Poor countries should hold Big Green groups and directors liable for deaths, ravage they cause
Guest opinion by Paul Driessen
Fossil fuel and insurance company executives “could face personal liability for funding climate denialism and opposing policies to fight climate change,” Greenpeace recently warned several corporations. In a letter co-signed by WWF International and the Center for International Environmental Law, the Rainbow Warriors ($155 million in 2013 global income) suggested that legal action might be possible.
Meanwhile, the WWF ($927 million in 2013 global income) filed a formal complaint against Peabody Energy for “misleading readers” in advertisements that say coal-based electricity can improve lives in developing countries. The ads are not “decent, honest and veracious,” as required by Belgian law, the World Wildlife ethicists sniffed. Other non-governmental organizations (NGOs) make similar demands.
These are novel tactics. But the entire exercise might be little more than a clever attempt to distract people from developments that could create problems for thus far unaccountable Big Green organizations.
I don’t mean Greenpeace International’s $5.2 million loss a couple weeks ago, when a rogue employee (since fired) used company cash to conduct unauthorized trades on global currency markets. Other recent events portend far rougher legal and political waters ahead for radical eco-imperialists, especially if countries and companies take a few more pages out of the Big Green playbook.
India’s Intelligence Bureau recently identified Greenpeace as “a threat to national economic security,” noting that these and other groups have been “spawning” and funding internal protest movements and campaigns that have delayed or blocked numerous mines, electricity projects and other infrastructure programs vitally needed to create jobs and lift people out of poverty and disease. The anti-development NGOs are costing India’s economy 2-3% in lost GDP every year, the Bureau estimates.
The Indian government has now banned direct foreign funding of local campaign groups by foreign NGOs like Greenpeace, the WWF and US-based Center for Media and Democracy. India and other nations could do much more. Simply holding these über-wealthy nonprofit environmentalist corporations to the same ethical standards they demand of for-profit corporations could be a fascinating start.
Greenpeace, WWF and other Big Green campaigners constantly demand environmental and climate justice for poor families. They insist that for-profit corporations be socially responsible, honest, transparent, accountable, and liable for damages and injustices that the NGOs allege the companies have committed, by supposedly altering Earth’s climate and weather, for example.
Meanwhile, more than 300 million Indians (equal to the US population) still have no access to electricity, or only sporadic access. 700 million Africans likewise have no or only occasional access. Worldwide, almost 2.5 billion people (nearly a third of our Earth’s population) still lack electricity or must rely on little solar panels on their huts, a single wind turbine in their village or terribly unreliable networks, to charge a cell phone and power a few light bulbs or a tiny refrigerator.
These energy-deprived people do not merely suffer abject poverty. They must burn wood and dung for heating and cooking, which results in debilitating lung diseases that kill a million people every year. They lack refrigeration, safe water and decent hospitals, resulting in virulent intestinal diseases that send almost two million people to their graves annually. The vast majority of these victims are women and children.
The energy deprivation is due in large part to unrelenting, aggressive, deceitful eco-activist campaigns against coal-fired power plants, natural gas-fueled turbines, and nuclear and hydroelectric facilities in India, Ghana, South Africa, Uganda and elsewhere. The Obama Administration joined Big Greeen in refusing to support loans for these critically needed projects, citing climate change and other claims.
As American University adjunct professor Caleb Rossiter asked in a recent Wall Street Journal article, “Where is the justice when the U.S. discourages World Bank funding for electricity-generation projects in Africa that involve fossil fuels, and when the European Union places a ‘global warming’ tax on cargo flights importing perishable African goods?”
Where is the justice in Obama advisor John Holdren saying ultra-green elites in rich countries should define and dictate “ecologically feasible development” for poor countries? As the Indian government said in banning foreign NGO funding of anti-development groups, poor nations have “a right to grow.”
Imagine your life without abundant, reliable, affordable electricity and transportation fuels. Imagine living under conditions endured by impoverished, malnourished, diseased Indians and Africans whose life expectancy is 49 to 59 years. And then dare to object to their pleas and aspirations, especially on the basis of “dangerous manmade global warming” speculation and GIGO computer models. Real pollution from modern coal-fired power plants (particulates, sulfates, nitrates and so on) is a tiny fraction of what they emitted 40 years ago – and far less harmful than pollutants from zero-electricity wood fires.
Big Green activists say anything other than solar panels and bird-butchering wind turbines would not be “sustainable.” Like climate change, “sustainability” is infinitely elastic and malleable, making it a perfect weapon for anti-development activists. Whatever they support is sustainable. Whatever they oppose is unsustainable. To them, apparently, the diseases and death tolls are sustainable, just, ethical and moral.
Whatever they advocate also complies with the “precautionary principle.” Whatever they disdain violates it. Worse, their perverse guideline always focuses on the risks of using technologies – but never on the risks of not using them. It spotlights risks that a technology – coal-fired power plants, biotech foods or DDT, for example – might cause, but ignores risks the technology would reduce or prevent.
Genetically engineered Golden Rice incorporates a gene from corn (maize) to make it rich in beta-carotene, which humans can convert to Vitamin A, to prevent blindness and save lives. The rice would be made available at no cost to poor farmers. Just two ounces a day would virtually end the childhood malnutrition, blindness and deaths. But Greenpeace and its “ethical” collaborators have battled Golden Rice for years, while eight million children died from Vitamin A deficiency since the rice was invented.
In Uganda malnourished people depend as heavily on Vitamin A-deficient bananas, as their Asian counterparts do on minimally nutritious rice. A new banana incorporates genes from wild bananas, to boost the fruit’s Vitamin A levels tenfold. But anti-biotechnology activists repeatedly pressure legislators not to approve biotech crops for sale. Other crops are genetically engineered to resist insects, drought and diseases, reducing the need for pesticides and allowing farmers to grow more food on less land with less water. However, Big Green opposes them too, while millions die from malnutrition and starvation.
Sprayed in tiny amounts on walls of homes, DDT repels mosquitoes for six months or more. It kills any that land on the walls and irritates those it does not kill or repel, so they leave the house without biting anyone. No other chemical – at any price – can do all that. Where DDT and other insecticides are used, malaria cases and deaths plummet – by as much as 80 percent. Used this way, the chemical is safe for humans and animals, and malaria-carrying mosquitoes are far less likely to build immunities to DDT than to other pesticides, which are still used heavily in agriculture and do pose risks to humans.
But in another crime against humanity, Greenpeace, WWF and their ilk constantly battle DDT use – while half a billion people get malaria every year, making them unable to work for weeks on end, leaving millions with permanent brain damage, and killing a million people per year, mostly women and children.
India and other countries can fight back, by terminating the NGOs’ tax-exempt status, as Canada did with Greenpeace. They could hold the pressure groups to the same standards they demand of for-profit corporations: honesty, transparency, social responsibility, accountability and personal liability. They could excoriate the Big Green groups for their crimes against humanity – and penalize them for the malnutrition, disease, economic retractions and deaths they perpetrate or perpetuate.
Actions like these would improve billions of lives and bring some accountability to Big Green(backs).
Paul Driessen is senior policy analyst for the Committee For A Constructive Tomorrow (www.CFACT.org) and author of Eco-Imperialism: Green power – Black death.
Acknowledged World Expert, Prof Paul Reiter
speaks on mosquito vector borne diseases
Published by EIKE on January 31, 2013
The internationally well most respectable mosquitoes specialist Paul Reiter of the Institut Pasteur in Paris showed that no climate change malaria, dengue and chikungunya carriers to driving to our shores, but the global trade in used tires, in which rain water stops. tabs: “The biggest malaria epidemic of all time with over 600,000 dead broke not in the tropics, but in the 1920s in the far north of Russia from.” But the UN IPCC replaced riders in the drafting of the chapter on health effects of climate change through a inexperienced, but well patronized young scientist who willingly disseminated the tale of the malaria-spreading as a result of global warming.
The Video is from Germany, but Prof. Reiter speaks in English.
I can watch the “Bat boat” getting cut in half everyday
Please release the Prof Reiter, mosquito video I posted above – thank you
Lauren R;
Didn’t think I was hating. The “guilt as a control” part of my comment should be self obvious, as for the collateral deaths in the middle ages, these days they have names like Schism, Reformation, Inquisition, and Crusade.
Agreed with much of your post but I’m getting tied to see golden rice sale pitch among climat septics.Should be sceptical about that too.
‘In order to meet the full needs of 750 micrograms of vitamin A from rice, an adult would have to
consume 2 kg 272g of rice per day. This implies that one family member would consume the entire family ration of 10 kg. from the PDS in 4 days to meet vitaminA needs through “Golden rice”.
Dr. Vandana Shiva
Lauren R says, “Millions have died and hundreds of millions suffered as a result of, for example, communism.”
There is some very important research done by a man named RL Rummel, which demands attention. He has painstakingly assembled the data in thousands of lines of tables comparing the death rates in democracies, authoritarian systems, and totalitarian regimes. It is very clear that authoritarian and totalitarian governments are far more lethal to their own citizens, and are also much more belligerent towards other countries.
Democracies have the least rate of democide – that is Rummel’s term for death by government – and do not go to armed conflict with other democracies. This is plain from the last century. To illustrate, let’s look at the casualties in WWII as broken down in Rummel’s Death by Government:
So the data from the last century clearly shows that the over-powerful government is the worst perpetrator of murder against civilians in their own countries, and a great threat to life and limb. And incidentally, these totalitarians and authoritarians always make a point of first denigrating and censoring, then controlling, then wiping out the religions and folk beliefs of the people. They all share that in common: eliminate religious freedom and belief, which competes with the state. Open societies protect religious freedom and other basic rights, such as property rights and freedom of expression.
Big green acutally likes and invest in fossil fuels. Hooooray! And goodnight.
May 2013
The Guardian
“The giants of the green world that profit from the planet’s destruction”
The Nation
“Time for Big Green to Go Fossil Free”
The Nation
“Why Aren’t Environmental Groups Divesting from Fossil Fuels?“
” Brian says:
July 6, 2014 at 3:25 pm
Lauren R;
Didn’t think I was hating. ….”
Neither does greenpeace.
In South Africa, the DDT killed the malaria mosquitoes pretty well. But the bedbugs quickly became resistant to DDT. So the bedbugs proliferated in houses sprayed with DDT.
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sorry but this makes no sense. the bedbugs don’t feed on DDT, so at best it had no effect on the resistant bedbugs. it certainly can’t cause them to “proliferate” any faster than if no DDT was used, unless the DDT killed something that eats bedbugs.
interestingly World Health listed bedbugs as a transmitter of Slim’s Disease in Africa for years. this was all hushed up after Slim’s Disease was confirmed to be HIV/AIDS. Look in the WHO manuals from the 70’s and 80’s if you have any doubts.
@ur momisugly Martin – Golden Rice issue.
It was not until 2004 that the first field trial was conducted in Louisiana, which proved Golden Rice produced sufficient beta-carotene under farm conditions. Then in 2005, with the help of the Syngenta Foundation, a new variety of Golden Rice was produced that contained 23 times as much beta-carotene as the original strain. This, along with studies on human uptake of beta-carotene from Golden Rice, now provides proof Golden Rice will be effective in preventing vitamin A deficiency with a cup of rice per day. – click my name for source
Vandana Shiva opposes Golden rice, because she claims the women of Bengal grow and eat 150 greens which can do the same, and furthermore sees golden rice as a threat to other local strains of rice plants, who have a “right to integrity” and she claims that we need to abandon “anthropocentric worldview” in favor of “Earth Democracy”.
Martina McGloughlin, director of the biotechnology program at the University of California at Davis angrily compared this to Marie Antoinette, who said that the peasants should eat cake if they don’t have bread. In fact as Patrick Moore and others have pointed out many 3rd World people have only a single bowl of rice per day, and have not got access to these “150” plants. Many of them have never even seen a carrot for instance.
kenw;
point taken, good one.
@ur momisugly El Nino Nanny
As with most environmental issues, I still firmly believe that we need to improve the economic of affected population. Vitamins deficiency? Need to improve the income to be able to buy variety of food. The past (or current) technology is more than sufficient to feed all humans.
Greenpeace et al are simply following the UN Agenda21 dictum that wealth and economy are bad and everything must be done to break capitalism.
What better way than to destroy fuel supply infrastructure?
This is quite ironic – first of all “Big Oil” and other fossil fuel investors have every reason to like Greenpeace ideas, (although it would appear that Greenpeace et al refuse to see it that way).
Why would the fossil fuel industry like a forced reduction in fossil fuel use? Well like OPEC and every other trader in the worl, they can see that if volume is restricted, the price shoots way up. In fact it is often touted that price hikes be used to lessen the use of fossil fuels. Either way “Big Oil” knows there is no substitute on the horizon for fossil fuels and the demand will always be there. Just like Adam Smith said!
That being the case, the fossil fuel industry will be quite happy to settle for decreased production and high prices – the higher the better. Even if the economy is destroyed, what a huge margin they will achieve for less work!
Just what OPEC tried to do and basically failed.
Of course the UN is working on otherways to destroy capitalism – one is the education system where bogus “Studies for sustainability” courses and the like are inserted into the school curriculum.
If you think this is far fetched check this expemplar which I found on my countries official government education website! http://thedemiseofchristchurch.files.wordpress.com/2013/03/exemplar-3-2008-exam.pdf
Check my blog, there is more!
http://www.thedemiseofchristchurch.com
Bravo for India. Introduction of Golden Rice alone would eliminate millions of cases of blindness from poor nutrition at no cost ecologically. It’s shocking that “environmentalists” have delayed this for so long.
Just look at their actions and add up the results of such.
Misanthropes, every single one of them.
Greenpeace started out as a poor eco-terrorist organization and is now a rich eco-terrorist organization. Every principal of Geenpeace needs to be on the US terrorist no fly list.
Brian says:
July 6, 2014 at 3:25 pm
###
You need to get your knowledge of history from other sources besides Christianity hating lefty historians. E.g. The Church strongly condemned the Inquisitions, which were nothing but tools of the nobility to achieve political goals.
Off topic, but related. Greg L*d*n resurrected the old Patrick Moore is not a Greenpeace co-founder meme recently. Bob Tisdale summed up Greg L*d*n to a tee on Dec 20, 2013:
Greg L*d*n appears to be expressing a belief, not knowledge, which is a common trait among global warming alarmists.
http://scienceblogs.com/gregladen/2014/06/27/who-founded-greenpeace-not-patrick-moore/
The majority of respondents appear outraged. Good!
The threat of civil litigation by the Green industry underscores two important items. There are more. However, this is a post response. So, who is reading.
First, it is an attempt at greenmail. There is no possible follow-up. The green’s counsel would advise that, the greens would have to provide all exculpatory documents and more. Not good. However, the suit’s premise is: get media headline. Then, hope one of the accused rolls over and provides enough cash to make the suit cash neutral.
Second, [and last] this is the Steyn suit on steroids.
So, if you are truly outraged, buy a book at Mark’s website.
My point is: if this is a step-up from the suit against Mark, win the smaller suit and the boogeymen will stop and think.
As full disclosure, I have been buying Mark’s books on the American musical theatre for the last three years. If you like music, the man is an over the top library of the anecdotal history of our culture.
This is a battle: contribute to the small win. The big win may follow.
Buy stuff. It’s good.
Can the UN IPCC, it’s director and administration employees (including the UN General Secretary present and past), and the “authors” (present and past) of its reports be held by law on the complaints of fraud against citizens of member countries and given trial by jury in the Hague ? or in the countries of the citizens who claim injury ?
I.e. If the United Nations (its General Secretary and employees and employee consultants) commits crimes against humanity, then where can a trial by jury be held ?
Is such not an act of war ? And if an act of war should it be answered by an act of war ?
James Strom says:
July 6, 2014 at 4:24 pm
Bravo for India. Introduction of Golden Rice alone would eliminate millions of cases of blindness from poor nutrition at no cost ecologically. It’s shocking that “environmentalists” have delayed this for so long.
>Actually no, it’s not. See some of the posts above that claim these people hate humanity and want to see us culled. The shocking part is that governments have gone along for the ride with them for so long. I would have had this matter settled within a week, the wailing and gnashing of teeth would go on for a short while and then nobody would hear about it again. Once India takes them down they won’t bother with India anymore. You won’t see Greenpeace messing around in Russia anymore either. It’s long past time for the western world to shove them to the extreme margins where they belong.<
@lawrence Todd, 4:42pm, July 6.
Greenpeace started out as a poor eco-terrorist organization, while I agree with the second part of your comment, I wouldn’t call the early years of Greenpeace ‘eco-terrorists’.
In preparing my rebuttal to Greg L*d*n’s absurd claims in the link above, I borrowed from the library Rex Wyler’s Greenpeace, an Insider’s Account: How a Group of Ecologists, Journalists and Visionaries Changed the World; http://www.amazon.com/Greenpeace-Ecologists-Journalists-Visionaries-Changed/dp/1594861064 , those early first half-dozen years or so their main concerns concentrated on the nuclear test program in the pacific, whaling and saving seal pups from clubbing.
It was around about ’78-’79 that GP turned to the more political ‘eco-terrorist organization’ when David McTaggart arrived on the scene.
I honestly can’t understand why any country allows organizations like Greenpeace to operate there, attempting to change their politics with foreign money. I can only presume politicians are benefitting from that foreign money in some way.
By all means hold Greenpeace accountable. They need to face reality. Hit them with hard fact after hard fact, and don’t let them run away into their “visionary” echo chambers.
I was trying to put my finger on the difference between engineers, who have to deal with hard facts or else see their structures come crashing down, and politicians, who can’t make anything work. Into my mind’s eye came the 1960’s singing group who changed its name from “Jefferson Airplane” to “Jefferson Starship.” What is the difference? (Besides way too much LSD, I mean.) The difference is that an airplane is a real thing that can actually fly. A starship doesn’t exist, and therefore cannot fly even to the next town, let alone to the next star. This seems an apt symbol for the mentality we are dealing with.
If you try to tell Greenpeace burn-outs they are not dealing with reality they get all haughty and claim you lack vision. You are not “progressive.” However they are the ones who are blind, blind to the extreme lack of practicality in their goals. Their “vision” is not vision at all.
(Don’t get me wrong. I like the idea of starships, and like dreamers. However please show me a working starship before you ask me to give up my pick-up truck. )
When dealing with a person who is “out there,” you need to go jaw to jaw and hit them with hard fact after hard fact. It is cruel to isolate the “out there” in a padded cell when they need contact, but in the case of Greenpeace they are marginalized by a weird sort of self-marginalization. They are a cult; they are yes-men in an echo-chamber. If rescue is possible, they need to be held accountable.
If you break through their walls and invade their ivory tower you will hear all sorts of strange excuses for the fact their ideas simply don’t work. A crashing economy? Oh, that is “redistribution of wealth.” Suffering in the third world? Oh, Well…I won’t repeat and don’t care what they say; I call it genocide, inhumane, and craziness.
Confront them every chance you get.
sadbutmadlad says:
July 6, 2014 at 2:06 pm
If any other group of people carried out what Greenpeace and Friends of the Earth do they would be classified as terrorists.
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They are terrorists.
Here in Australia, they broke into a government research station and destroyed an experimental GM wheat crop, and years of research. They perps got a fine (paid by Greenpeace). And, trying to board a Russian oil platform was undoubtedly a terrorist act. Fortunately, Vlad Putin has dealt with terrorists in the past, and I don’t think they’ll be trying that again in a hurry.
They and other groups like them have thrived on the double standard which stupid Western governments have applied to them. A novel legal defence, called “caring about the Planet”, has been allowed to let off vandals, trespassers and thieves with slaps on the wrist, at worst.
Two things should happen to put a stop to this. Firstly, anyone who commits offences against property (or any other offence) should be treated the same. Claiming that you are saving the planet is irrelevant. Secondly, organisations like Greenpeace should either forfeit their tax deductible status or publish comprehensive accounts, and otherwise be subject to the same laws as corporations. That means details about where the money comes from and where it goes, including salaries and perks (like the guy who flew to and from work in Amsterdam). It also means that if you damage someone, you can be sued, and if you try to hide income or assets, you can be prosecuted.
Great work by India, although given the nature of politics and bureaucracy there, whether it has much effect in practice remains to be seen.