Paul Driessen
November 30, 2020
Senator
Sheldon Whitehouse (D-RI) is again behaving like Tomas de Torquemada,
using Inquisition-like
tactics to harass “manmade climate crisis” skeptics, and saying
Democrat
control of the Senate would enable him and his colleagues to launch
investigations, haul climate realists before committees, and even
employ grand
juries and criminal prosecutions – to intimidate, silence and punish
climate
crisis nonbelievers. It is reprehensible, dictatorial, un-American and
anti-science. America and
the world do not need more censorship. They need open, robust debate:
over the
validity of climate crisis claims, over the impacts that literally
millions of
wind turbines and billions of solar panels and battery modules would
have on
our environment and wildlife, over the effects that an expensive,
weather-dependent energy system would have on jobs, living standards
and
working class families. My article examines these issues. Five years ago, I said Senator Sheldon Whitehouse (D-RI) behaves like Torquemada, using Inquisition-like tactics to harass “manmade climate crisis” skeptics, and threatening to prosecute them for racketeering. Tomas de Torquemada was the Grand Inquisitor of the Spanish Inquisition that interrogated, tortured, imprisoned and executed thousands for religious heresy. The senator took great umbrage, and denounced me in Senate chambers where I once worked. But he didn’t change his ways. If anything, he has become more intolerant and vindictive. He recently said Democrat control of the Senate would enable him and his colleagues to launch investigations, haul climate realists before committees (for star-chamber show trials), and even employ grand juries and criminal prosecutions – to intimidate, silence and punish climate crisis nonbelievers. People could certainly conclude that the thin-skinned senator would feel right at home in Inquisition Spain, Stalinist Russia, Red Guard and Xi Jinping China, or book-burning pre-Holocaust fascist Europe. Their history of silencing dissenters, erasing them from history, and sending them off to gulags and salt mines (or worse) is legendary. Their economic and governing ideology is classic fascism: an extreme, intolerant system, under which an authoritarian government does not own businesses and industries outright, but does dictate what they can make, do, sell and say – while controlling citizens’ thoughts, speech and choices – through intimidation, silencing, arrest, prosecution, and fear of being fined, jailed, fired, sent to penal or reeducation colonies, and being beaten or executed. These tactics are reprehensible and dictatorial. They are un-American and anti-science. Indeed, science achieves no progress without dissent, discussion and debate. It requires not just hypotheses, theories and computer models, but solid, empirical evidence to confirm or disprove hypotheses, models and predictions. Discussion, debate, dissent and evidence are especially vital in addressing the assertion that humanity faces an unprecedented manmade climate crisis. That assertion is being used to justify demands that the United States, Europe and developed world eliminate the fossil fuels that provide over 80% of our energy, petrochemical and pharmaceutical raw materials, fertilizers and countless other benefits. It is being used to justify demands that we replace this reliable, affordable energy and raw material base with wind, solar, battery and biofuel power. Not only are these alternatives intermittent, weather-dependent and far more expensive. They involve extensive mining, land use, wildlife, pollution and other environmental impacts. They are not renewable, sustainable, environment-friendly or climate-safe. In the United States alone, we would have to replace some 7.5 billion megawatt-hours of electricity and electricity-equivalent fossil fuel use per year; replace enormous amounts of oil and natural gas raw materials; and overhaul our transportation, home heating and other systems. That would require millions of wind turbines, billions of solar panels, billions of 1000-pound battery modules, tens of millions of acres of corn, canola, soybean and other biofuel crops – and tens of trillions of dollars. Democrat urban population and voter centers will likely oppose those industrial-scale installations in their backyards. They would have little objection to locating them in what many ruling, media and Hollywood elites imperiously and derisively refer to “flyover country” – western, Midwestern and southern states. This
“transformation” – under the Paris
climate treaty, a Green
New Deal or a
Biden-Harris regulatory program – would massively disrupt America’s
economy,
jobs, living standards, health and wellbeing, especially for poor,
minority,
blue-collar, fixed-income and flyover country families and communities.
Climate
alarmists insist that any lost jobs would be
replaced with “green” jobs. But those would be mostly minimum-wage
positions:
hauling, installing, maintaining, dismantling, removing and landfilling
turbines, panels and batteries. Moreover, most of those green
technologies
would be manufactured overseas, especially
in China, because
environmentalists
battle any mining in
the USA, and a
climate-focused energy
system would provide insufficient reliable, affordable power for
factories. Those huge
and unprecedented amounts of mining and
manufacturing would require fossil fuels. So the only thing that would
change
is where the fossil fuel use and emissions occur. It would be
mostly in Asia and Africa, in countries
that are not
obligated under the Paris climate treaty to reduce their
fossil fuel use or
greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions; countries that will build as many
hundreds or
thousands of coal and
gas-fired power plants as needed
to lift their
people out of poverty
... and make “green
energy” technologies they will happily sell to America, Australia,
Canada and
Europe. That means,
even if the US went cold-turkey on
fossil fuels, it would make no difference to global GHG emissions or
global
atmospheric concentrations. And that means, even if carbon dioxide is
the primary factor in climate change, destroying US and other modern
economies
would bring no climate benefits. The EU’s and
UK’s unwavering belief in human-caused
climate cataclysms is already hammering its industries, workers and
families,
as numerous articles attest: here,
here, here
and here, for
instance. Thankfully, however, it is becoming increasingly clear that assertions of Climate Armageddon have been miscalculated, exaggerated or fabricated. Average global temperatures are rising far less rapidly than predicted by climate models: by at least a half-degree F. Violent (F4-F5) US tornadoes have actually declined in number the past 35 years (1985-2020) versus the previous 35 years (1950-1984); and in 2018 not one F5 tornado touched down in the United States. For a record twelve years, from Wilma in 2005 until Harvey and Irma in 2017, no Category 3 to 5 hurricane struck the US mainland. Overall, there is little or no trend in tropical cyclone activity or intensity. All that is not surprising in light of new research by Drs. William Happer and Willem van Wijngaarden that strongly indicates even doubling carbon dioxide (and other greenhouse gases) in Earth’s atmosphere would have minuscule effects on global temperatures and climate (but would benefit plant growth). Indeed, it is impossible to distinguish human influences from natural factors, fluctuations and cycles regarding temperatures, polar ice, storms and droughts. Some scientists certainly claim otherwise – and generally just blame humans. But they have little or no actual, empirical evidence to support their claims, predictions and models. They simply say the science is settled, and we must ban fossil fuels, so shut up. With so much at stake for America and the world, this is completely intolerable. At the very least, those claiming we face a climate calamity must be required to present solid empirical evidence to support their assertions – and engage in in robust, transparent debates with manmade climate change skeptics. That is precisely what Senator Torquemada seems determined to prevent and punish, while transforming “the world’s greatest deliberative body” into a Russian Politburo or Chinese National People’s Congress – and an integral part of the $multi-trillion-per-year Climate Industrial Complex. In that quest he would certainly be aided by the Big Media and Big Tech moguls who share his views on climate change, silencing scientists and evidence that contradicts climate cataclysm catechism, and blacklisting “climate heretics” in government, academic and corporate circles. People have been conditioned to kowtow to government lockdown edicts, to save humanity from Covid. Climate alarmists assume we will now be sufficiently compliant about banning fossil fuels to “save the planet,” when we’re trying to recover from Covid. Or their Torquemadas will make us compliant. It’s time to reject politicized junk science, demand debate, and resist green climate and energy edicts. Perhaps most of all, the US Senate must assert its Advice and Consent responsibilities on the Paris climate treaty, the most far-reaching international agreement Americans were ever asked to ratify. |
Paul Driessen is a
senior fellow with the Committee For A Constructive Tomorrow
(CFACT) and Center
for the Defense of Free Enterprise (CDFE), nonprofit public
policy institutes that focus on energy, the environment, economic
development and international affairs. He is the author of "Green
Power, Black Death" (Merril Press, 2010) and coauthor of "Energy
Keepers, Energy Killers" (Merril Press, 2008). Read his full bio here. You can contact Paul here. |
Copyright © Paul Driessen |
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4dec2020