'Frozen Gore' sculpture spouting hot air fuels global warming debate in Alaska - latimes.com
Is Support For Cap-And-Trade Waning? -- Energy Section
"We don't agree with his theories — we're suspicious of the financial motivation behind them," Compeau said.Video: Watch 4000 lb. Frozen Al Gore ice sculpture give his Copenhagen speech and belch truck exhaust | GORE LIED
Last year's inaugural Gore ice sculpture got national attention, including mentions on The Drudge Report, CNN, Fox News and MSNBC.
Compeau said his Web site with photos and information about the sculpture attracted 1.7 million visitors. He also was swamped with mostly positive e-mails from people who found the sculpture entertaining.
As GORE LIED noted in detail on Monday, Fairbanks, Alaska’s Craig Compeau has recreated and improved last year’s frozen Al Gore ice scupture by adding audio of Gore’s Copenhagen speech from last month, and is also piping pick-up truck exhaust though the Frozen Gore ice sculpture to simulate Gore’s personal emission of that dastardly CO2.warming gore - [I've been checking this Twitter search, and it seems to be yielding very nearly 100% pure mockery these days]
Is Support For Cap-And-Trade Waning? -- Energy Section
Support for climate change legislation that includes a cap-and-trade system seems to be falling off on both ends of the political spectrum, according to some experts on NationalJournal.com's Energy & Environment Expert Blog this week.Got Beef with the EPA? The National Cattlemen Do - Over Carbon Regulations » The Foundry
Farming is another energy-intensive industry with its fuel, chemical, electricity and natural gas-derived fertilizer costs – not to mention the methane from “cow emissions.” Greenhouse gas regulations’ potentially disastrous effect on farmers should raise a red flag for those in the farm belt and will put U.S. agriculture at a tremendous competitive disadvantage. If these costly regulations move forward, soon beef won’t be what’s for dinner.
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