Thursday, September 27, 2012

Teachers’ journal wants questions about climate change suppressed | Troy Media
The Day After Tomorrow exploits the inherent fear of separation and abandonment that children experience. In the movie, a father desperately tries to reach his son as cataclysmic cold weather sweeps across the U.S. It is a film fraught with tragedy and larger-than-life special effects. And it is fiction, not science.

Much of climate change ‘science’ exploits fear and encourages nonsensical thinking in place of the Scientific Method. Take a look at the UN’s Environment Program like “Tore and the Town on Thin Ice.” Tore runs a team of sled dogs. To save him from carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions, the UN earth mother Sedena encourages his arctic villagers to install solar panels on their homes, in a land where it is dark and sunless for much of the year.

That’s why critical thinking is essential to balance emotional climate change hysteria.
Sharp to End Solar Panel Business in U.S., Europe, Kyodo Says - Bloomberg
Sharp Corp. (6753) plans to end production and sales of solar cells and modules in the U.S. and Europe by March as part of a restructuring, Kyodo News said.
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Osaka-based Sharp plans to cut more than 10,000 jobs, or about 18 percent of its workforce, and is in talks to sell plants as it tries to return to profit, two people with knowledge of the proposal said yesterday.
EU and US drift apart on climate change | European Voice
Democrats are loathe to even mention the subject. For the EU, this development turned the aviation issue into a time-bomb, as American airlines were to be subject to the ETS from 1 January this year without any equivalent system in the US.
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Whichever candidate wins on 6 November, one thing looks certain: Europe and the US are now widely apart on the issue of emissions reduction. It is a reality that is causing many in EU to question the long-term viability of a Europe-only price on CO2.
STUDY: TV News Covered Paul Ryan's Workout 3x More Than Record Arctic Sea Ice Loss | Research | Media Matters for America
Cable Outlets Covered Ryan's Workout Over Six Times More Than Arctic Sea Ice Loss

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