Wednesday, August 24, 2005

Eastern States want to lead!

Word is that Northeastern states are moving ahead on controlling and reducing "greenhouse gases that contribute to global warming." So it's said in today's NY Times article/semi-science propaganda. Greenhouse gases are actually a singular hate for carbon dioxide (CO2), which is the building block of organic life from plants to humans. Controlling the emissions of CO2 is the back door envirowar against America's consumer society and fast growing economy.

The process of controlling CO2 is a microcosm of how left of center thinking elitists believe they can regain control over this nation. And it has all the fingerprints of the usual suspects all over it. First and foremost, a slower growing economy also slows the creation and growth of wealth. We must remember that wealth is the root of all evil on the world. Or so it's said.

Second, by creating a market for trading CO2 it becomes a taxable commodity that can be used to redistribute existing wealth from those who earn it to those who don't. This critical process is necessary because once the economy slows, the masses get restless unless they are promised redistribution of other's money.

Third is an artificially structured CO2 system requires a huge bureaucracy to manage and control. This creates jobs for adherents to the notion that CO2 is actually a pollutant. As this crowd grows and as their livelihood is connected to CO2 as pollution, a critical mass of followers will stand in the way of any politician that tries to bring real science into the conversation about climate change.

And fourth and most importantly is that an international CO2 redistribution and trading system controlled by the Kyoto/UN crowd will begin the process of funding the UN and other NGOs for all eternity. Once we create this monster and it is self sustaining, we can only end it by burning the UN village to the ground. These are still the early days before the real envirowars begin to torch the world as we know it. Yet it's almost like watching a slow-motion accident from start to finish with few resources available to avoid it.





.

No comments: