Is There an Elephant in the Living Room? Or Did Manmade Climate Change Cause Syria’s Civil War and the Rise of ISIS?

elephantGuest essay by E. Calvin Beisner

Did manmade global warming cause the Syrian civil war and the rise of ISIS?

A new paper, “Climate change in the Fertile Crescent and implications of the recent Syrian drought,” PNAS, March 2, 2015, summarized its findings by saying, “the 2007−2010 drought contributed to the conflict in Syria. It was the worst drought in the instrumental record, causing widespread crop failure and a mass migration of farming families to urban centers.”

It went on to say, “Century-long observed trends in precipitation, temperature, and sea-level pressure, supported by climate model results [emphasis added], strongly suggest that anthropogenic forcing has increased the probability of severe and persistent droughts in this region, and made the occurrence of a 3-year drought as severe as that of 2007−2010 2 to 3 times more likely than by natural variability alone.”

It concluded its summary, “human influences on the climate system are implicated in the current Syrian conflict.”

Not surprisingly, global warming alarmists jumped on the news.

AP’s Seth Borenstein called it “one of the most detailed and strongest connections between violence and human-caused climate change.”

Eric Holthaus, writing in Slate, led his report by saying, “One of the most terrifying implications [of climate change] is the increasingly real threat of wars sparked in part by global warming. New evidence says that Syria may be one of the first such conflicts.”

He cited Retired Navy Rear Adm. David Titley, a meteorologist who’s now a professor at Penn State University, as saying, “you can draw a very credible climate connection to this disaster we call ISIS right now.”

But the case isn’t quite so clear. Holthaus also cited Titley as saying that after decades of poor water policy “there was no resilience left in the system” and “It’s not to say you could predict ISIS out of that, but you just set everything up for something really bad to happen.”

A “climate connection” isn’t the same thing as a “manmade global warming connection,” and “climate model results” aren’t exactly convincing support for anything.

Consider first the measures of temperature and rainfall for the region. Are those two factors sufficient to explain the drought—or even much of it? Eyeballing graphs in the PNAS paper suggests not.

clip_image002

In the Fertile Crescent, of which Syria is part, the Palmer Drought Severity Index (which uses a scale from +3 to -3) worsened from about positive 0.2 to about negative 0.8 since 1930. That’s significant but not likely sufficient to explain the severe 2007–2010 drought.

More important, what caused the drought?

The Fertile Crescent experienced about a 7% decline in winter rainfall since 1930, most occurring before 1980, leaving only about 3% during the period of allegedly manmade warming. Not much there to explain.

If you accept the figures from the Climatic Research Unit, home of Climategate, annual surface temperature in the Fertile Crescent rose by about 0.5 C˚ since 1930, again about half before 1980, leaving about 0.25 C˚ since then, but that’s not sufficient to explain the drought.

So, with so little change in precipitation and temperature, why the major increase in drought, and, more important, what caused the conflict over water?

Part of the answer is embedded in Holthaus’s own words: “After decades of poor water policy.” Got that? Poor water policy.

But there’s a second, more important culprit, and neither Holthaus nor Admiral Titley mentions it, though it’s obvious in the bottom portion of Kelley et. al’s graph.

Syria’s population multiplied 11 times since 1930, from about 2 million to about 23 million. At the same time, its industrial and agricultural water use multiplied even more. Eleven times as many people coupled with burgeoning industry and agriculture mean you’re going to use a lot more water—and hence face water shortages, especially with “poor water policy.”

But assume for a moment that higher temperature and lower rainfall, not population growth, actually drove the drought. That doesn’t explain what caused either one, and the U.N. Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change concluded in its 2012 report on extreme weather that it was impossible to demonstrate a connection between global warming, manmade or natural, and increasing frequency or severity of extreme weather events, including droughts.

Even assuming that global warming contributed somewhat to the rise in annual surface temperature and the fall in winter rainfall, that doesn’t mean human activity drove the global warming. The computer models on which the IPCC depends simulate warming from rising atmospheric CO2 at double (and more) the observed rate, and none simulated the complete absence of observed warming over the last 18+ years, so they’re wrong and provide no rational basis for any belief about the magnitude to human contribution to global warming.

At most, human activity has contributed only a fraction of the global warming observed over the last 30, 50, 100, or 150 years, which means it can have contributed only a fraction of the half-degree increase in annual average surface temperature in the Fertile Crescent and only a fraction of the slight decline in rainfall, and hence only a fraction of a fraction of the increased drought and a fraction of a fraction of a fraction of the conflict over water.

Rising population coupled with “poor water policy” is a far greater cause of conflict for access to water in Syria.

And as causes of Syria’s civil war, those pale into insignificance compared with religio-political conflicts. Elephant in the living room, anyone?

E. Calvin Beisner, Ph.D., is Founder and National Spokesman of the Cornwall Alliance for the Stewardship of Creation.

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Jimbo
March 8, 2015 12:29 pm

Could it just be the weather?

Abstract
….From the meteorological perspective, winter and transition months were dominated by high pressures that inhibited synoptic activity entering from the eastern Mediterranean and favoured relative north-easterly winds and drier air masses with low convective instability…..
http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0168192310001334

Jimbo
March 8, 2015 12:55 pm

Did Manmade Climate Change Cause Syria’s Civil War and the Rise of ISIS?”
Did Manmade Climate Change Cause Nigeria’s Northern Conflict and the Rise of Boko Haram?”
Did Manmade Climate Change Cause XXXXXX Civil War and the Rise of [Insert any civil war fighters]?”
Once again we are being deluged by speculative drivel. Enough of this already.

March 8, 2015 1:00 pm

Thanks, E. Calvin Beisner.
Good article.

Bezotch
March 8, 2015 1:07 pm

I’m always entertained by those who proclaim that a drought causes hunger and famine. This isn’t the 1600’s, we have something called international trade. Think about it. The U.S. had a couple of years of drought, how much hunger, famine, rioting and radicalization did that cause? None!
The reason that there is hunger in the world is not because there is not enough food, it’s because there are people that do not have enough money to buy food. If they do not grow it themselves, they do no not have enough money to buy enough food from elsewhere. This is why rich nations do not have famines, only poor ones do.
Many poor countries in general, and Middle Eastern countries in particular already were dependent on imports for a large percentage of their food. While a local drought may have caused a slight increase in prices, and required them to import a much larger percentage of their food, it is disingenuous to ignore the biggest factors that caused them to not have enough money to buy sufficient food from elsewhere.
1. Biofuels. Converting billions of tons of food into fuel dramatically increased the price of food, reducing the amount of food that can be sourced from elsewhere should they fail to produce a normal crop.
2. Energy poverty. An inexpensive and stable source of energy is required to lift the whole economy, and its population ,out of poverty. The 1st World’s prosperity came from, not in spite of, fossil fuels. Prosperous 1st World economies can survive (sort of, for the moment) the economic insanity of replacing a portion of their inexpensive and reliable energy needs with expensive, inefficient and unreliable “renewable” energy, 3rd World nations can not. 21st century living standards can not be maintained with 18th century energy sources. People who maintain that the 3rd World can somehow follow the footsteps of the 1st World into prosperity, while at the same time disrupting and dismantling the very mechanisms that made it possible, prove that their ignorance of history is equal to their ignorance of economics.
How willfully blind does one have to be? Do they acknowledge the role that the very policies that the CAGW movement advocates played? Curtailing worldwide food and energy supplies, thereby magnifying the effect of a local disruption, was a major reason that the economic and political fallout of the drought was so severe. Instead, they fudge some numbers, run it through a computer to show a butterfly effect, claim it’s consistent with climate science and then state that the fallout was due to the increased intensity of the drought, caused by CO2. They completely ignore the demonstrably large role that CAGW policies definitely played, to focus on a small theoretical role that CO2 plausibly (i.e. not provably false) might have played.

RH
March 8, 2015 1:17 pm

Humans suffer starvation, disease, and war in far greater numbers during cold periods. Culture, art, technology, individual wealth and freedom advance during warm periods, as less time and money is required to simply stay alive, and there is less need to fight over resources. When the next cold period hits, and it could happen soon, we will have these same CAGW nut-jobs talking about CAGC.

ralfellis
March 8, 2015 1:45 pm

>>And as causes of Syria’s civil war, those pale into insignificance
>>compared with religio-political conflicts.
Indeed.
a. How can they have a discussion about water shortages in Syria, without mentioning the Attaturk Dam in Anatolia? The dam was opened in 1992, but when I was there in 2012, they were still completeing the G.A.P. water channels for further irrigation. The GAP tunnels and channels take 1/3 of the flow of the Euphrates.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Atat%C3%BCrk_Dam
b. How can they have a discussion about population increases in Syria, without mentioning the Armenian Genocide? Some 3 million Armenian Christians were forcible exiled from Anatolia, by the recent occupiers of that land, and while most of these Armenians perished several hundred thousand arrived in Aleppo.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Armenian_Genocide
But there is an even bigger elephant in this particular room…
Ralph

michael hart
Reply to  ralfellis
March 8, 2015 2:11 pm

There are quite a few reports that Turkey stopped pumping Euphrates water into Syria last year. If true, I’m surprised we haven’t heard more about this. The full paper is paywalled but, as you say, a report about drought in Syria cannot be taken seriously without discussing the Euphrates.

ralfellis
Reply to  michael hart
March 8, 2015 3:04 pm

Yes, there are many reports of Turkey starving Syria of water. This is in addition to the 1/3 of the Euphrates that Turkey was already syphoning off to irrigate the Harran plain and grow cotton.
http://english.al-akhbar.com/node/19970
Turkey now double-crops on the Harran plain, which is fine for Turkey but leaves Syria with no water. Look on Google and you will see a big green rectangle from Edessa (Sanlurfa) all the way past Harran (the city of Abraham, apparently) to the Syrian border. There is also a new GAP aqueduct and tunnel all through the hills to the east of the Harran plain, to irrigate lands up to the Iraqi border.
https://www.google.com/maps/place/Harran+al+%27+Awamid,+Syria/@36.9366475,39.3265609,107897m/data=!3m1!1e3!4m2!3m1!1s0x1518f91a400274eb:0xae4bcdc1e83bf18e
Again, you have to understand the politics of the region.
Assad’s Alawite sect are not only Christio-heretics, they nominally follow Shia and are supported by Iran. ‘King’ Erdogan of Turkey is a fundamentalist Sunni who wants to reestablish the Ottoman Empire across the Near and Middle East.** To that end Erdogan has been pumping $billions from the liberal west of Turkey into the fundamentalist east of Turkey. These huge infrastructure projects and vast population increases include the continued syphoning of water from the Euphrates.
Demographics – In 1870 Amida (Diyarbakir) had a population of 21,000 (9,814 Muslims, 11,278 Christians and 280 Jews). The same city now has 906,000 people (and only 40 Syriac Christians remain). These vast population increases continue to test the ability of this arid region to supply enough water for these ever-increasing populations. This, plus the increased irrigation for agriculture, means that any 7% reduction in rainfall is totally irrelevant, in comparison to the demographic, religious, political and strategic changes and challenges in this region.
Ralph
.
** King Erdogan said: “Democracy is like a train – you can jump on it and jump off it, whenever you want.” This is the guy that the naive fools in the E.U. parliament wanted to invite into Europe.
King Erdogan’s new ‘royal palace’ in Istanbul.
http://static.ordineazilei.ro/public/articles/4d3a73a66a055e14df775abc63a8cfa0.jpeg

Jimbo
Reply to  michael hart
March 9, 2015 1:19 am

Here is the full paper. Turkey is mentioned – but with a quick scan I cannot see mention of the water restriction – maybe it’s there.
http://www.pnas.org/content/early/2015/02/23/1421533112.full.pdf
In May 2014 it was reported that Turkey had suspended pumping Euphrates’ water into lake Assad.
http://english.al-akhbar.com/node/19970
In June 2014 the Guardian reported it also.
http://www.theguardian.com/environment/2014/jul/02/water-key-conflict-iraq-syria-isis

Farmer Gez
March 8, 2015 1:47 pm

Does drought cause war?
Do brutal regimes advance science?
The Medici and Borgia families were generally vile but supported art and science.
Nazi scientists were world leading.
We are a perverse species.

ralfellis
March 8, 2015 2:24 pm

As the last paragraph in this article says, the biggest elephant in this particular room is the millennia-long persecution of all the minorities in this region – including the Alawite tribe of Bashar Assad. Here is a synopsis of my letter to the UK Foreign Secretary, regarding the rise of ISIS.
.
Re: ISIS and Assad – the truth
Dear Mr Hammond,
Firstly, William Hague and the BBC created ISIS in Iraq:
(As I predicted back in 2011.)
ISIS only came into being because of the ignorance and bungling of both William Hague and the BBC.
I warned Hague of the perils of opposing Assad and supporting the terrorists, way back in 2011. But the Wee Idiot refused to listen to reason, and preferred to heed the fantasist propaganda of the BBC. But had we supported Bashar Assad, back in 2011, the Sunni fundamentalists of Syria could never have formed Sunni ISIS. It is called the lesser of two evils – a concept that the BBC finds incomprehensible.
The predictable result of the BBC’s propaganda, is that nobody in Parliament or the media could or would recognise the obvious truth – that the uprising against Assad was a religious conflict that can trace its roots back to the barbaric 7th century invasion of the Christian and Jewish lands of the Near East. Just like ISIS, Muhummad’s military campaign was based upon barbarity, violence and abject fear – which was designed to intimidate, cow and subdue the peaceful communities of the East into Dhimmitude (Serfs of Islam).
In Saudi Arabia, this military campaign resulted in Muhummad personally overseeing the beheading the 800 Jewish men of the Banu_Qurayza tribe. In Syria, this invasion resulted in the Dead Cities of Aleppo – some 800 towns and cities that were similarly denuded of their populations by Muhummad’s army. (See image below)
http://wikiislam.net/wiki/The_Genocide_of_Banu_Qurayza
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dead_Cities
Had the UK Foreign Office (F.O.) understood these truths, we would not be in the mess we are today. And it is just as well that we ‘commoners’ raised sufficient opposition to this parliamentary stupidity, to prevent the government voting to arm the Syrian terrorists (ie: ISIS).
.
Secondly, why we should have supported Assad and the Alawites:
(As I recommended back in 2011.)
Contrary to what the BBC have broadcast, the Alawite of Syria have been a grievously persecuted minority who lived in the gutters of Syrian society for more than 1,200 years – just as the Yazadi and Syriac Christians have similarly been persecuted minorities for the same number of centuries. This is why I correctly predicted, back in 2011, that Bashar Assad would NEVER give up power in Syria. As a persecuted minority in Muslim lands, he had no other option. (The Alawites gained control of the Syrian army in the 1920s, courtesy of the French, and have wisely never relinquished that control.)
Note that the Armenian and Syriac Christians have backed Assad all this time. Why? Because they know they are in the same boat as the Alawites. Assad’s Alawites are half Christian – they celebrate Easter and Christmas and they refuse to go to mosque. This is why the Alawites have been persecuted for 1,200 years. But why did the BBC not tell you that?
Why did the BBC brand Assad as the devil incarnate, and start a civil war in Syria, when the Alawites are actually the persecuted semi-Christian minority who are in grave danger of being the victims of yet another Muslim genocide? And let’s be clear about this – if we had supported the Syrian rebels, they would have taken control of all of Assad’s weaponry, plus 2,000 tonnes of sarin gas. And then they would have morphed into ISIS, whether you or the BBC liked it or not. Then they would have used this military power to exterminate 4 million Alawites, exterminate 4 million Syriac Christians, and exterminate another million Iraqi Christians and Yazidi. In addition, the sarin gas would have appeared on the London and New York metros inside a couple of months. Is this what the BBC was really hoping would happen?
Assad’s persecuted Alawites and the persecuted Syriac Christians and Yazidi are all in the same boat. The only difference is that Assad has the power to protect his people from Muslim aggression, while all the Yazidi and Iraqi Christians can do is flee to a mountain-top. Thus if Parliament supports the plight of the Yazidi and Christians of Iraq, then they must by the same logic support Assad in Syria.
etc: etc: etc: (several pages)
Sincerely,
Ralph (Atheist)
Serjilla, one of the 800 Dead Christian Cities of Aleppo, vanquished and abandoned for 1,300 years.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dead_Cities#mediaviewer/File:Serjilla_01.jpg

Newsel
Reply to  ralfellis
March 8, 2015 6:56 pm

Maybe a little of topic but in the context of your post, ditto Libya….and the irony is that the west used the R2P UN doctrine as the excuse to protect a few hundred “Arab Spring” rebels trying to dispose Gadhafi. How many more thousands have been killed and will be killed because of Rice, Clinton, Powers, Cameron et al. And lets not forget the 21 Copts just beheaded on the Libyan beach. RIP

Climate Heretic
March 8, 2015 2:54 pm

Did man made global warming cause the Syrian civil war and the rise of ISIS? Absolutely not. Read the following articles and make up your own mind as to what is actually going on in the middle east.
1) http://www.counterpunch.org/2014/10/10/the-u-s-versus-isis/
2) http://www.counterpunch.org/2015/01/30/syria-yes-we-are-responsible/
Use the search words “united states, the cause of isis counterpunch” or similar to find more articles in this particular area. It would be interesting to see if there are other web sites that analyse and discuss what is accutally going on in the middle east.
Regards
Climate Heretic

Robert B
March 8, 2015 3:32 pm

The elephant in the room is the vilification of President Assad and the outside forces pushing another Arab spring.

Barbee
March 8, 2015 3:50 pm

Exacerbate?, maybe.
Contribute?, maybe.
….
CAUSE? Do you seriously believe that?

David Barber
March 8, 2015 5:29 pm

Anthropogenic (Central Bank), plus carbon tax induced global economic slowdown, plus a hot summer day could induce social unrest.

clipe
March 8, 2015 6:28 pm

Syria: Fighting the Fungi That Threaten Wheat

The prevailing theory is that wetter winters caused by climate change are helping the fungi persist until new crops are planted.

H/T
http://www.nytimes.com/2011/04/19/health/19global.html?_r=1

hunter
March 8, 2015 6:35 pm

If anything it was climate catastrophists who came up with the crazy idea of converting food to fuel who destabilized the world food markets.
The real costs of the cliamte social madness is higher than people generally realize.

Greg Cavanagh
March 8, 2015 7:09 pm

Syria has strong sanctions against imports and exports, imposed after the Iraq war and the rise of the Iranian and Syrian threats of war. It is no wonder at all that they are hurting, that’s exactly what the sanctions are supposed to do, hurt the people to force either a populace uprising, or capitulation of the governments.
It’s all politics (again).

March 8, 2015 7:20 pm

Climate change did NOT cause Syria’s civil war. The US had plans back in the days of Bush after 911 to go after Syria and some other countries in that area:
So I came back to see him a few weeks later, and by that time we were bombing in Afghanistan. I said, “Are we still going to war with Iraq?” And he said, “Oh, it’s worse than that.” He reached over on his desk. He picked up a piece of paper. And he said, “I just got this down from upstairs” — meaning the Secretary of Defense’s office — “today.” And he said, “This is a memo that describes how we’re going to take out seven countries in five years, starting with Iraq, and then Syria, Lebanon, Libya, Somalia, Sudan and, finishing off, Iran.” I said, “Is it classified?” He said, “Yes, sir.” I said, “Well, don’t show it to me.” And I saw him a year or so ago, and I said, “You remember that?” He said, “Sir, I didn’t show you that memo! I didn’t show it to you!”
– Gen. Wesley Clark, 2007 on democracy now.
http://www.democracynow.org/2007/3/2/gen_wesley_clark_weighs_presidential_bid
(Make sure you hit the show full transcript button to see the quote for yourselves).
And trust me, I can show links that strongly suggest we are working with Socialistinternational.org in nation rebuilding over there. And that Bush was probably in on it.
What these socialist voyeuristic paranoid control freak bastards are doing is using their planned Syrian nation rebuilding scheme to leverage a little extra push for climate change action. And Soros and a number of prominent US people as well as 6 members of socialist international (at least there were when I checked a few years ago) are monitoring these events at the crisisgroup.org:
http://www.crisisgroup.org/en/about/board.aspx
What does socialistinternational.org want: Nothing less than world government:
“The ultimate objective of the parties of the Socialist International is nothing less than world government. ”
http://www.socialistinternational.org/viewArticle.cfm?ArticleID=2133
In a nutshell, if these leftwing bastards are successful, our future is going to be a global socialist control freak hell where we are under constant surveillance and living our lives based on plant and tree food.
Little by little, they are moving us there in that direction. The latest things are the AR15 bullet ban and the possible move by Google to rank hits based on what the left-wingers deem truthful vs popularity.

ralfellis
Reply to  kramer
March 9, 2015 4:43 am

Kramer
This is a memo that describes how we’re going to take out seven countries in five years, starting with Iraq, and then Syria, Lebanon, Libya, Somalia, Sudan and, finishing off, Iran
_______________________________________
Yes, but that was historical naivety and liberal stupidity, rather than bad intention. Donald Rumsfeld summed it up when he said that America would make Iraq a shining example of democracy in the Middle East, which would bring all the Middle east into the democratic fold. Yes, they really thought they could do to IsIam, what they had done to N@zi Germany and Japan after WWII. They thought they could change Islam into a 21st century democratic semi-secular creed, that did not get involved in politics. Just how naive can you get?
However, the result of American intervention was obvious to anyone with an eye to history. IsIam is a destabilising force, as Kermal Attaturk said when he came to power in Turkey, which is why he tried to wrap Turkey in a secular blanket. (A covering that King Erdogan is now stripping away, year by year.) So any intervention in IsIamia that took away the strong semi-secular leader (Saddam, Mubarak, Gadaffi, Assad etc:) will always result in a rise in IsIamic fundamentalism and civil war. It always has, and always will, because the clerics have too much power and influence, and the book they use as a guide is perhaps the most bloodthirsty, divisive and hate-filled book ever written. And if you do not believe that statement, then read it for yourself. Don’t shout: “oh, no it is not,” if you are merely relying on CNN or the BBC for your knowledge-base. Read it for yourself – chapter 9 is a good one.
Thus the result of these interventions has always been predictable, and so I have been able to write about these unfolding events years before they actually happen. It is a shame that nobody in modern politics or the media reads any history nowadays. Winston Churchill understood the problem, as he makes clear in his assessment of this creed in his book ‘River War’. If you want good non-PC assessment, then read that quote, it is on the net (I cannot repeat it here). Ah, yes, the days when you could tell the truth, and not have to disguise and guard every word you utter from the Thought Police.
Ralph

Reply to  ralfellis
March 9, 2015 5:04 pm

“Yes, but that was historical naivety and liberal stupidity, rather than bad intention.”
But the fact remains, our government had plans years ago to nation rebuild in those countries and Syria was one of them. The fact that they are trying to get people to think that it might be from climate change is pure fraud IMO.

March 8, 2015 8:23 pm

Complete absence of of observed warming over the last 18+ years? According to what – one of the two major datasets of satellite measurements of lower troposphere temperature anomaly, and not any current or recently obsoleted dataset of global surface temperature anomaly?

Robert B
Reply to  Donald L. Klipstein
March 8, 2015 10:37 pm

Yes. Your point?
Even though they are different
http://www.woodfortrees.org/graph/gistemp/from:1974/compress:60/offset:-0.1/plot/hadcrut4gl/from:1974/compress:60/offset/plot/rss/from:1974/compress:60/offset:0.15/plot/none
if you take the difference between the adjacent five year means for the GISS LOTI, the trend is going down and not up to anywhere near the 0.3°C /decade that was predicted.
http://s5.postimg.org/ll7mlyd47/diff_5_year_means.jpg
Its trending down and is at below 0.1°C/decade now so even this blatantly fudged index doesn’t provides evidence for >1deg;C rise in temperatures by the end of the century.
I suspect that there might be more different ways to explain the pause to real deniers than there are excuses for it, now.

March 8, 2015 9:45 pm

Easiest way to get published these days is to claim something negative based on “Climate Change.”
Rear Adm. David Titley, now Prof Titely at UPenn is NO exception. When it comes to keeping the paycheck coming… many men and women will compromise their integrity. Sadly.

roaldjlarsen
March 8, 2015 10:27 pm

The temperature has dropped between 0,2 – 0,7 C since 1934, ref. Professor Don Easterbrook. If there’s no warming, how can man contribute to some of the warming we haven’t had?
The “Arabic Spring” was caused by the anthropogenic global warming swindle (AGW-swindle), because diverting farmers from producing food on vast areas in Europe, America and South America, to producing biofuels caused the food prices to rise sharply from 2007, which was the cause for the popular uprise. To spin it around and make it sound like man made global warming is the reason, is less than honest, nor supported by historic, known facts!
http://www.forbes.com/sites/jamesconca/2014/04/20/its-final-corn-ethanol-is-of-no-use/

David Cage
March 8, 2015 11:21 pm

The theory of man made climate change did cause the rise of ISIS.The UN was set up to resolve political crises and prevent the rise of destructive territory grabbing corrupt regimes. It has turned a blind eye to the rise of ISIS and chosen to spend our money on climate change instead and ignore the very real and proven problem of our time.

bushbunny
March 12, 2015 10:12 pm

Well I lived in Cyprus and there was no rain between April and September as is many regions around the East end of the Mediterranean. I went to the Lebanon, and it was rich in fields of crops, and a definite French influence until the trouble brewed. But it snows there too. I was reading a book called ‘What is Islam’ And from about 600AD until the present time, the Muslims have been fighting one another. The one’s fighting now want Sharia law implemented, stoning, you name it and oppression of women. Well you know some Christian sects still believe the world was created 6,000 years ago, and humans walked with dinosaurs. I suppose in most major religions you get your fundamentalists, at least most don’t kill each other any more. Sounds terribly Medieval and uneducated. Thank God that most democratic countries separate the State from religion, but Theocracies unfortunately ain’t run that way. “A plague on both their houses…” They feel they have nothing to lose, but when you do of course, makes a difference to how a country is run.