Tree Huggers And Climate Changers Trash The Planet During Protests.

OriginalShroom

Gold Member
Jan 29, 2013
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The same people who want to impose their beliefs on the rest of us about "Man Made Climate Change" and how destructive man is on the world leaves proof behind them.

Look how they trashed the planet during and after their protests.

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I predicted this disgusting mess yesterday, this is who liberals are.
It does seem to be a standard in these types of rallies or protests.

We remember what OWS left behind at many if their rallies. Its not surprising though - it comes with the entitlement mindset. Someone owes you a living wage, a job, healthcare and education. They owe it to you to clean up your garbage as well.
 
Let's see now... radical Islam is murdering, raping, enslaving, and destroying...but the crazy leftists in NYC are worried about a hoax.

Proof the elites can fool some of the people ALL the time.
 
Let's see now... radical Islam is murdering, raping, enslaving, and destroying...but the crazy leftists in NYC are worried about a hoax.

Proof the elites can fool some of the people ALL the time.

Yeah 2 guys got beheaded now we have to put that before the planet.

ISIS is coming to America yanno. They said so!!!

They also said they will get 72 virgins when they die. Its true because they said it
 
Al Gore left in a car?!!?!?! What the heck?!?!

Where was his horse? What a hypocrit! I bet he farts too and adds to the methane levels
 
Granny fusses at possum when he hangs by his tail from the tree she planted...
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Scientists: Plant More Trees to Combat Climate Change
October 16, 2017 — Planting forests and other activities that harness the power of nature could play a major role in limiting global warming under the 2015 Paris agreement, an international study showed Monday.
Natural climate solutions, also including protection of carbon-storing peat lands and better management of soils and grasslands, could account for 37 percent of all actions needed by 2030 under the 195-nation Paris plan, it said. Combined, the suggested "regreening of the planet" would be equivalent to halting all burning of oil worldwide, it said. "Better stewardship of the land could have a bigger role in fighting climate change than previously thought," the international team of scientists said of findings published in the U.S. journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

The estimates for nature's potential, led by planting forests, were up to 30 percent higher than those envisaged by a U.N. panel of climate scientists in a 2014 report, it said. Trees soak up heat-trapping carbon dioxide as they grow and release it when they burn or rot. That makes forests, from the Amazon to Siberia, vast natural stores of greenhouse gases. Overall, better management of nature could avert 11.3 billion tons of carbon dioxide emissions a year by 2030, the study said, equivalent to China's current carbon dioxide emissions from fossil fuel use.

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A caretaker of the Zika Forest near Entebbe, Uganda, poses under the trees​

The Paris climate agreement, weakened by U.S. President Donald Trump's decision in June to pull out, seeks to limit a rise in global temperature to "well below" two degrees Celsius (3.6 Fahrenheit) above pre-industrial times. Current government pledges to cut emissions are too weak to achieve the 2C goal, meant to avert more droughts, more powerful storms, downpours and heat waves. "Fortunately, this research shows we have a huge opportunity to reshape our food and land use systems," Paul Polman, CEO of Unilever, said in a statement of Monday's findings.

Climate change could jeopardize production of crops such as corn, wheat, rice and soy even as a rising global population will raise demand, he said. The study said that some of the measures would cost $10 a ton or less to avert a ton of carbon dioxide, with others up to $100 a ton to qualify as "cost-effective" by 2030. "If we are serious about climate change, then we are going to have to get serious about investing in nature," said Mark Tercek, chief executive officer of The Nature Conservancy, which led the study.

Scientists: Plant More Trees to Combat Climate Change
 

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