Uh Oh...Dr. Fruit Fly has Angry on his ass.
Steve Janke (Angry in the Great White North) has a trilogy of posts painting David Suzuki in a very bad light. Go Steve!
David Suzuki: Hypocrite or Henpecked?
David Suzuki's grand Tangwyn property is a struggle for him
Suzuki Plays Some Type of Medievil lord
Thursday, May 24, 2007
Suzuki Target of Canadian Blogger
Posted by
Twelve:01
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10:44 PM
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Labels: David Suzuki, Steve Janke
Monday, May 7, 2007
Rational Thinking Leaking Into the Main Stream Press
On the weekend, Claire Hoy had an editorial that was sure to be a hit in these parts. It had, Al Gore making millions from his fearmongering, David Suzuki as his sycophant, DoLittle Dion's hypocrisy on getting it done for climate change and slamming the Tories for their very un-conservative, mercury laced policy on light bulb regulation. Here's a taste:
I don't like Baird's green plan either. But only because it's playing into the hands of the green activists who would have you believe that the same people who can't accurately predict tomorrow's weather can -- by using the same computer models -- tell us what the weather will be doing 25 and 50 years from now. Think about that.
Three decades ago, these same people were warning us about "global cooling." Then it was acid rain which was going to end life as we knew it. And don't forget that deadly hole in the ozone layer. And so on.
Posted by
Twelve:01
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7:40 AM
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Labels: Al Gore, Claire Hoy, David Suzuki, Global Warming, Skeptic, Stephane Dion
Wednesday, April 25, 2007
Catching Up
Yesterday was a down day, but here are a few items in case you missed them:
As Al Gore takes his resource hogging, CO2 spewing crusade through the Canadian West, the Alberta Premier tells the Goracal (a paraphrase): "...if you don't like the oilsands, get your country to stop buying oil from it":
But Stelmach, who hasn't seen the documentary, said Monday in Calgary the province is merely feeding Americans' insatiable demand for energy, so perhaps ore should look closer to home.
Over at the Toronto 'Red' Star, they want to know if you are a "Invested Materialists" or a "Ambivalent Materialists" or part of the "Suzuki Nation". The insidious part about this is they tie the man-made global warming issue into the general pollution issue. Who in their right ind wants polluted air and water? I am against those and believe energy conservation is a good thing. I am against spending billions of dollars on a problem that has been created by unreliable computer models and simply is not true. Anyway, they are mostly talking about a marketing scheme:
Environment Canada was also advised to push those "most responsible for influencing or making the types of decisions that can have a positive environmental impact" into considering the environment in their shopping habits.
The report by [American] market researcher Phoenix Strategies suggests individuals can be pushed into environmental action with targeted communications.
(emphasis and addition mine).
And finally, Lorrie Goldstein of the Toronto Sun likes what Baird and the Conservatives have said about Kyoto:
Environment Minister John Baird deserves credit for finally getting a serious discussion going about the real costs of implementing the Kyoto accord. Up to now, we've been sleep walking toward disaster.
[...]
Yesterday, the National Post said the Liberals had studies in 2000 estimating that complying with Kyoto would result in a loss of $4,400 of disposable income for a typical family, close to Baird's numbers. Is that true?
[...]
Last week, Baird called his [Dion's] bluff. About time.
Posted by
Twelve:01
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8:05 AM
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Labels: Al Gore, David Suzuki, Global Warming, oil sands, Skeptic
Monday, April 23, 2007
Suzuki is Clueless
David Suzuki, arch-bishop (Canada) of the global warming religion, has no idea what Canadians are willing to pay for to pray at his climate change altar.
On Sunday, Suzuki opined that Canadians would be willing to pay a carbon tax. CTV decided to run a little web poll. Apparently, Suzuki, the partisan global warming mouthpiece is WRONG!
Suzuki has jumped the shark. Time to go back to fruit flies and sucking on the public teat at the CBC where it is nice and comfortable.
Posted by
Twelve:01
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11:34 AM
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Labels: David Suzuki, Global Warming, Skeptic
Who is Scarier: Conservatives or Environmentalists?
The fallout from the Conservatives’ report on the economic cost of implementing bill C-288 has been interesting. As expected, the opposition and enviro-cultists like Suzuki have ripped into Baird and the Conservatives. Friday’s question period started off with a Liberal-Bloq pile on of Baird, lead by David McGuinty (Ottawa South, Lib.) accusing the Conservatives of trying to:
…scare Canadians with a report based on bogus assumptions and extreme views of the Kyoto accord.
This assertion is ironic because the environmental religion led by Al Gore has been trying to scare the world with predictions of cataclysmic disasters "based on bogus assumptions and extreme views". I guess they would know a scare tactic when they see one.
The enviro-kool-aid-brigade was made up of McGuinty, Rodriguez (Lib), Guay (BQ) and Bigras (BQ). They accused the Conservatives of everything from twisting the arms of the economists that supported the economic report to inflating the tax cost to corporations, with a healthy dose of damaging Quebec thrown in.
Baird shot back with Liberal inaction on Kyoto since 1997, the opposition not costing out C-288 before passing it and the
The cost of inaction is that we are forced to do the work of 15 years in just 8 months. That is the real problem.
Baird referred a number of times to the impending Conservative plan to tackle
harmful greenhouse gas emissions
It is worrying that the Conservative government has adopted the opinion that CO2 emissions are harmful. There is no evidence of this. CO2 is a naturally occurring molecule emitted by plants and animals alike. If you don’t like CO2 emissions, stop breathing. That is also impossible, just like Canada meeting its Kyoto targets in 8 months.
Even more worrying is Baird’s assertion that the Conservative’s will
regulate industry
for greenhouse gas emissions. Currently, Canada is riding high economically, regulating CO2 emissions will be a huge cost to industry, however they choose to meet the regulations. China and other developing countries are not part of Kyoto and do not have to regulate CO2 emissions. In fact, these countries have little to no environment regulations at all. Canada has to compete with these countries in the current global economy. We are shooting ourselves in the foot over a problem that does not exist.
Others have weighed in on the issue also:
Chantal Hébert of the Toronto Star agrees that the Conservatives and the opposition seem to be on a collision course over the environment. It should be interesting with bill C-30, the new, improved Clean Air Act looming on the horizon.
From the sounds of it, the differences between the Harper government and the opposition on climate change are irreconcilable.
Andrew Coyne of the National Post thinks that Baird may have a point. It is a good read. He even puts together some numbers to support Baird’s Argument.
The key assumption is that the bulk of the required reductions -- 75% -- would have to be achieved domestically, rather than by buying emissions credits abroad. We'll get to that assumption in a second, but the implications if you accept it are stark. At 770 megatonnes per year, we are now about 36% above the target set out in the Kyoto protocol: 6% below 1990 levels, or 563 Mt.
The deadline for meeting this target is not, as commonly reported, 2012. Rather, it is 2008 to 2012: the target is defined as the average annual emissions over that period. Yet emissions are currently projected to grow another 10% over the next five years, to roughly 850 Mt. So it isn't just a matter of somehow cutting 200 Mt out of emissions by next year, but of cutting nearly 300 Mt by 2012 --an average reduction of 33% from the baseline forecast. If we fall short of that target in the first year, we have to exceed it in subsequent years.
Finally, Jeff Watson (MP, Essex – CPC) , believes that implementing C-288 will kill Canada’s auto industry.
Jeff Watson, today panned the Liberals' job killing Kyoto bill, C-288, "as the death knell for Essex county's auto industry and called on the Liberal Opposition - and its nominated candidates - to explain why they want to kill auto jobs in Essex and across Canada".
Posted by
Twelve:01
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9:18 AM
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Labels: Andrew Coyne, C-288, C-30, Chantal Hébert, CO2, David McGuinty, David Suzuki, Global Warming, Jeff Watson, John Baird
Friday, April 20, 2007
Suzuki Blows a Gasket
Isn’t it interesting how stoked up the enviro-cultists get when anyone, especially a governing politician, says anything against their god, global warming. Check out GW arch-bishop of Canada - David Suzuki’s reaction to the dire warnings in the report on the economic impacts of meeting Kyoto targets:
If our so-called leaders ignore the warnings, I would think that this is a crime against future generations and I'm wondering if there's a legal basis for taking action against people who run corporations or who run government, for their inaction on global warming,
[...I’m wondering if there’s any legal basis for taking action against Suzuki and his ilk for spreading lies about man made global warming, with the intention of swindling everyday people out of gobs and gobs of money. Probably not likely either. As you were.]
I happen to think it's a crime, or perhaps we can call it a sin.
[…the bishop has spoken, let it be written that anyone that is not a lemming and likes to think for themselves is a sinner against the global warming religion and must burn in…umm…Ontario desert for all their natural lives. Even Suzuki is referring to GW hysteria as a religion, complete with sin.]
And what did his worship have to say about the report?
First of all, let's stop listening to the goddamn economists
[…classy! “If you don’t worship my god I will cuss in your God’s name.” Is that what they teach in fruit-fly skool nowadays? Not to mention the disrespect he has shown for some of the most honoured people in their field.]
And finally,
Twenty per cent of the economy will disappear. It will cost more than World War I and World War II put together. We'll go into a kind of depression we've never, ever had in all of history.
[…after which, Suzuki stood up and yelled “BOOO!”]
Why do people like Suzuki and the rest of the global warming cult not get it? These dire predictions are based on very flawed models that are set up to give the answer their creators (global warming proponents) are looking for. On a more basic level, climatologists are lousy at predicting the weather a week or a month into the future. How can we trust them predicting temperatures and weather 20 to 50 years from now?
Posted by
Twelve:01
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2:11 PM
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Labels: C-288, David Suzuki, John Baird