» Hedge Fund Manager Earns Millions on Carbon, Spends it Financing Global Warming Initiative Campaign - Big Government
It is often pointed out by climate change skeptics that the deeds of the most prominent voices preaching climate doom rarely match their apocalyptic caterwauling. How many times a year does Al Gore circumnavigate the globe in a gasoline fueled jet to condescendingly tell the masses that their use of gasoline is killing the planet?Scene & Herd: For Ludwig, teaching science is elementary - Lexington, MA - Lexington Minuteman
And how worried can Tom Steyer be about the ill effects of carbon fuels if he’s helping to fund the development and delivery of them?
“I guess the thing that motivates me most now is doing what I can to limit climate change, including teaching, volunteering and political activism. Climate disruption is a specter that looms over all our kids and grandchildren,” she said. “This world of nature that I've spent a lifetime exploring with kids and adults is at risk, as is our way of life — think 30 or more days a summer above 90 degrees in the future if we do nothing different. It's really disturbing that there seems so little momentum for change in Washington.”Environmentalists Getting Mad As Hell | The Science Friday Blog
Are environmentalists “mad as hell” now and willing to become more vocal and politically active? Could be.If China is going green, why did those 10,000 coal trucks get caught in the Mother-Of-All-Traffic Jams? | Washington Examiner
They’ve watched greenhouse gas legislation stalling in Congress this year, again. They’ve listened to politicians call global warming the greatest hoax ever foisted on the American public. They’ve seen environmental groups, over the decades, try to be more accommodating with lobbyists and industry, hoping to “get along” if they “give a little.” How much did it get them?
But incredible as a 75-mile traffic jam is in and of itself, there was something else of importance worth noting in the Chinese traffic choker - it was mainly caused by trucks hauling coal. According to China Daily, "more than 10,000 trucks mainly carrying coal are stuck in a 120 km (75 mile) traffic jam in the north Chinese region of Inner Mongolia, in the latest dramatic snarl-up on the country's roads."
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