A comment on climate fraudster Dr R K Pachauri's Blog
Posted on May 10, 2009 11:56 PM by Russell BEddisbury MP Stephen O’Brien slams wind farm developers Cornwall Light and Power at public meeting in Rushton - Chester Chronicle
You sir, to keep it simple, are wrong in your "science", in your politics and your green dogma. You are absolutely wrong.
Shadow health secretary O’Brien, who had previously attended a meeting with protest action group Cheshire Against Wind Turbines, was not convinced about the information provided at CL&P’s exhibition, held at Eaton’s Jessie Hughes Hall.Breathtaking, dangerous stupidity: "Global Warming May Exceed Infections as Health Threat" (Update1) - Bloomberg.com
He said: “I did not pull my punches when I met with representatives of Cornwall Light and Power at the public exhibition.
“The growing case against land-based wind turbines – their inefficiency and their impact on landscapes in the open countryside – is overwhelming.
“Now Rushton is potentially in the firing line to suffer the same sort of environmental vandalism.”
May 14 (Bloomberg) -- Global warming is the biggest public health threat of the 21st century, eclipsing infectious diseases, water shortages and poverty, a team of medical and climate-change researchers concluded.Fraudster Gavin Schmidt promotes his alarmist book | Environment | guardian.co.uk
The phenomenon will be felt first in the developing world, further burdening a population already in crisis from food shortages, said the report from University College London that was published today in The Lancet journal. The changing climate will also cause real and lasting damage to the Western world, affecting generations to come, said Anthony Costello, a pediatrician at University College London.
“Climate change is a health issue affecting billions of people, not just an environmental issue about polar bears and deforestation,” Costello said during a news conference. “We are setting up a world for our children and grandchildren that may be extremely frightening and turbulent.”
Eschewing the polemics in favour of objective explanations can provide a welcome respite from the constant bickering that all too often passes for debate in climate change discussions.
One manifestation of this approach is a new book, Climate Change: Picturing the Science, which photographer Joshua Wolfe and I have put together. The book brings together our two communities to demonstrate in words and images how we are exploring what is happening now, what happened in the past and what might happen in the future. We don't expect this suddenly to transform the public's understanding of the science or the policy debate, but it is a resource that many will hopefully find accessible and useful. Citizens deserve a more mature discussion, and together, scientists, journalists and photographers should provide it.
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