Month: May 2017

Fake News is for amateurs; the real money is in Fake History

Fake News is for amateurs; the real money is in Fake History

via Climate Scepticism
http://cliscep.com

Think the global-warming wars are boring? Think climate science is a low-ante, “academic” debate? Think the never-ending, ever-impending trials of Rajendra Pachauri and Steyn/Simberg don’t really matter? Then the following post is for you. It doesn’t mention any of that stuff. Scepticus Augustus the Self-Introducing, Unique of my Name, King in the South-Southeast know as … Continue reading Fake News is for amateurs; the real money is in Fake History

via Climate Scepticism http://cliscep.com

May 30, 2017 at 12:41AM

Irrelevant Notes and Thoughts

Irrelevant Notes and Thoughts

via Defeat Climate Alarmism
https://defyccc.com

After Brexit, the map of the European Union seems a lot like the map of the fascist-controlled territory of 1941.

As Trump returned from the G7 meeting, I couldn’t fail to notice that four out of six other its members are Germany, Japan, Italy, and Macron’s (i.e., collaborationist) France.  And all of them seem to be against the U.S. on climate change.  With the understanding that these countries have nothing in common with the regimes that ruled them in the WWII, and with all due respect to them, I support President Trump in his firm stand against the evil that is climate alarmism.

Speaking of Japan: it might pay lip service to climate alarmism, but it stakes its energy future on coal power plants.

via Defeat Climate Alarmism https://defyccc.com

May 29, 2017 at 11:05PM

Gulf News Demands USA Submit to the Paris Agreement

Gulf News Demands USA Submit to the Paris Agreement

via Watts Up With That?
http://ift.tt/1Viafi3

Guest essay by Eric Worrall

Gulf News, whose holding company is chaired by the United Arab Emirates Minister for Finance, has printed an article demanding the USA cut CO2 Emissions in line the Paris Agreement.

The US must act on climate change

The Paris Agreement is our best hope yet in preventing irrevocable environmental damage and all must adhere to its limits.

Published: 17:22 May 28, 2017

Trump has repeatedly said that he will decide on the Paris Agreement by the end of May, and with that now upon us, the danger is that he may renege on the US commitment to adhere to its environmental responsibilities.

Should Trump baulk, the danger is that other mass emitters of greenhouse gases such as China and India will follow suit, rendering what is our best hope to negate climate change as virtually worthless. This decision by Trump is crucial — and so too how nations react. We much not let this period now be the turning point where future generations look back through the fog of their dangerously warmed up world and say: “That was the beginning of the end.”

Read more: http://ift.tt/2r6Tb4I

Arab News Outlets frequently blame major weather disasters on Western CO2 emissions. The terrorist Osama Bin Laden on several occasions raised historic US CO2 emissions as another reason to hate – he saw Western pre-occupation with climate as an opportunity to destabilise the West.

I’m not suggesting Gulf News and their sponsors are intentionally seeking to use the Paris Treaty as a means to sabotage US fossil fuel interests, to help promote their own exports. But it seems more than a little hypocritical for a news outlet with strong connections to the UAE government, substantial exporters of oil, to be criticising someone elses contribution to CO2 emissions.

via Watts Up With That? http://ift.tt/1Viafi3

May 29, 2017 at 10:29PM

Woman Killed By Bear Because Of Climate Change!

Woman Killed By Bear Because Of Climate Change!

via NOT A LOT OF PEOPLE KNOW THAT
http://ift.tt/16C5B6P

By Paul Homewood

            

h/t Rupert Wyndham

             

From the ever more hysterical Telegraph:

              

image

A woman has been killed in an apparent bear attack while picking wild bamboo shoots in the mountains of northern Japan.

The body of Masako Oishi, 61, a nursing assistant, was reportedly found with gashes to the back of her head in a mountainous forest in Akita prefecture, which is known to be populated by bears.

The incident comes just weeks after local police issued warnings to residents living in remote mountainous areas of northern Japan to look out for bears.

Leaflets were reportedly circulated to warn locals of bear attacks in rural areas of both Akita and neighbouring Aomori Prefecture, advising residents not to enter forests where bears have been spotted foraging for mountain vegetables.

The number of bear attacks in Japan has risen sharply in recent years, with four people killed in the space of three weeks last year in forested areas of Akita, around 31 miles from the most recent attack. Before then, there had been only eight bear-related deaths in the region since 1979.

Bamboo shoots have long been a popular seasonal staple in Japanese cuisine at this time of year, with a number of residents living in northern mountains earning a living by selling them.

However, they are also a springtime staple in the diet of local bears, resulting in growing calls for caution among locals who go out to pick them in the wild.

Climate change has also been attributed to the surge in bear attacks in Japan in the past, as a growing number of the creatures reportedly leave their natural habitat in search of food.

http://ift.tt/2rhkaeh

 

So a woman enters a forest where there are lots of bears, with the aim of picking food that’s also eaten by bears, and gets killed.

But they blame it on climate change. Pathetic!

 

Even the WWF have not stooped so low. This is what they have to say:

The Japanese (Asiatic) black bear is the largest mammal of Japan’s 3 major islands (Honshu, Kyushu, Shikoku). After World War II, a large portion of their habitat in the mountains was converted from indigenous deciduous or mixed forests to afforested coniferous forests for timber production. This course of action drastically reduced the availability of food, forcing the bears to come down to human residential or farm areas. Various public works such as dams and roads separate their habitats, which interferes with their movements and isolates them from neighboring populations.

http://ift.tt/2rQB04l

 

But it’s too much to expect accurate reporting from the hacks at the Telegraph these days.

via NOT A LOT OF PEOPLE KNOW THAT http://ift.tt/16C5B6P

May 29, 2017 at 09:51PM