M.D. Rawlings
Classical Liberal
by John Ransom
08/25/2011
Townhall.com
Liberals are getting pretty desperate on the global warming/climate change debate.
But you have to give them high marks for creativity. As one of our contributors Marita Noon mentioned the other day, enviros are switching to supposed health risks associated with fossil fuels since politicians and the general public dont buy the carbon-hates-us argument anymore.
And lacking little evidence that many of the natural disasters that were predicted by the global warming model that the high priests of their religion constructed years ago, one economist has come up with a new disaster, this one wholly civil. And the media are climbing aboard the bandwagon like a high speed rail car powered by solar energy.
Citing wars in Burundi, Chad, the Dominican Republic, Indonesia, Peru, the Comoros, Congo, Eritrea, Niger and Rwanda, economist Solomon Hsiang of Columbia University argues, according to Scientific American, that they all have one thing in common: They all happened when global climate was enduring El Nino according to research the economist published in Nature, a sister publication to Scientific American.
LINK
08/25/2011
Townhall.com
Liberals are getting pretty desperate on the global warming/climate change debate.
But you have to give them high marks for creativity. As one of our contributors Marita Noon mentioned the other day, enviros are switching to supposed health risks associated with fossil fuels since politicians and the general public dont buy the carbon-hates-us argument anymore.
And lacking little evidence that many of the natural disasters that were predicted by the global warming model that the high priests of their religion constructed years ago, one economist has come up with a new disaster, this one wholly civil. And the media are climbing aboard the bandwagon like a high speed rail car powered by solar energy.
Citing wars in Burundi, Chad, the Dominican Republic, Indonesia, Peru, the Comoros, Congo, Eritrea, Niger and Rwanda, economist Solomon Hsiang of Columbia University argues, according to Scientific American, that they all have one thing in common: They all happened when global climate was enduring El Nino according to research the economist published in Nature, a sister publication to Scientific American.
LINK