicycle city. Dr Pachauri offered to contact foundations, which will provide battery-operated bicycles, feasible to the terrain of Thimphu.

He also expressed his interest in setting up a centre for Tata energy resources institute (TERI), of which he is director general and Yale university (where he heads its newly established Yale climate and energy institute) at Bhutan’s education city, which is also being planned as a green city.
[It's 2010, and this brainwashed high school student argues that a community garden will prevent bad weather] | AspenTimes.com
As people who live in the world, we know that global warming is harming our Earth.
...Food transportation vehicles produce tremendous amounts of carbon emissions in the air, which in turn, are harmful to our Earth. Also, there is high risk of food contamination during the process.

As we have worked together, we have come up with an idea that we think will help this problem in the long run. Our solution to this problem is a community garden in the town of Basalt.

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