by Paul Driessen
Lockheed Martin, a recent Washington Post
article notes, is getting into renewable energy, nuclear fusion,
“sustainability” and even fish farming projects, to augment its reduced
defense profits. The company plans to forge new ties with Defense
Department and other Obama initiatives, based on a shared belief in
manmade climate change as a critical security and planetary threat. It
is charging ahead where other defense contractors have failed, confident
that its expertise, lobbying skills and “socially responsible”
commitment to preventing climate chaos will land it plentiful contracts
and subsidies.
As with its polar counterparts, 90% of the titanic climate funding
iceberg is invisible to most citizens, businessmen and politicians. The
Lockheed action is the mere tip of the icy mountaintop.
The multi-billion-dollar agenda reflects the Obama Administration’s
commitment to using climate change to radically transform America. It
reflects a determination to make the climate crisis industry so enormous
that no one will be able to tear it down, even as computer models and
disaster claims become less and less credible – and even if Republicans
control Congress and the White House after 2016. Lockheed is merely the
latest in a long list of regulators, researchers, universities,
businesses, manufacturers, pressure groups, journalists and politicians
with such strong monetary, reputational and authority interests in
alarmism that they will defend its tenets and largesse tooth and nail.
Above all, it reflects a conviction that alarmists have a right to
control our energy use, lives, livelihoods and living standards, with no
transparency and no accountability for mistakes they make or damage
they inflict on disfavored industries and families...
But Climate Crisis, Inc. is using our tax and consumer dollars to advance six simultaneous strategies...
Driessens' conclusions are similar to Wilmeth's:
States must refuse to play the climate crisis game. Through lawsuits,
hearings, investigations and other actions, governors, legislators, AGs
and other officials can delay EPA diktats, educate citizens about solar
and other natural forces, and explain the huge costs and trifling
benefits of these draconian regulations.
Congress should hold hearings, demand an accounting of agency
expenditures, require solid evidence for every climate claim and
regulation, and cross-examine Administration officials on details. It
should slash EPA and other agency budgets, so they cannot keep giving
billions to pressure groups, propagandists and attack dogs. Honesty,
transparency, accountability and a much shorter leash are long overdue.
Issues of concern to people who live in the west: property rights, water rights, endangered species, livestock grazing, energy production, wilderness and western agriculture. Plus a few items on western history, western literature and the sport of rodeo... Frank DuBois served as the NM Secretary of Agriculture from 1988 to 2003. DuBois is a former legislative assistant to a U.S. Senator, a Deputy Assistant Secretary of Interior, and is the founder of the DuBois Rodeo Scholarship.
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