Thursday, March 18, 2010

Electric cars and 40 new nuclear power stations to meet climate change [swindle] targets - Telegraph
Every car on the road will need to be electric and there will be solar panels on every home, 10,000 wind turbines onshore and 40 new nuclear power stations if the Government is to stand a chance of meeting strict climate change targets, engineers have warned.
Beware of the climate change mind police - Chris James - On Line Opinion - 18/3/2010
Congratulations to the mining and resources industries and their cohorts for a successful campaign in mind control. They have managed to change public opinion on global warming. How do these executives sleep at night knowing that millions of people across the world are going to lose their homes and possibly their lives to climate change and rising sea levels?
...
The genuine scientists who worked on the IPCC report were lost in the mire of the climate sceptics’ public relations propaganda, which, everyone suspects, is backed by enormous mineral industry funds.

The result is clear: an absolute campaign of mind control is occurring, but this happens with fascist governments, or in a dictatorships or a military regime doesn’t it? Surely it doesn’t happen through the Western democratic processes; or does it?
Chris James - On Line Opinion Author
Dr Chris James is an artist, writer, researcher and psychotherapist. She lives on a property in regional Victoria and lectures on psychotherapeutic communities and eco-development.
Coal Beats Solar as Analysts Favor Peabody Energy (Update1) - BusinessWeek
March 17 (Bloomberg) -- Wall Street’s contribution to the debate on how to curb global warming: Buy coal, sell solar.

Peabody Energy Corp., the biggest coal producer, is rated a “buy” by 79 percent of analysts, while 44 percent recommend First Solar Inc., the largest maker of thin-film solar panels. The Stowe Global Coal index of 38 coal producers has gained 6.5 percent in 2010, and the Bloomberg Global Leaders Solar index of 38 solar module and component makers has dropped 17 percent.

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