The Flim-Flam Men
Neo-Neocon likens the global warming conflict to a religious war.
It’s been clear for quite some time that the AGW controversy has morphed from a scientific to a religious war—although in this case, it’s the AGW scientists who are the “religious” fanatics. That sort of situation cannot help but spell trouble.
There’s something in that. The demands of the pro-AGW folks sound a lot like calls for religious orthodoxy and calling skeptics “deniers” is supposededly to compare them to people who dispute the existance of the Holocaust but the subtext goes back a little bit further than that. “Denier” is one of the descriptions of Satan.
Then there’s redemption. In a post Christian world many no longer seek it but, rather, seek to offer it by recreating or at least preserving Eden.
And there’s The Great and Powerful God Mammon.
From a small coterie of scientists the climate game has exploded into a multi-billion dollar business. University chairs, fellowships, research grants. Every newspaper has a climate reporter. They may be laying off everybody else but there is still one of those.
There are conferences in Tahiti, Rio, Steamboat Springs. Stowe, Vermont. Gstaad. Pick a spot where the beautiful people gather and there will be a climate conference there.
So — let’s recap (and please understand,or recall, as the case may be, that this isn’t a recitation of failed bread recipes, but crises that were just as real at their time as the fact that a few gigatons-worth of thermonuclear warheads were pointed at us):
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1968
The planet is going to starve. Paul Erlich
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1972
Club of Rome
We’ll run out of oil in the 80’s.
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1975
Ice age — Newsweek
The Dark Ages are going to return
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1998
Y2K. Airplanes falling from the sky. Thousands of very expensive emergency generators appeared for sale on Ebay, Craig’s List, and in the local classifieds the week after New Year’s day, 2000.
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2004
The Day After Tomorrow — Art Bell and Whitley Streiber, where the earth froze due to global warming (you read that right). Art Bell had a late-night talk show catering to Extraterrestrial-Alien Kidnapees and Bigfoot Researchers, while Whitley Streiber was a writer of horror novels. This movie was taken as gospel by a lot of people.
The film made $110,000,000 in DVD sales, bringing its total film gross to $652,771,772.
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2006
Al Gore looked at that and got the idea for An Inconvenient Truth. That earned $49 million and he got around $1.5 million for his Nobel.
It was even made mandatory that it be shown in British schools until a court reviewed it and found it full of inaccuracies.
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There was a commercial for Life cereal in which these two kids are thinking about trying it and then they decide to try it out on their little brother, Mikey. Because Mikey doesn’t like anything.
I don’t think we should be people who won’t try anything. But should we be the people who will swallow everything?
Kind of reminds me of The Music Man

