Thursday, May 13, 2010

Who's Backing the Climate Bill? | Mother Jones
Kerry made much of the anticipated support from three large oil companies: Shell, ConnocoPhillips, and BP.
PJTV Streams Climate Debate LIVE
EL SEGUNDO, CA –PJTV today announced it will stream LIVE coverage of the Heartland Institute’s 4th Annual International Conference on Climate Change (ICCC-4) – a worldwide gathering of global warming “realists” – from Chicago, IL, on May 16-18. The online television network will offer viewers videos and analysis from each keynote speaker as well as a number of the conference events.
Glenn Beck, carbon dioxide, and Twinkies | Media Matters for America
So yes, higher carbon dioxide levels are beneficiary to plant life, just as higher Twinkie levels would make for a happier Glenn Beck.
Limbaugh: Obama "regime" creating a "path of destruction," energy bill intended to "control" | Media Matters for America
[Audio] From the May 13 edition of Premiere Radio Network's The Rush Limbaugh Show
Michael Levi's Blog » Blog Archive » Kerry-Lieberman and the International Climate Talks
This bill probably won’t pass. While it lives, U.S. negotiators will have pretend, however half-heartedly, that they think it’s got a serious chance.
Kerry-Lieberman’s Great American Rip-off « Green Hell Blog
There are only three things you need to know about the Kerry-Lieberman cap-and-trade bill that was released Wednesday—it will accomplish nothing for the environment; it will cost a lot of money and it will financially enrich and politically empower a host of scoundrels.
#38) The Syracuse Sizzle Discussion with Marc Morano, Ruth Yanai, Mark Meisner, and Randy Olson | The Benshi
...while some people might think it’s wrong to allow a climate skeptic to speak publicly, the fact is you can hear the Syracuse students in the Q&A using the opportunity to try and grasp how the mind of a climate skeptic works — how, in the face of so much science [like what, specifically?], can you possibly claim it’s mostly untrue? If nothing else, that exercise for them was valuable because, as they said, they are deeply ensconced in an environmental program where everyone thinks pretty much exactly the same way on such major issues. It is good for them to hear a little diversity in the voices they are exposed to.

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