The American Spectator : Environmentalist Hypocrisy
YouTube - Ed Struzik [didn't let his fear of CO2 prevent him from taking eleven fossil-fueled trips to the Arctic]
That Big Oil (or whatever fossil fuel industry) funds free-market, limited government organizations and candidates (who also tend to fit into the global warming realism camp) is a familiar attempt to discredit them by watermelon groups and by the formerly mainstream media. Meanwhile those very same green socialist groups escape scrutiny of their own lobbying and relationships, because their bedmates give them no reason to suspect anything!Into the "Hot" Zone | Alarmist Ed Struzik - UpHere.ca
Despite their conviction that climate change is occurring, many Inuit hunters don’t believe polar bears are threatened.Struzik is all over the place in the article above. He admits that the Arctic has warmed and cooled naturally, and he doesn't say why the changes today aren't natural. He blames CO2 for a male polar bear eating a cub; he blames CO2 for narwhals getting stuck in ice; he blames CO2 for natural mercury washing into the water.
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In amongst the rocks, gravel and peat, they found fossil fragments of alligators, giant tortoises, snakes, lizards, tapirs, hippos and rhino-like animals that had lived 55 million years ago. A decade later, Canadian scientist James Basinger and his colleagues added another dimension to this picture when they excavated extraordinarily well-preserved evidence of a Dawn Redwood forest that flourished downstream of an upland environment dotted by pine, spruce and walnut trees 10 million later.
No one knows why it was warm for so long. What we do know is that in relatively rapid-fire fashion, the cold wiped out the Arctic forests, the miniature beavers and the three-toed horses. Even the more hearty woolly mammoths, mastodons and giant beavers that took over were unable to withstand the climatic cycles that waxed and waned and ended up glaciating 30 per cent of the Earth’s surface at one end of the extreme and nourishing vast savannahs at the other.
YouTube - Ed Struzik [didn't let his fear of CO2 prevent him from taking eleven fossil-fueled trips to the Arctic]
The Big Thaw is a product of the eleven trips taken by veteran Arctic journalist Ed Struzik throughout the north. This book takes a close look at global warming's wide-ranging impact on the Arctic.
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