This was the scene yesterday in Copenhagen. As you can see the scene is rather agitated with lots of police action, including use of billy clubs. As of this writing, no pictures or video is available of Lord Monckton’s account below. Hopefully somebody in the crowd will post some. I wish him well. I’ll also be glad when this conference is over. It has shown government at its worst.
From The Viscount Monckton of Brenchley in Copenhagen at the SPPI blog:
Today the gloves came off and the true purpose of the “global warming” scare became nakedly visible. Hugo Chavez, the Socialist president of Venezuela, blamed “global warming” on capitalism – and received a standing ovation from very nearly all of the delegates, lamentably including those from those of the capitalist nations of the West that are on the far Left – and that means too many of them.
Previously Robert Mugabe, dictator of Rhodesia, who had refused to leave office when he had been soundly defeated in a recent election, had also won plaudits at the conference for saying that the West ought to pay him plenty of money in reparation of our supposed “climate debt”.
Inside the conference center, “world leader” after “world leader” got up and postured about the need to Save The Planet, the imperative to do a deal, the necessity to save the small island nations from drowning, etc., etc., etc.
Outside, in the real world, it was snowing, and a foretaste of the Brave New World being cooked up by “world leaders” in their fantasy-land was already evident. Some 20,000 observers from non-governmental organizations – nearly all of them true-believing Green groups funded by taxpayers – had been accredited to the conference.
However, without warning the UN had capriciously decided that all but 300 of them were to be excluded from the conference today, and all but 90 would be excluded on the final day.
Of course, this being the inept UN, no one had bothered to notify those of the NGOs that were not true-believers in the UN’s camp. So Senator Steve Fielding of Australia and I turned up with a few dozen other delegates, to be left standing in the cold for a couple of hours while the UN laboriously worked out what to do with us.
In the end, they decided to turn us away, which they did with an ill grace and in a bad-tempered manner. As soon as the decision was final, the Danish police moved in. One of them began the now familiar technique of manhandling me, in the same fashion as one of his colleagues had done the previous day.
Once again, conscious that a police helicopter with a high-resolution camera was hovering overhead, I thrust my hands into my pockets in accordance with the St. John Ambulance crowd-control training, looked my assailant in the eye and told him, quietly but firmly, to take his hands off me.
He complied, but then decided to have another go. I told him a second time, and he let go a second time. I turned to go and, after I had turned my back, he gave me a mighty shove that flung me to the ground and knocked me out.
I came to some time later (not sure exactly how long), to find my head being cradled by my friends, some of whom were doing their best to keep the police thugs at bay while the volunteer ambulance-men attended to me.
I was picked up and dusted me off. I could not remember where I had left my telephone, which had been in my hand at the time when I was assaulted. I rather fuzzily asked where it was, and one of the police goons shouted, “He alleges he had a mobile phone.”
In fact, the phone was in my coat pocket, where my hand had been at the time of the assault. The ambulance crew led me away and laid me down under a blanket for 20 minutes to get warm, plying me with water and keeping me amused with some colorfully colloquial English that they had learned.
I thanked them for their kindness, left them a donation for their splendid service, and rejoined my friends. A very senior police officer then came up and asked if I was all right. Yes, I said, but no thanks to one of his officers, who had pushed me hard from behind when my back was turned and had sent me flying.
The police chief said that none of his officers would have done such a thing. I said that several witnesses had seen the incident, which I intended to report. I said I had hoped to receive an apology but had not received one, and would include that in my report. The policeman went off looking glum, and with good reason.
To assault an accredited representative of a conference your nation is hosting, and to do it while your own police cameramen are filming from above, and to do it without any provocation except my polite, non-threatening request that I should not be manhandled, is not a career-enhancing move, as that police chief is about to discover to his cost.
Nor does this incident, and far too many like it, reflect the slightest credit on Denmark. We must make reasonable allowance for the fact that the unspeakable security service of the UN, which is universally detested by those at this conference, was ordering the Danish police about. The tension between the alien force and the indigenous men on the ground had grown throughout the conference.
However, the Danish police were far too free with their hands when pushing us around, and that is not acceptable in a free society. But then, Europe is no longer a free society. It is, in effect, a tyranny ruled by the unelected Kommissars of the European Union. That is perhaps one reason why police forces throughout Europe, including that in the UK, have become far more brutal than was once acceptable in their treatment of the citizens they are sworn to serve.
It is exactly this species of tyranny that the UN would like to impose upon the entire planet, in the name of saving us from ourselves – or, as Ugo Chavez would put it, saving us from Western capitalist democracy.
A few weeks ago, at a major conference in New York, I spoke about this tendency towards tyranny with Dr. Vaclav Klaus, the distinguished economist and doughty fighter for freedom and democracy who is President of the Czech Republic.
While we still have one or two statesmen of his caliber, there is hope for Europe and the world. Unfortunately, he refused to come to Copenhagen, telling me that there was no point, now that the lunatics were firmly in control of the asylum.
However, I asked him whether the draft Copenhagen Treaty’s proposal for what amounted to a communistic world government reminded him of the Communism under which he and his country had suffered for so long.
He thought for a moment – as statesmen always do before answering an unusual question – and said, “Maybe it is not brutal. But in all other respects, what it proposes is far too close to Communism for comfort.”
Today, as I lay in the snow with a cut knee, a bruised back, a banged head, a ruined suit, and a written-off coat, I wondered whether the brutality of the New World Order was moving closer than President Klaus – or any of us – had realized.
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iurockhead (09:24:05) : said
…Our greatest hope now is to do all we can to get the truth revealed in the Climategate emails and the analysis of long-hidden raw data out to the public. Even if the MSM chooses to ignore it, the internet is a powerful megaphone, and word of mouth goes a long way too.
You are correct I have been trying to wake people up for a couple of years. I have found through trial and error that the Federal Reserve and Fractional Banking are good waker-uppers. After the bank bailout EVERYONE hates the bankers and with good reason. Notice WHO is going to get the money from the global tax… THE BANKERS!!!!
“The final Copenhagen draft agreement which was hammered out in the early hours of Friday morning includes provisions for a global tax on financial transactions that will be paid directly to the World Bank, as President Obama prepares to bypass Congress by approving a massive transfer of wealth from America into globalist hands.
http://www.minnesotansforglobalwarming.com/m4gw/
Once you start following the money it all leads back to the Financiers. Even the monster Monsanto Corporation is controlled by the Financiers – 85% is owned by mutual funds who vote the stock. For example the Johnson family owns the the fidelity groups and control about 6% of Monsanto stock.
“An analysis of the 2007 financial markets of 48 countries shows the world’s finances are in the hands of a few mutual funds, banks, and corporations. This is the first report of global concentration of financial power…. http://www.insidescience.org/research/study_says_world_s_stocks_controlled_by_select_few
It used to be ten Corporations controlled 80% of the food supply, now in the USA it is down to five… https://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=105152916
World wide, five corporations control 90 percent of the international grain trade, three countries produce 70 percent of exported corn… National food reserves have been privatised and are now run like transnational companies…. Governments and private grain dealers used to hold large inventories in normal times, just in case a bad harvest created a sudden shortage. Over the years, however, these precautionary inventories were allowed to shrink, [The USA as now has NO grain reserves] http://www.globalresearch.ca/index.php?context=va&aid=14378
This covers the basics about the threat to our food supply:
CONTROL OF THE WORLD’S FOOD SUPPLY: http://www.converge.org.nz/pirm/ctrlfood.htm
>>Who still refers to Zimbabwe as Rhodesia? Only racists
>>who are severely divorced from reality.
I daresay Monckton uses the name ‘Rhodesia’ in the same manner as I do – to openly declare that that nation was wealthier, safer and better managed when under the control of Ian Smith.
And there is no racism in this. Before his death, Ian Smith demanded of Mugabe that they both walk through the black townships to see how the locals lived – but with no bodyguards. Mugabe refused, because he knew that it would he who would be torn apart, not Ian Smith.
Gail Combs,
“This will last just long enough for those who remember democracy to die off and the UN trained “Global Citizens” to become the majority.”
What do you think starts revolutions?
>>I personally believe the whites should have seen the
>>writing on the wall many years previously and made
>>a graceful exit.
Are you saying that the Africans settled in Europe and America should ‘see the writing on the wall’ and go back to Africa??
Why the racism? (the differing perception and opinion, depending on race).
Another PhD of course is The Dear Leader Gordon Brown aka Macavity and look how well that turned out for the UK economy.
Richard111 (11:16:16) :
No mention of Lord Monckton on the BBC site.
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/sci/tech/8421652.stm
There’s No chance of that, while they pander to the procession of posturing politicians .
It’s in the FT ‘though:-
http://blogs.ft.com/energy-source/2009/12/18/copenhagen-diary-day-12-browns-tweets-and-absent-friends/
Lord Monckton,
My deepest regrets that you got to ‘experience this’.
My mother was from England, and I was raised to be something of an English Gentleman. It did not sit well in a rougher culture where I was raised. (I’ll spare the details)
Eventually I learned a very important lesson: “Be A Mirror. -E.M.Smith”
People can only understand things presented the way they think and at their level. With street thugs (in uniform or not) you will get little benefit from your civility. Sad, but true.
When immersed in a “rough culture” you must be “rough” to be seen by them as normal. If you are “polite” you are seen as weak and a target.
So if a person speaks at 4 th grade level, that is what they will understand, and that is the level at which you must speak.
If a person is indoctrinated in Communism, you must find a way to explain how capitalism works without recourse to the tainted words (or by learning the equivalent in their world view).
It even extends to the need to (as in Aikido in the physical world) merge with an opponents direction of motion and world view, then turn them. A ‘head to head’ does not speak to them, but if you mirror to them those points on which you agree, then focus on gentile change where you do not agree, they will shift. So first, “Be a Mirror”, then nudge…
And as any ‘street person’ can tell you: When the police first show up with riot gear, you turn around and leave as fast as you can. It is not possible to reason with a street goon in gear. The only way you can “be a mirror” is if you have a badge and baton… No mirror? Leave.
Part of how I know this is that I have many police friends. I was an “Eagle Scout” in a troupe devoted to law enforcement. I’ve had some of the training. Part of the specific training is that you always show “superior force” and you always escalate beyond the crowd.
So if a crowed member talks nice, they talk mean. If you from the crowd ask them to stop pushing you, they push harder. As you have now learned… It is a fundamental of all their training to assert dominance beyond all else because they are there for crowd control and from dominance comes control. You were pushing for ‘equality and fair treatment’ … That can not be left to stand. It is part of the training of such units.
So while it pains me to say this: “Welcome to Joe Sixpack’s world”.
If you are ever in California near San Francisco, I know a couple of good pubs and the beer (or other beverage) is on me. It would be nice to be in a place, and with company, where one could just be a gentleman again…
BTW, It would be good to take training in “how to fall”. I can now fall in any direction at any time and not be hurt. Even with “feet trapped straight forward” (the hardest fall…). It takes about a week to learn, is fairly good fun, and you will never have a hard fall again. Aikido and Judo both do it well, but even my Karate instructor had us do falls for days… Works well in skiing too. When in doubt, just bend your knees and curl into a ball with arms in a boxers position (but there are better ways). And best of luck to you. We need more folks like you in the world.
E. M. Smith chiefio.wordpress.com
They fired the Danish Climate Minister from the Presidency of COP15?? So much for COPs.
Lord Monckton:
I too gladly hoist a pint in your honor sir. What E.M. Smith (a man of many talents) is saying is put another way in this quote from the excellent film “The Untouchables:”
“You wanna know how to get Capone? They pull a knife, you pull a gun. He sends one of yours to the hospital, you send one of his to the morgue. *That’s* the *Chicago* way!” Malone/Sean Connery
I’d like to know why both the Danish police and the UN security forces failed to arrest Mugabe. Aren’t there several international warrants out for that repugnant little thug?
-jcr
Let us not forget the real hero of this story: Al Gore.
If he had not invented the Internet we would know nothing of this!
The whole charade provides many reasons to start dismantling bloated government both within the U.S. and the U.N.. Both have become fat, lazy and over-pampered. The “climate change” battle is really about money and how much money the developing nations and green con artists can extort from developed nations.
The whole area of “models” has been a dismal fail in my estimate.
Abandon all hope! Jackson has spoken and the AGW zealots will have a supermajority in the senate in 2012. Well, I guess it’s all over then… What’s that? The polls say what? Oh, um, er, nevermind. Can’t wait for the midterms. >:)
Mugabe enjoys diplomatic immunity as a head of state with respect to United Nations functions.
Obama is certainly in a pickle. At least he’s getting the US back in global climate talks – that’s obviously a step
in the right direction. Speaking of -we shouldn’t stop working at our local level just because world leaders are
making speeches 🙂 http://www.tictacdo.com/ttd//Apply_green_trends_in_your_workplace The web is filled with great
suggestions on how we can help on the microlevel.
Anyone who is the least bit surprised at any of these occurrences wherever
the western monetary/power elites are in control is either dead asleep or
a goddamed liar! How long the get away with this filth will be up to the
masses who tolerate them!
E. Tippett
Chicago, Illinois
ralph (11:57:08) :
>>I personally believe the whites should have seen the
>>writing on the wall many years previously and made
>>a graceful exit.
Are you saying that the Africans settled in Europe and America should ’see the writing on the wall’ and go back to Africa??
No.
Why the racism? (the differing perception and opinion, depending on race).
Nothing to do with racism. More to do with pragmatism. And anyway, the two situations are utterly different. The Europeans went to Africa as conquering colonialists, whereas the Africans were brought to America and Europe as slaves.
And that’s the end of this off topic conversation as far as I’m concerned.
Reply: Yes. ~ ctm
E.M.Smith (12:46:59) :
And as any ’street person’ can tell you: When the police first show up with riot gear, you turn around and leave as fast as you can. It is not possible to reason with a street goon in gear. The only way you can “be a mirror” is if you have a badge and baton… No mirror? Leave.
Yep, this is why I said I take precautions when going on demo’s where the govt have given the cops the go ahead to play rough.
You don’t affect policy held by both main parties through the ballot box, so you either put up with it and grumble, or you fight. We won the poll tax argument, it was the beginning of the end for Thatcher. The govt still got their enhanced census and surveillance in the end through the council tax that replaced it though. This is their modus operandi: Demand something beyond what you really want, and ‘compromise’ to the position where you wanted to get to.
BTW, It would be good to take training in “how to fall”. I can now fall in any direction at any time and not be hurt. Even with “feet trapped straight forward” (the hardest fall…). It takes about a week to learn, is fairly good fun, and you will never have a hard fall again. Aikido and Judo both do it well.
Yes. Lord Monckton was following advice on ‘passive resistance’, hands in pockets etc. Can work ok with ordinary uniformed bobbies in the UK, he found out the hard way that turning your back on a cop in riot mode with your hands in your pockets can get you a cracked head.
tallbloke (00:57:01) wrote: “Which is worse, semi-benevolent white elitist racism, or Mugabe’s tribal racism with added terror and hunger?”
You (and I think savethesharks) miss my point entirely. Monkton fills the role of skeptical activist but he spreads himself too thin by introducing too many unfashionable ideas at once. He simply comes across as reactionary and it doesn’t matter that he is right about any or all of his views. We all recognize congenital greeny activists by their ridiculous in-built sense of grievance and righteousness about everything, and feel safe to laugh them off as lefty gadflies. In this struggle we need spokesmen with unwavering focus, not a gadfly who introduces tangential issues at random intervals; it is bad political technique and this long ago became a political struggle.
Hunter (19:05:42) :
Who still refers to Zimbabwe as Rhodesia? Only racists who are severely divorced from reality. Not much point reading on when you realised the author is of that ilk.
Lighten up, Francis — for most of Lord Monckton’s life (and mine), Zimbabwe was *Rhodesia*. And nobody throws the “racist!” card at the American Kennel Club when the don’t talk about “Zimbabwean Ridgebacks”.
You must have fun trying to discuss Thailander cats.
Lord Monckton is my hero and I would like to wish him a speedy recovery and a Happy Christmas
Roy,
You make a good point. Perhaps it is just the excitement of the occasion, but probably it is simply because Lord Monckton has linked AGW with corruption and global authoritarianism. These are all linked issues, but I agree that he should try and be a little more focussed if he is to successfully present a coherent picture.
Roy (02:50:14) :
tallbloke (00:57:01) wrote: “Which is worse, semi-benevolent white elitist racism, or Mugabe’s tribal racism with added terror and hunger?”
You (and I think savethesharks) miss my point entirely.
I addressed your specific point head on, now you raise another:
In this struggle we need spokesmen with unwavering focus, not a gadfly who introduces tangential issues at random intervals; it is bad political technique and this long ago became a political struggle.
I agree that the lefties will use Monckton’s naming of Rhodesia as a stick to beat him with, but I’m sure he was right to raise the issue of Mugabe’s presence at the summit. The fact that his prime minister was excluded from their delegation should have been used by Ban Ki Moon as a legitimate reason to exclude Mugabe.
Maybe the liberal press will realise this and downplay the issue. I think it will get lost in the bigger media scrum anyway, so nothing to get too worked up about.
One might hope that a PhD in physics would understand the experimental method and data collection and analysis, and therefore not fall for the Warmist con.
The threat to take our ‘guns and gold’ not to mention our religion from us (note to tyrants and sturmabteilung, it can’t be done, we will die first, and always have, through the millennia) is chilling – and should be taken seriously. Jackson is not alone in this pogrom-mentality. This sort of thing that one mainly sees at the Daily Kos and Huffington Post preceded Krystallnacht and Auschwitz. They should be taken very seriously. The last time, those who didn’t take them seriously died in ovens and showers.
I certainly wouldn’t want to drink -inorganic- wine! 😉
Lord Monckton might want to consider a titanium-reinforced bowler in the future at such events. . .
Referring to Mugabe’s domain as “Rhodesia” is a protest against his brutal dictatorship of rape and mass murder which is in the scale with Pol Pot’s Kampuchea. Naming that region after an old Arab slave-buying post never did seem like a good idea to me, I don’t know what else to call it, though.
And I do insist on calling Burma, ‘Burma’.