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  4. Environmentalist Goes Nuts Over ClimateGate

Environmentalist Goes Nuts Over ClimateGate

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  • I Ian Shlasko

    You shouldn't listen to chain e-mails... http://www.politifact.com/truth-o-meter/statements/2009/nov/23/chain-email/chain-e-mail-claims-cap-and-trade-will-require-hom/[^] EDIT: Also, from Snopes: http://www.snopes.com/politics/business/captrade.asp[^]

    Proud to have finally moved to the A-Ark. Which one are you in? Developer, Author (Guardians of Xen)

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    J Offline
    josda1000
    wrote on last edited by
    #10

    I don't want to believe it either... this is getting really weird. A lot of people are going scared over the clean energy stuff. I've got fluorescent light bulbs and I've got no problem with them... Though you have to wonder why it's all over the conservative radio and not liberal.

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    • I Ian Shlasko

      You shouldn't listen to chain e-mails... http://www.politifact.com/truth-o-meter/statements/2009/nov/23/chain-email/chain-e-mail-claims-cap-and-trade-will-require-hom/[^] EDIT: Also, from Snopes: http://www.snopes.com/politics/business/captrade.asp[^]

      Proud to have finally moved to the A-Ark. Which one are you in? Developer, Author (Guardians of Xen)

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      C Offline
      CaptainSeeSharp
      wrote on last edited by
      #11

      You know, the same type of "debunking" went on by these type of sites with the healthcare bill, but if you actually read the bill you will find that the assertions of selective rationing decided by unelected boards were very true indeed. I am quite certain that there are energy audits where you can't sell your home until you practically replace everything in your home ot make it "green". Whenever I get around to it, I will give page numbers and lines. I will wait until it is in the front of the queue.

      Watch the Fall of the Republic (High Quality 2:24:19)[^]

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      • C CaptainSeeSharp

        You know, the same type of "debunking" went on by these type of sites with the healthcare bill, but if you actually read the bill you will find that the assertions of selective rationing decided by unelected boards were very true indeed. I am quite certain that there are energy audits where you can't sell your home until you practically replace everything in your home ot make it "green". Whenever I get around to it, I will give page numbers and lines. I will wait until it is in the front of the queue.

        Watch the Fall of the Republic (High Quality 2:24:19)[^]

        C Offline
        C Offline
        Christian Graus
        wrote on last edited by
        #12

        CaptainSeeSharp wrote:

        I am quite certain that there are energy audits where you can't sell your home until you practically replace everything in your home ot make it "green".

        Market pressure may have that end result, and some people may be talking about that already, but how could the government possibly stop you from selling your home ? Oh, wait, you're CERTAIN, you didn't say there was any EVIDENCE.

        Christian Graus Driven to the arms of OSX by Vista. Read my blog to find out how I've worked around bugs in Microsoft tools and frameworks.

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        • C Christian Graus

          I have a question. We obviously know that you're incapable of original thought, but would Alex Jones be pleased that you're ripping off text from his site, and in the process suggesting to anyone who doesn't know much about him, that his demographic is morons like you ?

          Christian Graus Driven to the arms of OSX by Vista. Read my blog to find out how I've worked around bugs in Microsoft tools and frameworks.

          J Online
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          jeron1
          wrote on last edited by
          #13

          Christian Graus wrote:

          you're ripping off text from his site

          You aren't kidding, a word for word ripoff, incredibly lame. X|

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          • J jeron1

            Christian Graus wrote:

            you're ripping off text from his site

            You aren't kidding, a word for word ripoff, incredibly lame. X|

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            C Offline
            Christian Graus
            wrote on last edited by
            #14

            It's all he does. Just google any of his posts and you'll find the source. You'd think he'd at least steal from someone smart or credible.

            Christian Graus Driven to the arms of OSX by Vista. Read my blog to find out how I've worked around bugs in Microsoft tools and frameworks.

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            • C Christian Graus

              It's all he does. Just google any of his posts and you'll find the source. You'd think he'd at least steal from someone smart or credible.

              Christian Graus Driven to the arms of OSX by Vista. Read my blog to find out how I've worked around bugs in Microsoft tools and frameworks.

              J Online
              J Online
              jeron1
              wrote on last edited by
              #15

              Usually I don't read his posts, but for some reason I did read this one. The thing that immediately struck me was, there are way too many well formed sentences and a distinct lack of spelling errors for this to be original.

              Christian Graus wrote:

              You'd think he'd at least steal from someone smart or credible.

              true

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              • C CaptainSeeSharp

                You know, the same type of "debunking" went on by these type of sites with the healthcare bill, but if you actually read the bill you will find that the assertions of selective rationing decided by unelected boards were very true indeed. I am quite certain that there are energy audits where you can't sell your home until you practically replace everything in your home ot make it "green". Whenever I get around to it, I will give page numbers and lines. I will wait until it is in the front of the queue.

                Watch the Fall of the Republic (High Quality 2:24:19)[^]

                I Offline
                I Offline
                Ian Shlasko
                wrote on last edited by
                #16

                CaptainSeeSharp wrote:

                Whenever I get around to it, I will give page numbers and lines. I will wait until it is in the front of the queue.

                Yeah, you let me know. When you can quote text from the ACTUAL BILL, not from Alex Jones's site, then you get back to me. Until then, you'll forgive me if I trust Snopes more than you.

                Proud to have finally moved to the A-Ark. Which one are you in? Developer, Author (Guardians of Xen)

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                • C CaptainSeeSharp

                  If the juvenile and wildly erratic behavior of celebrity environmentalist Ed Begley, Jr. is anything to go by, the warmists are more upset about ClimateGate than they are letting on. Begley appeared on Fox News yesterday to react to the explosive story of the hacked CRU emails which prove that climate scientists affiliated with the UN IPCC altered temperature data models in order to “hide the decline” in global warming since the 1960’s, as well as engaging in academic witch hunts to ensure the work of skeptical scientists was blocked from appearing in peer-reviewed journals. When asked about the scandal, Begley immediately resorted to invoking the words, “peer reviewed studies,” uttering the phrase no less than eight times in an attempt to dismiss the hundreds of skeptical scientists whose stance on global warming proves that the debate is not over. Unfortunately for this clown, his constant repetition of the term only discredited his argument with each mention. The hacked emails show that warmists conspired to conduct academic witch hunts in order to prevent studies which didn’t jive with their agenda from appearing in peer-reviewed journals. As the Telegraph’s James Delingpole highlights[^] , the exposé reveals, “A long series of communications discussing how best to squeeze dissenting scientists out of the peer review process. How, in other words, to create a scientific climate in which anyone who disagrees with AGW can be written off as a crank, whose views do not have a scrap of authority.” Other emails illustrate how warmists embarked on a campaign to discredit peer-reviewed journals that dared publish studies which contradicted the man-made global warming hypothesis. The emails illustrate that the peer-review process is completely corrupted. Warmists can invoke “peer-reviewed studies” until they are blue in the face, as Begley does in this interview, but the fact is that the entire foundation of the argument has been debunked now it is proven that an inherent bias to censor unfavorable studies from appearing in such journals has been in place. The rest of the interview mainly consists of Begley having a tantrum, wildly gesticulating and waving his finger around l

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                  Ilion
                  wrote on last edited by
                  #17

                  I still think this ought to be called "Climatequiddick."

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                  • I Ilion

                    I still think this ought to be called "Climatequiddick."

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                    L Offline
                    Lost User
                    wrote on last edited by
                    #18

                    Ilíon wrote:

                    I still think this ought to be called "Climatequiddick."

                    The use of the suffix -gate or -quiddick should be deprecated - unimaginative.

                    Bob Emmett UEA, UAE, who will be next?

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                    • L Lost User

                      Ilíon wrote:

                      I still think this ought to be called "Climatequiddick."

                      The use of the suffix -gate or -quiddick should be deprecated - unimaginative.

                      Bob Emmett UEA, UAE, who will be next?

                      I Offline
                      I Offline
                      Ilion
                      wrote on last edited by
                      #19

                      -gate is unimaginative, having been used so many times since Watergate (though, "Gatesgate" was humorous). -quiddick hasn't been used yet, it can hardly be deprecated. On the other hand, imagination/novelty is vastly overrated.

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                      • L Lost User

                        Ilíon wrote:

                        I still think this ought to be called "Climatequiddick."

                        The use of the suffix -gate or -quiddick should be deprecated - unimaginative.

                        Bob Emmett UEA, UAE, who will be next?

                        I Offline
                        I Offline
                        Ilion
                        wrote on last edited by
                        #20

                        Another reason to use "-quiddick" is that the Legacy Media has every intention of ignoring or, failing that, explaining away, this very real and very serious scandal.

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                        • I Ilion

                          -gate is unimaginative, having been used so many times since Watergate (though, "Gatesgate" was humorous). -quiddick hasn't been used yet, it can hardly be deprecated. On the other hand, imagination/novelty is vastly overrated.

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                          Lost User
                          wrote on last edited by
                          #21

                          Ilíon wrote:

                          quiddick hasn't been used yet, it can hardly be deprecated

                          Had '-quiddick' never been used before (it has, go Google), it would remain unimaginative, merely copying a lazy journalistic cliché. (Although, I would agree with your subsequent post that Climate-quiddick is more appropriate.)

                          Ilíon wrote:

                          On the other hand, imagination/novelty is vastly overrated.

                          Typical bloody conservative! :)

                          Bob Emmett CDO and CDS - imagination at its best.

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                          • L Lost User

                            Ilíon wrote:

                            quiddick hasn't been used yet, it can hardly be deprecated

                            Had '-quiddick' never been used before (it has, go Google), it would remain unimaginative, merely copying a lazy journalistic cliché. (Although, I would agree with your subsequent post that Climate-quiddick is more appropriate.)

                            Ilíon wrote:

                            On the other hand, imagination/novelty is vastly overrated.

                            Typical bloody conservative! :)

                            Bob Emmett CDO and CDS - imagination at its best.

                            I Offline
                            I Offline
                            Ilion
                            wrote on last edited by
                            #22

                            Bob Emmett wrote:

                            Had '-quiddick' never been used before (it has, go Google), it would remain unimaginative, merely copying a lazy journalistic cliché.

                            So? Most things people say or write are but the copying of what someone else has said. As I said, novelty is overrated.

                            Bob Emmett wrote:

                            Typical bloody conservative! ;)

                            Isn't the traditional "liberal" accusation that we conservatives are too bloodless?

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                            • I Ilion

                              Bob Emmett wrote:

                              Had '-quiddick' never been used before (it has, go Google), it would remain unimaginative, merely copying a lazy journalistic cliché.

                              So? Most things people say or write are but the copying of what someone else has said. As I said, novelty is overrated.

                              Bob Emmett wrote:

                              Typical bloody conservative! ;)

                              Isn't the traditional "liberal" accusation that we conservatives are too bloodless?

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                              L Offline
                              Lost User
                              wrote on last edited by
                              #23

                              Ilíon wrote:

                              Most things people say or write are but the copying of what someone else has said.

                              The bulk of conversation and correspondence being of a mundane nature, that is true. But I expect more of professional communicators.

                              Ilíon wrote:

                              As I said, novelty is overrated.

                              May a diet of unleavened bread for eternity be your punishment, while I feast on the breads of "every race and clime". :)

                              Ilíon wrote:

                              Isn't the traditional "liberal" accusation that we conservatives are too bloodless?

                              It's on your hands. :)

                              Bob Emmett Frequently called "a typical bloody conservative".

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                              • L Lost User

                                Ilíon wrote:

                                Most things people say or write are but the copying of what someone else has said.

                                The bulk of conversation and correspondence being of a mundane nature, that is true. But I expect more of professional communicators.

                                Ilíon wrote:

                                As I said, novelty is overrated.

                                May a diet of unleavened bread for eternity be your punishment, while I feast on the breads of "every race and clime". :)

                                Ilíon wrote:

                                Isn't the traditional "liberal" accusation that we conservatives are too bloodless?

                                It's on your hands. :)

                                Bob Emmett Frequently called "a typical bloody conservative".

                                I Offline
                                I Offline
                                Ilion
                                wrote on last edited by
                                #24

                                Bob Emmett wrote:

                                The bulk of conversation and correspondence being of a mundane nature, that is true. But I expect more of professional communicators.

                                On many levels, whyever for?

                                Bob Emmett wrote:

                                May a diet of unleavened bread for eternity be your punishment, while I feast on the breads of "every race and clime". :)

                                I like unleavened bread ... though I do like even more things like challah and "yeast rolls" so freshly baked that you can still smell the little critters. If you really wanted to "damn" me, you should have wished me an eternity of Wonder Bread. "May you be a meal-worm in the middle of a loaf of Wonder Bread of infinite size, expanding exponentially; and may you know that you shall surely regain human form when you eat your way through the crust."

                                Bob Emmett wrote:

                                It's on your hands. :)

                                Dewd! It isn't conservatives who were behind: . the French Revolution, the Terror, the Vendee, the Napoleonic Wars . the Russian Revolution, Lennin, Stalin . Naziism . Fascism . Maoism . Pol Pot . Castro

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                                • I Ilion

                                  Bob Emmett wrote:

                                  The bulk of conversation and correspondence being of a mundane nature, that is true. But I expect more of professional communicators.

                                  On many levels, whyever for?

                                  Bob Emmett wrote:

                                  May a diet of unleavened bread for eternity be your punishment, while I feast on the breads of "every race and clime". :)

                                  I like unleavened bread ... though I do like even more things like challah and "yeast rolls" so freshly baked that you can still smell the little critters. If you really wanted to "damn" me, you should have wished me an eternity of Wonder Bread. "May you be a meal-worm in the middle of a loaf of Wonder Bread of infinite size, expanding exponentially; and may you know that you shall surely regain human form when you eat your way through the crust."

                                  Bob Emmett wrote:

                                  It's on your hands. :)

                                  Dewd! It isn't conservatives who were behind: . the French Revolution, the Terror, the Vendee, the Napoleonic Wars . the Russian Revolution, Lennin, Stalin . Naziism . Fascism . Maoism . Pol Pot . Castro

                                  L Offline
                                  L Offline
                                  Lost User
                                  wrote on last edited by
                                  #25

                                  Ilíon wrote:

                                  On many levels, whyever for?

                                  Just as I would expect more of a professional midwife than a village wise woman.

                                  Ilíon wrote:

                                  If you really wanted to "damn" me, you should have wished me an eternity of Wonder Bread.

                                  I was considering unleavened bread to be an early form of bread. Subsequent breads being mere novelties.

                                  Ilíon wrote:

                                  Dewd! It isn't conservatives who were behind: . the French Revolution, the Terror, the Vendee, the Napoleonic Wars . the Russian Revolution, Lennin, Stalin . Naziism . Fascism . Maoism . Pol Pot . Castro

                                  Yes, a thoroughly unpleasant, and certainly bloody, collection. However, conservatives (the European Monarchies) were responsible for invading France. This gave rise to conscription - a contributing factor to the Vendée - and provided a launch pad for Napoleon's career. Their support for counter revolutionaries provided the 'rationale' for the Terror. Similar actions followed the Russian Revolution. Also, Fascism (and, by extension, Nazism) was supported by conservatives who saw it as a bulwark against the spread of Communism. This, combined with the war-weariness of Britain and France, contributed to the international inertia as Hitler continually violated the Treaty of Versailles. Blood may be on one's hands literally or figuratively.

                                  Bob Emmett

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