True Believer | OnEarth Magazine
"Is meat okay? We eat a lot of meat down here in Lubbock." After the Sunday morning service at Ecclesia, Katharine Hayhoe has suggested a favorite barbecue spot for lunch.Flashback: Warmist David Roberts admits to repeatedly eating meat, ignoring the sage advice of Hansen and Pachauri
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For her part, Hayhoe continues to frame the choice we all face in a context that should be familiar to any Christian who has given some thought to the question of sin and its wages. "God has given us free will," she says. "And the Bible is actually very clear that there are consequences for making bad choices. Sow the seeds, bear the fruit. Climate change is the consequence of making some bad choices. We made them, and we’re now bearing the results."
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People generally don’t like hearing bad news, and Katharine Hayhoe knows it. But, she says, "if a doctor gave you a full-body scan and found some potential issues or abnormalities, and didn’t tell you, can you imagine how angry you’d be? It’s the doctor’s moral responsibility to tell you. Climate scientists do full-body scans of the planet. It’s our moral responsibility to tell people what we’re finding."
Top climatologist Dr. James Hansen calls for less coal and less meat to stop global warming.
"You can make a bigger contribution in that way (being a vegetarian) than just about anything."
1 comment:
Hayhoe, as a Christian, is saying that mankind's pursuit of and becoming prosperous is destroying the earth. Providing people with reliable sources of energy and lifting them out of poverty is somehow bad. Would someone believe in a God who provided oil and coal for their obvious uses would also cause the earth's destruction by using them? That would be an awfully cruel joke on mankind to give him resources for prosperity and those same resources destroy them. How can she believe that? A benevolent God would not trick mankind into destroying themselves. For anyone who believes in a God, it's a contradiciton for them to believe in CAGW.
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