Your Opinion: Liberals just want to tax, regulate | battlecreekenquirer.com | The Enquirer
Liberals hate oil supposedly because of global warming. As is usual, they lie. Like some giant lizard with a brain too small to tell the body it's dead, climate alarmists mechanically yammer on in an endless loop, often behaving cockroach-like, darting about, pretending to care about foreign oil, green jobs, windmills, solar panels. It's mindless crap, brainwashing for the ignorant. All they really want is to completely control the economy. The goal all along has been to tax and regulate every human activity.Mary Ellen Harte and John Harte: Addressing Climate Change: Connect It to the Daily News, and Heat
We are carbon-based life forms. We exhale carbon. Plants absorb it. All organic matter is carbon. Millions of years ago it was warmer. There were more plants, more animals, more potential places to grow food. Thousands of years ago ice ages came and went. Carbon had nothing to do with any of it. Naturally, liberals would have us believe carbon is pollution.
Is the US Congress a fracas of frogs? So far, they're acting like it, even as one of their beloved and venerated members, Robert Byrd, was pushed into the arms of the grim reaper by the extra heat recently.Mary Ellen Harte and John Harte
What to do? This is a duh moment. Stop acting like a frog. Boycott fossil fuels. Write letters to the editors. Complain to your news outlets when they fail to mention the "C-C" phrase in the news, whether it's the unusual droughts, floods, blizzards, insect epidemics destroying our forests, wildfires, dying coral reefs, storms, spread of tropical diseases, acidifying oceans, or whatever scenario that is predicted to worsen under climate change. Climate change is bad for the economy, and a transition to clean energy is good for the economy. It's that simple.
Prof. John Harte of the University of California at Berkeley has won numerous awards and honors as an ecologist and an established environmental scientist and author.[Global warming blamed for long, cold winter, late spring, and frost damage?] - Dairy farmers facing winter silage shortages
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Mary Ellen (Mel) Harte Ph. D. is a biologist who has worked with him on various environmental projects.
The long, cold winter and late spring meant that some crops were completely destroyed by frost and farmers were not able to plant on time.
She said with extreme weather conditions likely to become more frequent in the future due to global warming, it is likely the same difficulties for farmers will return.
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