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Ext User(Bonzo)
18-04-2007, 08:43 PM
Young children are easily scared, which makes them particularly vulnerable
to the politics of fear peddled by apocalyptic earth doomers. The Washington
Post seems to get off on this:

The boy has drawn, in his third-grade class, a global warming timeline
that is his equivalent of the mushroom cloud.

"That's the Earth now," the 9-year-old says, pointing to a dark shape at
the bottom. "And then," he says, tracing the progressively lighter stripes
across the page, "it's just starting to fade away."

Alex Hendel of Arlington County is talking about the end of life on our
beleaguered planet.


What sort of parent would decline to intervene at this point? Alex's,
apparently:


Looking up to make sure his mother is following along, he taps the final
stripe, which is so sparsely dotted it is almost invisible. "In 20 years,"
he pronounces, "there's no oxygen." Then, to dramatize the point, he
collapses, "dead," to the floor.

Alex would be in therapy if he'd drawn a graph illustrating the increase in
Islamic terrorism and staged a similar "death".


For many children and young adults, global warming is the atomic bomb of
today. Fears of an environmental crisis are defining their generation in
ways that the Depression, World War II, Vietnam and the Cold War's lingering
"War Games" etched souls in the 20th century.

At least they're not bothered by 9/11. Maybe they've never been taught about
it.


Parents say they're searching for "productive" outlets for their
8-year-olds' obsessions with dying polar bears.

Why not productively explain that the ursine hulks aren't dying?


Teachers say enrollment in high school and college environmental studies
classes is doubling year after year.

I'd have enrolled myself, if I'd had the chance, back in the day. Easiest
courses ever.


And psychologists say they're seeing an increasing number of young
patients preoccupied by a climactic Armageddon.

Great. We're raising a generation of jittery little Gore muppets. Stock tip:
invest in bed-wetting medication and rubber sleepwear.


"For, like, the whole history of the environmental movement," begins David
Bronstein, 19, a freshman at St. John's College in Annapolis, "we've been
saying: 'Do it for your children. We have to protect the Earth for them.'
But that argument has shifted. I'm fighting for my future."

The destruction of Annapolis is imminent!


[Child psychologist Mark] Goldstein adds: "In my practice, they bring this
up. Some of the kids are scared, and it's interesting, because I've seen an
evolution ... Kids used to have fears of war and nuclear annihilation. That'
s dissipated and been replaced by global warming."

Thanks to the Washington Post, among others. Can an entire generation file a
class-action suit?


It's not just a U.S. phenomenon: A United Kingdom survey, by the
Somerfield supermarket chain, of 1,150 youngsters age 7 to 11 found that
half felt anxious about global warming-and many were losing sleep over it,
convinced that animal species will soon die out and that they, themselves,
will be victims of global warming.

Yeah. They'll possibly develop a slight tan and resistance to rickets.


After 8-year-old Mollie Passacantando, daughter of Greenpeace USA's
executive director, read a story about polar bears in class this year, the
Fairfax County youngster and her friends spent recess marching around the
playground with signs reading, "Stop global warming. Save the polar bears."

Seems the natural market for global warming hysteria is in the sub-teen
demographic. Well, not all of it:


A classmate taunted, "You can march all you want, but you're not going to
save a single polar bear."

And then, hopefully, he stole her lunch.


That riled Mollie up. With her father, John Passacantando, she started a
blog to get the polar bear put on the endangered species list.

"I have heard from friends and work colleagues around the country," says
Mollie's mother, Lisa Guide, "that global warming is a subject that can be
stressful to children. Mollie was so concerned ... we really felt it was
important to help her do something constructive."


It might have been constructive to point her towards a creature that
actually is endangered - sane children, for example. Over at Sherwood High
School, the environmental club is booming:


Just under 10 teenagers were active last year; 90 have signed up this
year, an increase helped by an aggressive marketing campaign and Al Gore's
documentary "An Inconvenient Truth." Gore is this generation's Bob Dylan;
"Truth" is its "Blowin' in the Wind."

How many bears must the arctic support, before we know they're alive? (By
the way ... just under 10? Is that some WashPost fancy-talk for "nine"?
Speaking of which ... )


Nine-year-old Alyssa Luz-Ricca's mother returned from a business trip to
Costa Rica with a T-shirt of a colorful frog and the words "Extinction is
forever." Alyssa looked at the T-shirt and, she says, "I cried."

She did? Really?


"She cried very hard," clarifies her mother, Karen Luz of Arlington.

That explains the rising seas, then.


"I don't like global warming," Alyssa continues, her eyes huge and serious
behind her glasses, a stardust of freckles across her nose, "because it
kills animals, and I like animals."

So do I, little one. That's why I own a barbecue.


She dreams of solar-powered cars and has put a recycling basket for mail,
office and school paper in the corner of her family's dining room. She made
another recycling box for her third-grade English teacher's classroom at Key
Elementary School and has persuaded her mother to start composting.

That's some powerful persuading. What sections of her mother were composted
first?


Marvel at any of her efforts, though, and she looks confused: Everyone
should be doing all this-and more-to save the environment.

"I worry about it," says this girl who has yet to lose all her baby teeth,
"because I don't want to die."


Let's hope Alyssa never learns about the size of the Washington Post's print
run, and the environment-gulping efforts involved in the paper's
distribution. Meanwhile, we should look forward to the Post turning over its
2008 election coverage to frightened nine-year-olds.


Posted by Tim B. on 04/16/2007 at 01:14 PM

Regards

Bonzo

"...and I think future generations are not going to blame us for anything
except for being silly, for letting a few tenths of a degree panic us"
Dr. Richard Lindzen, Professor of Meteorology MIT and Member of the National
Academy of Sciences

"What most commentators-and many scientists-seem to miss is that the only
thing we can say with certainly about climate is that it changes" Dr.
Richard Lindzen, Professor of Meteorology MIT and Member of the National
Academy of Sciences

[most of the current alarm over climate change is based on] "inherently
untrustworthy climate models, similar to those that cannot accurately
forecast the weather a week from now." Dr. Richard Lindzen, Professor of
Meteorology MIT and Member of the National Academy of Sciences

Ext User(Exxon is Toxic Waste)
18-04-2007, 08:43 PM
Crooked Lindzen, Sloan Professor of Crookology

http://www.sloan.org/main.shtml
The Alfred P. Sloan Foundation, a philanthropic nonprofit institution,
was established in 1934 by Alfred Pritchard Sloan, Jr., then President
and Chief Executive Officer of the General Motors Corporation.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alfred_P._Sloan
During Alfred P. Sloan's leadership of GM, many public transport
systems of trams in the US were replaced by buses. This conversion was
orchestrated by General Motors, Firestone Tire corp., Standard Oil of
California, and the Mack Truck Co. in order to increase automobile
sales; see General Motors streetcar conspiracy for details. In the
1930s GM, long hostile to unionization, confronted its workforce,
newly organized and ready for labor rights, in an extended contest for
control. Sloan was averse to violence of the sort associated with
Henry Ford. He preferred the subtle use of spying and had built up the
best undercover apparatus the business community had ever seen up to
that time. When the workers organized a massive sitdown strike in
1936, Sloan found that espionage had little value in the face of such
open tactics.

Sloan maintained an office in 30 Rockefeller Plaza in Rockefeller
Center, now known as the GE Building.[1] He retired as GM chairman on
April 2, 1956 and died in 1966.

http://heritage.dupont.com/touchpoints/tp_1918/overview.shtml
DuPont's link with General Motors began with Pierre S. du Pont, who
bought GM stock in 1914. In 1915 Pierre was elected a GM director,
then board chairman, to help strengthen GM's management. After World
War I, GM executive and former DuPont treasurer John J. Raskob
persuaded DuPont's directors to invest $25 million in GM. Pierre
became GM's president in 1920. By then DuPont's GM holdings provided
half of DuPont's total earnings.

http://www.google.com/search?num=100&hl=en&safe=off&client=firefox-a&rls=org.mozilla%3Aen-US%3Aofficial&hs=37n&q=Dupont+Petrochemicals&btnG=Search
Results 1 - 100 of about 355,000 for Dupont Petrochemicals.

http://www.google.com/search?num=100&hl=en&safe=off&client=firefox-a&rls=org.mozilla%3Aen-US%3Aofficial&q=Dupont+Petrochemicals+Exxon&btnG=Search
Results 1 - 100 of about 99,700 for Dupont Petrochemicals Exxon.

http://www.exxonsecrets.org/html/personfactsheet.php?id=17
ORGANIZATIONS

The Annapolis Center for Science-Based Public Policy
Source: Annapolis Center website 3/04

The Annapolis Center for Science-Based Public Policy
The Annapolis Center for Science-Based Public Policy has received
$688,575 from ExxonMobil since 1998.

Cato Institute
Source: Cato Institute website 4/04

Cato Institute : TASSC Fred Singer, TASSC Patrick J. Michaels, TASSC
Steve Milloy
Cato Institute has received $90,000 from ExxonMobil since 1998.
KOCH OIL Funding Cato Institute = $12,999,240
SCAIFE OIL FORTUNE Funding Cato Institute = $2,057,500
White Star Oil Fortune (Earhart Foundation) Funding Cato Institute
= $217,600
OLIN Munitions & Chlorine-DDT Funding Cato Institute = $832,500

Tech Central Science Foundation or Tech Central Station
Source: Tech Central Bio Lindzen

Tech Central Science Foundation or Tech Central Station : TASSC
Patrick J. Michaels, TASSC Michael Fumento, TASSC Steven Milloy,
Tech Central Science Foundation or Tech Central Station has
received $95,000 from ExxonMobil since 1998.
KOCH OIL Funding Tech Central Science Foundation = $25,000
NOTE: Because TCS website runs paid commercial advertising, incomes
from this is NEVER reported as charitable gifts by either the donor or
receiver. The parent to TCS is DCI PR firm, whose incomes are likewise
not reported publically, nor do client corporations necessarily report
the payments to the public. A lot of EXXON ads run on TCS webpages,
perhaps a disguised form of giving as it's doubtful that EXXON needs
brand advertising to get people to fill up at the Tech Corner Station
-- if internet ads were proven effective there would be EXXON ads
everywhere on the net.

George C. Marshall Institute
Source: Marshall Institute Website (2006)

George C. Marshall Institute : TASSC Hugh Ellsaesser, TASSC Fred
Seitz, TASSC Bruce Ames, (member of the Cooler Heads Coalition,
associate of Competitive Enterprise Inst. Front Group for BIG OIL)
George C. Marshall Institute has received $630,000 from ExxonMobil
since 1998.
KOCH OIL Funding George C. Marshall Institute = $30,000
SCAIFE OIL FORTUNE Funding George C. Marshall Institute =
$2,827,500
White Star Oil Fortune (Earhart Foundation) Funding George C.
Marshall Institute = $100,000
OLIN Munitions & Chlorine-DDT Funding George C. Marshall Institute
= $350,000

Heartland Institute
Source: Heartland Institute - HeartlandGlobalWarming.org

Heartland Institute : TASSC Patrick J. Michaels (World Climate Report)
Heartland Institute has received $561,500 from ExxonMobil since
1998.
KOCH OIL Funding Heartland Institute = $77,578
SCAIFE OIL FORTUNE Funding Heartland Institute = $335,000
OLIN Munitions & Chlorine-DDT Funding Heartland Institute = $40,000

=========================
Philip Morris
Date: Mar 1991 (est.)
Length: 6 pages
http://tobaccodocuments.org/pm/2025528294-8299.html

3) Michael Gough, program manager for biological applications for the
Congressional Office of Technology Assessment -- Regarding the EPA's
lowering the confidence interval from 95 to 90 percent, Michael Gough
says, "You cannot run science with the government changing the rules
all the time. "

13) Dr. Fred Singer -- University of Virginia. Charged that the EPA-
supported theories of global warming and global ozone depletion are
not backed up by the scientific evidence. Has charged that several
major government studies that found information contrary to
"politically correct" issues (acid rain), was ignored. At a Consumer's
Research seminar in D.C. that dealt with official regulations
frequently have little basis in scientific fact, being instead driven
instead by political/social factors. "The tendency not only to misuse
science but to ignore it is very strong" in policy decisions
concerning global warming, ozone depletions, and acid rain. Has spoken
on issue of cost of other environmental problems. Singer was director
of the Washington Institute for Values in Public Policy, on leave from
Uva's department of environmental science.

26) Michael J. Bennett The Asbestos Racket: An Environment Parable
(Merrill Press) -- Bennett's meticulously researched saga of America's
plunge into the fantasy world of environmental junk science captures
the essence of the costly tragedy that befell the US during the great
asbestos scare. In formulating the nation's asbestos policy, the EPA,
aided and abetted by Congress, systematically ignored science. The
series of articles in the Detroit News on which much of the book is
based was nominated for a Pulitzer Prize. (EPA Watch, July 31, 1992)
(202) 488-7692

29) Dr. Patrick Michael, Uva Dept of Environmental Science,
Climatologist, global warming issues are not backed by science, on
Board of Advisors of American Policy Center\EPA Watch (804) 924-0549,
co-authored an article with David E. Stooksbury, also of Uva.

30) Dr. Bruce Ames, Biochemist, University of California at Berkeley
(friend of Michael Bennett)

36) Jim Tozzi, Director of Washington-based Multinational Business
Services Inc., has cited problems with EPA risk assessment policy, in
particular, risk assessment guidelines for non-cancer health effects
and criteria for inferring causation from epidemiologic data. Tozzi's
firm represents a number of companies interested in the risk
assessment issue.

38) Richard Lindzen, Robert Balling, William Nierenberg, Fred Seitz,
Patrick Michaels, Fred Singer, Sherwood Idso -- scientists opposed to
global warming issues, as cited by Peter Samuel.

40) Michael Fumento of Investor Business Daily who does write about
these issues.

44) Candace Crandall -- Executive Vice President of the Science and
Environmental Policy Project (SEPP). She has published extensively on
junk science issues in the past. Crandall was the Director of
Communications for the Center for Strategic and International Studies
before joining SEPP. The primary focus of SEPP is to document the use
of scientific data in the development of federal environmental policy.
SEPP is an independent, non-profit research group that relies on
private funding. It will co-sponsor a conference with George Mason
University in May on scientific integrity in the political process.
Crandall has arranged for a number of prominent scientists to be
participants, including Dr. Bernard Davis of Harvard University and
Sir William Mitchell of Oxford University. Crandall is Dr. Fred
Singer's wife.

=========================
http://tobaccodocuments.org/pm/2025802450-2451.html
Philip Morris
Scientific Integrity in the Public Policy Process Semi-Final Program
930524 - 930525 the Madison Hotel 15th and M Streets, Nw Washington,
D.C.
Date: 19930525/D
Length: 2 pages

=========================

Ext User(Stan)
18-04-2007, 09:33 PM
"Bonzo" <boozoo@optusnt.com.au> wrote in message
news:4625bcbf@dnews.tpgi.com.au...
(snipped)
> [Child psychologist Mark] Goldstein adds: "In my practice, they bring
> this
> up. Some of the kids are scared, and it's interesting, because I've seen
> an
> evolution ... Kids used to have fears of war and nuclear annihilation.
> That'
> s dissipated and been replaced by global warming."
>

That is precisely what Gramsci wrote about to alter the minds of people so a
different anxiety replaces the Christian one. All English-speaking
schoolteachers world wide have been indoctrinated to use the Gramsci method.
It's just not called that in their 'social studies'.

The conditioning is purpose built to be used in schools on children to
accept Universalism...another Gramsci word as a substitute for Marxism to
counteract the Christian resistance to it. It works. You have to be old
like me to know how the scam started.

So yes, children are always easily scared and the teachers know the method
to induce an agenda driven fear. They have taken over from the
priest...pure Gramsci...look it up in his Prison Notebooks.
It used to be the parents responsibility to teach worldly attitudes but
now teachers have assumed that responsibility instead of knowing how to
teach them to read and write.

Ext User(Bill Ward)
18-04-2007, 10:13 PM
On Wed, 18 Apr 2007 07:33:49 +0000, Stan wrote:

>
> "Bonzo" <boozoo@optusnt.com.au> wrote in message
> news:4625bcbf@dnews.tpgi.com.au...
> (snipped)

>> [Child psychologist Mark] Goldstein adds: "In my practice, they bring
>> this up. Some of the kids are scared, and it's interesting, because
>> I've seen an evolution ... Kids used to have fears of war and nuclear
>> annihilation. That's dissipated and been replaced by global warming."
>>
> That is precisely what Gramsci wrote about to alter the minds of people
> so a different anxiety replaces the Christian one. All English-speaking
> schoolteachers world wide have been indoctrinated to use the Gramsci
> method. It's just not called that in their 'social studies'.
>
> The conditioning is purpose built to be used in schools on children to
> accept Universalism...another Gramsci word as a substitute for Marxism
> to counteract the Christian resistance to it. It works. You have to
> be old like me to know how the scam started.
>
> So yes, children are always easily scared and the teachers know the
> method to induce an agenda driven fear. They have taken over from the
> priest...pure Gramsci...look it up in his Prison Notebooks.
> It used to be the parents responsibility to teach worldly attitudes
> but
> now teachers have assumed that responsibility instead of knowing how to
> teach them to read and write.

If it were any other subject, there would be screams of "child abuse".
Parents still have ultimate responsibility, and should challenge any
classroom brainwashing attempts. I think the liberal takeover of public
schools is one of the main causes of the current lack of critical thinking
in our society.

Bill Ward

Ext User(Exxon Crooks and Liars)
19-04-2007, 01:43 PM
http://edition.cnn.com/2007/WEATHER/04/18/storm.ap/

Thousands remain without power after storm


PORTLAND, Maine (AP) -- Utility crews cut their way through downed
trees Wednesday to restore service to thousands of customers still
without power since a huge weekend storm battered the East Coast.

Communities from New Jersey to Maine were still coping with stream
flooding after the storm dumped more than 8 inches of rain in places,
along with coastal flooding brought on by astronomical high tides and
heavy surf.

Seventeen deaths were blamed on the weather system.

New Hampshire safety officials made plans Wednesday to breach the 19th-
century Hayden Mill Pond dam at Hollis to relieve the pressure of high
water from the storm and avert a failure.

A dozen families living near the six-acre reservoir were evacuated
Tuesday evening, and National Guard troops closed part of a highway as
a precaution.

More than 50,000 businesses and residences remained without power
Wednesday in Maine, where Central Maine Power Co. was being helped by
repair crews from neighboring New Brunswick and Nova Scotia and as far
away as Pennsylvania.

Utility officials warned that some people might be without power until
the end of the week.

"It's a huge number of trees that are down, so it's a big job cutting
those away," said Central Maine Power spokesman John Carroll. "Plus
there are 250 broken poles. That's an enormous number of poles."

Utilities in New Hampshire reported nearly 19,000 homes and businesses
still had no electricity Wednesday and said some might not be
reconnected until the weekend.

In many areas, road damage and fallen trees blocked repair crews'
access, said New Hampshire Electric Cooperative spokesman Seth
Wheeler.

"There are 18 different tree crews we've hired ... just clearing trees
first before the line crews can get in there and do construction,"
Wheeler said.

About 1,700 New Jersey residents were in emergency shelters Wednesday
because of flooding, up slightly from the day before, as more rivers
crested. (Watch I-Report video of Hoboken, New Jersey, residents
escaping floodwaters Video)

Rescue crews went house to house by boat in a flooded section of
Fairfield asking if residents of any of about three dozen homes needed
to be evacuated, said State Police Sgt. Stephen Jones.

"The numbers are fluctuating, actually going down in some places as
folks go home, but rising in others as people who had been holding out
just give in and go to a shelter," Jones said.

Sections of some New Jersey highways were still closed by standing
water Wednesday.

More than 80 New Hampshire roads remained closed by high water or
damage, said Department of Transportation spokesman Bill Boynton. Most
were expected to be reopened soon, but it could take weeks to repair
landslide damage to Route 101 in Wilton, he said.

New Hampshire Gov. John Lynch had asked the Federal Emergency
Management Agency to start a preliminary damage assessment in all 10
counties to determine eligibility for federal disaster relief. "Many
New Hampshire communities have been overwhelmed by all the flooding,"
he said.

Swollen rivers in Massachusetts were receding, but waves still crashed
over sea walls and flooded coastal roads early Wednesday, authorities
said.

Two families were evacuated from oceanfront homes in Duxbury,
Massachusetts, late Tuesday but were able to return Wednesday morning,
fire Capt. Skip Chandler said. Their homes had knee-deep water on the
ground floor, he said. "Thank goodness it wasn't worse," he said.

Most roads had reopened in the suburbs north of New York City, as
homeowners in Westchester County piled water-ruined carpets and
furniture in heaps outside.

On Fire Island, a barrier island along the south side of New York's
Long Island, some homes were clinging to narrow beaches atop rickety
pilings because the storm's waves had scoured the sand out from
beneath them.

"There's nothing I can do," said homeowner Bill Raymond, 55. "You've
got to keep your fingers crossed."

Ext User(Flush the Exxon Turds)
19-04-2007, 05:43 PM
Storm damage: 'Tens and tens and tens of millions'
Posted by The Star-Ledger April 18, 2007 2:54PM

Alberto C. Galvan, owner of Good Point International Inc., an auto
body shop in Paterson, looks toward his flood damaged business today.
Galvan says 27 cars were damaged from the flood.

Acting Gov. Richard Codey today urged President Bush to declare New
Jersey a major disaster area in the wake of a storm that resulted in
more than 5,000 evacuations and "tens and tens and tens of millions"
of dollars in damage.

After a helicopter tour, Codey said the worst damage occurred around
swollen rivers in Passaic, Bergen, Somerset and Burlington counties.
But the floodwaters are receding, and he reported just seven state
highways - down from a peak of 70 - still fully or partially closed
due to the flooding. All were along the Passaic River, he said.

"New Jersey clearly has received the brunt of the storm. We were in
the middle of the bull's eye," Codey said at a statehouse press
conference. "New Jerseyans face a huge cost in terms of damage and
destruction to their homes and to their businesses as well."
JERRY McCREA/THE STAR-LEDGERFloodwaters from the Passaic River were as
high as the street signs today in some sections of Fairfield, Essex
County.
Codey said he was trying to reach Michael Chertoff, a New Jersey
native and the nation's homeland security chief, to provide a personal
briefing on the storm. Officials with the Federal Emergency Management
Agency have been in the state since the weekend monitoring conditions,
he said.

Codey said state officials still are gathering damage estimates from
public agencies and private individuals that they can present to the
federal government for disaster relief.

The acting governor said the deluge caused 1,400 people to seek refuge
just in Somerset and Bergen counties alone. Nearly three dozen
shelters still were in operation today.

Maj. Gen. Glenn Rieth, adjutant general of the Department of Military
and Veterans' Affairs, said 140 members of the New Jersey National
Guard assisted in evacuations and helped prevent looting in flood
ravaged areas.

Codey also said the number of people without power has dropped from a
peak of 40,000 to 700, and all mass transit lines were back on normal
schedules.

Lisa Jackson, commissioner of the Department of Environmental
Protection, reported two dam failures - one near the Atsion Lake along
Route 206 in Burlington County, the second along Route 56 in
Pittsgrove Township in Salem County. In both cases, other downstream
dams limited the flood damage, she said.

Along with other storm damage, the state also suffered significant
beach erosion in coastal counties that will add to its repair bills,
officials said.

"We're doing everything we can to open up those roadways that do
remain closed as of now. But the fact is even after the water recedes,
the lights are turned back, and the roads are clear, the biggest
challenges are ahead of us," Codey said.

"We have a massive cleanup ahead of us. We have security issues to
deal with. And we have homes and businesses to rebuild," he said. "The
bottom line is this- a lot of families and people are facing a tough
situation. But our resolve is firm. And the people of this state have
the full strength of this government behind them."