'Climate criminal' blows
whistle: 'It's just about the money!' 'Wealth
transfer' is 'gesture to redesign the global economic system', by Greg
Corombos, 12/12/15, WND
Secretary of State John Kerry told
the Paris climate conference that ending all U.S. carbon emissions, or even
those in all the industrialized world, would do nothing to impact the climate,
leading one of the top critics of the climate-change movement
to call the speech additional proof that the effort is all about
wealth redistribution.
In another major development, the
latest draft of the climate agreement does not include the creation
of the International Climate Justice Tribunal, which would have been a U.N.
agency that billed industrialized nations for the cleanup of natural disasters
around the world.
In Kerry’s address to the conference, he made a push to get developing nations to make major
commitments in reducing carbon emissions. However, his comments also gave
considerable fuel to those who believe Kerry and others are on a fool’s errand.
“The fact is that even if every
single American citizen biked to work, carpooled to school, used only solar
panels to power their homes, if we each planted a dozen trees, if we somehow
eliminated all our domestic greenhouse gas emissions, guess what? That still
wouldn’t be enough to offset the carbon pollution from the rest of the world,”
Kerry said.
He took a step further. “If all the
industrialized nations went down to zero emissions, remember what I said all
the industrialized nations went down to zero emissions, it wouldn’t be enough,
not when more than 65 percent of the world’s carbon pollution comes from the
developing world,” Kerry added.
Christopher C. Horner is a senior
fellow at the Competitive Enterprise Institute and author of multiple books
challenging the basis for the climate-change movement. He is in Paris as an
observer at the conference, where he has been branded a “climate
criminal.”
Horner said Kerry accidentally
lurched toward the truth in trying to implore global cooperation. “What he’s
doing is inadvertently pointing out that this is all pain, no gain,” Horner
said. “He won’t admit to the pain. They still say that if the state uses its
coercive power and forces you into energy rationing and so on … it
still wouldn’t impact the climate.”
Kerry used the hypothetical of zero
carbon emissions, which is a far cry even from the hotly contested Obama
environmental regulations calling for major carbon reductions by 2030. Horner
said the real goals go much further and are plenty frightening.
“They’re talking 70-95 percent
reductions in this document,” Horner said. “They really do think
that they can bring us back to the renewable age, which we left over 100
years ago because we could. Suddenly we liberated hydrocarbon energy. We didn’t
have to live on hydro power or solar power.”
While going back to renewables is
the stated goal of climate-change activists, Horner said there’s a good reason
we moved away from it generations ago.
“We’re not going back to that,” he
said. “We left it. It was a time of much-shortened lifespans, disease,
drudgery and mortality, crop failures leading to catastrophe and so on.”
Meanwhile, the scrapping of the
International Climate Justice Tribunal marks a win on one of Horner’s highest
priorities since he envisioned the panel blaming the U.S. and other advanced
nations for the severe weather events throughout the world. It’s a charge he
believes would have stuck at the tribunal because signatories at the conference
will be expected to confess their responsibility for climate change in any
final agreement.
But while Horner is thrilled, he
said many others in Paris are not. “It’s clearly going to leave the greens
upset and some countries upset because it’s kicking the can down the road on a
few issues,” Horner said.
Persistent sticking points are
leading some climate-change activists to call for Pope Francis to come and
demand unity in advancing a climate deal. Horner said the pontiff had better be
ready for a debate.
“He’s going to couch this in terms
of social justice, and as I have mentioned to you, that is truly perverse,” he
said. “I’m not saying the pope knows this, but social justice, as they see
it, is killing tens of thousands of the most vulnerable in every country.”
Horner said the
explanation for that charge is simple.
Implementing emissions reductions places major costs on energy providers, which
pass the costs on to consumers. Soaring utility rates will then impact the poor
most negatively and European nations that already do this see
people having to choose between buying food and paying to heat or
cool their homes.
As for the logistics of the conference
and any forthcoming agreement, Horner said officials are twisting themselves in
legal knots to avoid this being a treaty since they know Congress won't approve
it.
"The buzz here in Paris is that the
U.S. Congress is the greatest obstacle to them obtaining the treaty they refuse
to call a treaty," Horner said. "That means the democratic
process. There's nothing democratic about this. If you allow Congress to get a
crack at this, it's over.
"Under Article II, Section 2 of the
Constitution, this would never fly. No free society would ever do to itself
what they're demanding of us," he said.
Horner is one of seven activists opposed
to any deal to have their face plastered around Paris on posters branding them
climate criminals. After, first joking that activists could have picked a
better picture of him, Horner said there is a message of intimidation involved
with the posters.
"It's getting a little long in the
tooth, putting up all the bad guys' pictures so everybody knows what they look
like," Horner said. "We can play the 'What if Sarah Palin Did It'
game if you want, but they really want everybody here to now what we look
like."
In the end, Horner said the activists'
definition of climate criminal is really an indictment on those working to
preserve freedom.
"We point out the policies,
history, that it won't effect the climate, that's it's about a wealth transfer,
that it will kill the most vulnerable, that it's a gesture about clearly what
they're openly acknowledging here – to redesign the global economic system,"
he said. "When you point those things out, because they aren't popular in
the United States, you are a criminal."
Listen to
the WND/Radio America interview with Christopher C. Horner:
http://www.wnd.com/2015/12/climate-criminal-blows-whistle-its-just-about-the-money/
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