Monday, December 06, 2010

No so worried about warming that they’ll pay to stop it | Herald Sun Andrew Bolt Blog
Of course Australians still believe man is heating the world. It’s just that half of them now don’t want to lift a finger to stop it
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This is a huge fall from three years ago, when a massive 77 per cent of people polled told Newspoll they’d love to pay more, and only 18 per cent said no.
Rajan's Take: Climate Change: Cancun Speeds up the end of Climate Hysteria
For NGOs, the end of the scam for many is an end of their number one revenue spinner. Christopher Booker sums it rather nicely “The global warming scare may have been fun for the children while it lasted. But the time has come for the joke to be declared well and truly over.” NGOs are however not expected to make a formal admission that their role in this scam is over. But it is only a matter of time their climate staff are given the pink slips, if at all it hasn’t happen already. Most of these redundant staff is unlikely to be re-assigned responsibilities as the scam taint has made them unemployable within the industry, as they become an embarrassment for both the organization and the entire sector.
It is apparent that for a long, long time, NGO advocacy on any issue is not going to have a cutting edge as questions are expected to be frequently raised on their judgement of issues and competence in engaging in issues that based on science or technology.
Climbing Out Of The Dark: Cancun, Who Are The Deniers Now?
Someone has to pull the plug on the climate scam. Funding needs to be rerouted to REAL pollution problems. Send those Sierra kids to Africa to dig water wells, at least then they will make up for all the pollution that exists because money has been diverted to third world despots.
Video: Arctic elegy: a lament for the disappearing ice - Telegraph
At a micro level, a warming Arctic Ocean has begun to recalibrate the planet’s carbon exchange by heating billions of lifeforms in the microbial soup at the bottom of the food web. These processes are improperly understood, and outcomes can be good as well as bad. A shifting phytoplankton population in an ice-free ocean may result in an abundance of fish, solving, at a stroke, the planetary protein deficit.

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