My one-on-one meeting with Bill McKibben

UPDATED 6/8/15 (comment added by Bill McKibben, see end of article) About a month ago I got an e-mail from Bill McKibben telling me that he would be in my town to do a presentation on June 5th. He wanted to know if he could meet with me and just sit down over a beer and talk about things. I jumped at the chance. This photo below was taken yesterday, June 5th, at the Sierra Nevada Taproom in Chico, CA just before 6PM PDT after I had a two hour conversation with Bill McKibben, founder of 350.org.

mckibben-watts-06-05-2014
Bill McKibben at left, Anthony Watts, at right

One of the most interesting things about Bill McKibben is that he has always been civil and courteous to me unlike some others that are on the other side of the climate debate aisle. So, I didn’t think twice about meeting him because I knew that despite our differences we would likely have a very interesting and productive conversation.

My prediction came true. We had conversations that spanned everything from stories about our families and how we grew up to the current debates over climate and energy. We also spoke of the personal challenges that each of us face due to who we are and how we are perceived by others.

I didn’t make any recordings and I didn’t make any notes, I also did not tell anyone I had a time of this meeting and I don’t think Bill did either. I really didn’t want to because the last thing I wanted was to have someone come along and disrupt it. As I mentioned to Bill that some of the local environmentalists have what I would describe as a “severe hatred” of my position on climate change and because I have the to temerity to dare write about it. In fact, he was going to be addressing a number of environmentally oriented people right after our meeting at an event cosponsored by our local alternate radio station and the Butte Environmental Council. I suggested to Bill that perhaps he should mention that we had a pleasant and productive meeting to see if a “groan” might erupt from the audience. He said he would but I have not heard back from him yet as to whether or not my prediction came true.

Bill and I both had a couple of beers and we shared a dessert all the while chatting away as if we’d known each other for years. Essentially we have, but we just never met in person before.

Below are a few highlights that I remember from our conversation.

What we agreed upon:

We both agreed that tackling real pollution issues was a good thing. When I say real pollution issues, I mean things like water pollution, air pollution, Ocean plastics pollution, and other real tangible and solvable problems.

We both agreed that as technology advances, energy production is likely to become cleaner and more efficient.

We both agreed that coal use especially in China and India where there are not significant environmental controls is creating harm for the environment and the people who live there.

We both agreed that climate sensitivity, the response to a doubling of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere, hasn’t been nailed down yet. Bill thinks it’s on the high side while I think it’s on the low side neither of us thought the number had been correctly defined yet.

We both talked about how nuclear power especially Thorium-based nuclear power could be a solution for future power needs that would provide a stable base electrical grid while at the same time having far fewer problems than the current fission products based on uranium and plutonium.

We both agreed that the solar power systems we have put on our respective homes have been good things for each of us.

We both agreed that there are “crazy people” on both sides of the debate and that each of us have suffered personally at the hands of some of the actions of these people (you know who you are). We both spoke of some of the hatred and threats that we have endured over the years, some of which required police intervention.

We both agreed that if we could talk to our opponents more there would probably be less rhetoric, less noise, and less tribalism that fosters hatred of the opposing side.

We both agreed that we enjoy the musings of Willis Eschenbach on WUWT, and we spoke about his most recent essay describing the self-regulating mechanism that may exist due to albedo changes in the inter-tropical convergence zone (ITCZ).

We both agreed that it would be a great thing if climate skeptics were right, and carbon dioxide increases in the atmosphere wasn’t quite as big a problem as we have been led to believe.

What we disagreed upon:

Climate sensitivity was the first issue that we disagreed about. While we both thought the number has not been nailed down yet, Bill thought the number was high, while I thought the number was lower such as the kind of numbers we were getting from the recent climate sensitivity analysis of Judith Curry and Nicolas Lewis. I spent a fair amount of time explaining to Bill how I believe, as do many others, that the effect of carbon dioxide in our atmosphere is now approaching saturation point, such that a doubling of CO2 from this point forward might not be as catastrophic rise problematic as we have been told.

Bill seems to think that carbon dioxide influences along with other man-made influences have perturbed our atmosphere, which he considers “finally finely tuned”, enough to create some of the severe weather events that we have witnessed recently. He specifically spoke of the recent flooding in Texas calling it an “unnatural outlier”, and attributed it to man-made influences on our atmospheric processes. I pointed out that we only have about 100 years or so of good weather records and that we don’t really know for sure what the true outlier bounds are for such kinds of events. For example I told him of the great 1861 flood in California, followed by an exceptional drought within a few years. At the time, both events seemed like fantastic outliers. I also spoke of studies that have been attributing more extreme rainfall to the effects of cities.

And there just doesn’t seem to be any significant trend as this graph shows:

Global Precipitation, from CRU TS3 1° grid. DATA SOURCE

[Willis Eschenbach writes] As in all of the records above, there is nothing at all anomalous in the recent rainfall record. The average varies by about ± 2%. There is no trend in the data.

As does this one:

https://wattsupwiththat.files.wordpress.com/2014/09/us-rainfall-events-trend.jpg

Bill also seem to think that many other weather events could be attributable to the changes that humans have made on our planet. He was quite sincere about this belief and cited many examples of events he witnessed or saw the aftermath of. I could tell that his perspective was one of empathy as were many of his concerns. But I came away with the impression that Bill feels such things more than he understands them in a physical sense. This was not unexpected because Bill is a writer by nature, and his tools of the trade are to convey human experience into words. I can’t really fault him for feeling these things and expanding on them but I did note he seemed quite resistive to factual rebuttals because they didn’t assuage the feelings he harbored.

For example I tried to explain how the increase in reporting through cell phones, video cameras, 24-hour cable news, and the Internet have made severe weather events seem much more frequent and menacing than they used to be.

Bill and I disagreed about the usefulness of computer models and I pointed out how models have been diverging from the measurements. Bill seemed concerned that we have to act on the advice of the models and the people who run them because the risk of not doing so could be a fateful decision. I pointed out that mankind has been quite adaptable and resilient, and thrived on warmer periods of Earth’s history than cooler ones, while he seemed to think that we are more fragile especially when it relates to crop production then one might think.

A few other points that we discussed:

Bill and I talked about how government can sometimes over-regulate things to the point of killing them, such as some of the problems I had with the California Air Resources Board and my attempt to start an electric car company in 2008. He was surprised to learn that electric cars in California have to be emissions tested just like gasoline powered cars, instead of simply looking into under the hood and noting the electric motor and checking a box on a form. He laughed all the way through my tales of woe trying to deal with that insane bureaucracy, and was quite sympathetic.

I told Bill that up until recently I had trusted (but considered misguided) the climate scientists at NOAA/NCDC, but with the recent publication of the Karl 2015 paper and some of the data manipulation shenanigans that I witnessed, I no longer have that trust. Bill responded with he doesn’t know those people but he believed that Dr. James Hansen had integrity. I asked Bill that if the people at NOAA/NCDC had the same integrity he believed Jim Hansen has, why would they have to adjust data that had been previously considered okay, and why would they not publish data from the most state-of-the-art Climate Reference Network in our monthly and yearly US. State of the Climate reports, but instead rely on the old and problematic surface temperature network that is full adjustments, assumptions, and biases – none of which exist in the Climate Reference Network? He didn’t have an answer.

Bill and I both lamented how some people perceived us on opposite sides of the aisle. He was annoyed that some people see him as an “idiot”, while I spoke of my annoyance of being called a “denier” when I don’t deny that the climate has warmed; I just don’t think it’s as big a problem as some others do. I can tell you this: I don’t think Bill McKibben is an idiot. But I do think he perceives things more on a feeling or emotional level and translates that into words and actions. People that are more factual and pragmatic might see that as an unrealistic response.

Bill was amazed at my ability to keep WUWT going all these years without having any budget, sponsor or funding. I explained to him, as I have many times to readers that doing this is little more than an extension of all my years in broadcasting. In broadcasting we never allow for “dead air”; we always have to keep fresh content going and thanks to the help of many people who contribute their time for moderation, in the form of guest articles, and in the form of comments I am able to keep this enterprise fresh and relevant. Bill says he reads every day and I took that as a compliment.

In closing:

I offered Bill the ability to inspect what I was going to write about our meeting before I published it. He declined saying it’s okay, that he’ll just comment on whatever I write.

All in all it was a good meeting and while we might fervently disagree on some (but not all) issues, I can say that Bill McKibben was a pleasant individual to talk to and that I could count him among one of the more friendly people in the climate debate.


 

UPDATE: 6/8/15

In comments Bill says that he really isn’t for nuclear power of any kind. I got the impression that he was against conventional fission reactors, due to the problems and costs, but because he voiced no strong opinions to me about Thorium power,( that Jim Hansen also agrees with me on) I got the impression he was open to such new technology. Apparently, he isn’t. His comment is reproduced below:

Just a couple of points

1) It doesn’t actually bother me when people call me an idiot–I’m used to it, and it’s always possible it’s true

2) I don’t think thorium or cold fusion or anything like it is the future of power; I’d wager all things nuclear are mostly relics of the past, in no small part because they cost like sin. But the point I was trying to make is that the new fact in the world is the remarkably rapid fall in the price of renewable energy. That solar panels cost so much less than they did just a few years ago strikes me as a destabilizing factor for anyone’s world view

3) Sierra Nevada beer is even better fresh out of the tap at the brewery than it is in a bottle

I had a fine evening at the Masonic Hall in Chico following with a large crowd of local environmentalists, celebrating the week’s many big divestment victories. For the record, I mentioned my drink with Anthony and no one hissed or groaned. A few did chuckle.

 

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David Wells
June 7, 2015 4:19 am

McKibben clearly demonstrates a known fact (which he dislikes) you cannot argue with a belief, it doesn’t need acres of acrimony to establish that simple reality, McKibben will never cross that line so why bother?
You either believe or you do not believe but since when has science in finality been about belief? You might believe something is true but if you have an integrity or self respect then you do the research before you shout your mouth off about your beliefs otherwise you arrive when the greens are now having shouted from the roof for 30 years it is now almost impossible for them to row back and acknowledge their naïve simplistic relationship with reality. As if just 0.039% of anything would cause runaway climate change even if doubled you still wouldn’t know it existed unless you were determined to find it and then it becomes just something else to get obsessive about, bizarre.

Dodgy Geezer
June 7, 2015 4:29 am

If there is, and continues to be, a dialogue and discussion between representatives of both sides of an argument, the next stage, following scientific method, is for both sides to agree on a proposed experiment/data gathering exercise/other activity which would help to define the differences between their positions, and prove or disprove one or the other (or both!)
This is the major aspect of scientific knowledge gathering which has been lost in the current fighting. People write papers to bolster the arguments of one side, and others produce ‘rebuttals’ to those papers. NO ONE seems to be saying:
“OK. You think THIS is the case, and I think that THAT is. Why don’t we do this test to see who is right?”

Reply to  Dodgy Geezer
June 7, 2015 6:34 am

Good idea. All we need is a way to test whether CO2 from burning fossil fuels causes any measurable change in the Earth’s climate (assuming there is such a thing). So far, I haven’t heard of one. If no one can contrive such a test, we must conclude that it’s not a scientific question at all—more like, “How many angels can dance on the head of a pin?” Which of course fits right in with the messianic fervor of the ‘climate activists’ like Mr. McKibben. Pretending it’s a question of science keeps the skeptics (or heretics) busy and out of the press while you pursue insane ideas like destroying the economies of the civilized world.
/Mr Lynn

Bruce Cobb
June 7, 2015 5:09 am

This is sad. In an ordinary world, before the whole manmade climate nonsense became “the science”, most of us would find it rather easy to be friends with someone like McKibben, even though he seems to confuse emotions with actual thought. The faux climate issue has undoubtedly divided people, even amongst family and friends. It has been said many times, but bears repeating that this is about rational thought versus emotional Belief based on a monstrous lie. Nothing can bridge that gap. The only hope is to defeat the lie.

Stu
June 7, 2015 5:38 am

Sounds like you guys had a great chat. Thanks to Bill for organising and Anthony for accepting.

pfwells
June 7, 2015 5:52 am

I have taken several coursed from TheGreatCourses.com, including “The Physics of History.” While the course was most informative, I was very annoyed because the professor proceeded to all-too-obviously contradict the science he was presenting in lectures eleven and twelve by fear-mongering about global warming. I wrote to them about it, and received the reply that their “research department” would look into it.
The course very clearly documented the natural variability of our climate and the ways in which that variability had been determined. Credit to the professor for clearly stating that our earth is stormier during the cold periods than it is during the warm periods. For those of us who recall the 1970’s fear mongering about the next ice age coming, it would be instructive to read the article on our weather in the December 1977 edition of National Geographic. That description could apply almost verbatim to the weather we have had over the past year. Of course global cooling was given as a possible explanation.
By the way, my observation (not being in any way a meteorologist) is that the course offered on meteorology is excellent. (Professor Robert G. Fovell, UCal L.A.) However, it makes me happy that I never had any desire to become a meteorologist!

June 7, 2015 5:53 am

We may not agree but we can always share a beer!

Don B
June 7, 2015 6:31 am

Thanks for the article, and the meeting with McKibben – very nice.

Dodgy Geezer
June 7, 2015 6:53 am

@L. E. Joiner

Good idea. All we need is a way to test whether CO2 from burning fossil fuels causes any measurable change in the Earth’s climate (assuming there is such a thing). So far, I haven’t heard of one…

There could be many possible tests, considering various aspects of the AGW theory. Looking for the tropospheric hot-spot could be one such.
Invariably, the way science progresses is by looking at tests of theories, considering possible predictions and then looking to see if they are there. The classic was the Eddington 1919 solar eclipse test of the sun bending light which verified Einstein’s theory. Why don’t we see ANY of these?
Climate Change theory proposed a hypothesis, then jumped straight to assuming that it was true, without any confirmatory evidence. Surely Bill McKibben would be happy to work with developing such a series of tests…?

Reply to  Dodgy Geezer
June 7, 2015 7:21 am

I suspect Bill McKibben would not object to such tests, because they would be irrelevant to his movement. It’s not really about the science, as far as he’s concerned. See my response to PiperPaul below. /Mr L

SteveT
Reply to  Dodgy Geezer
June 9, 2015 3:54 am

Dodgy Geezer
June 7, 2015 at 6:53 am
@L. E. Joiner
Invariably, the way science progresses is by looking at tests of theories, considering possible predictions and then looking to see if they are there. The classic was the Eddington 1919 solar eclipse test of the sun bending light which verified Einstein’s theory. Why don’t we see ANY of these?
******************************************************************************************************************
I think I’m with you on what you’re saying but to follow the science you have to be careful with the words.
Eddington’s observations did not verify Einsteins theory – it provided further supporting evidence strengthening the theory. It could still be wrong. You have to keep an open mind.
Steve T

June 7, 2015 7:17 am

Charlie June 6, 2015 at 6:25 pm
The debate needs more of these meetings with the non crazies on both sided. Then eventually on the mainstream media. This is honest. This is not a show.

PiperPaul June 6, 2015 at 7:43 pm
But it is a show, for the True Believers.
“The followers of a mass movement see themselves on the march with drums beating and colors flying. They are participators in a soul-stirring drama played to a vast audience–generations gone and generations yet to come. They are made to feel they are not their real selves but actors playing a role, and their doing a ‘performance’, rather than as the real thing.”
The True Believer
Eric Hoffer
1951

Last year I heard from an old friend who has always been an inveterate supporter of ’causes’. Her signature read:

My activism at this point is centered on divestment of institutions from fossil fuels, and on stopping the pipelines (Keystone XL and the Northeast Pipeline), because solving the climate crisis is literally the sine qua non. I’m working with 350MA.org. — And notice: so far, over 95,000 people have signed Credo’s pledge of civil disobedience alone (there are other pledges) in connection with the pipeline.. Finally, finally, this movement is taking off. Better late than never!
I urge all to attend the NYC climate march on Sept. 21. . .

Bill McKibben is a Pied Piper leading thousands of True Believers on an emotional and vaguely ideological quest—Lenin called them ‘Useful Idiots’. If this were an isolated movement it might be laughable, but at this point it has reached the highest levels of government, academic, and the media, and poses a serious threat to the viability of our civilization—which relies for the health and well-being of its citizens on cheap and plentiful energy.
We have to assume that Mr. McKibben is fully aware of the danger he and his followers pose, and perhaps he revels in it, or in the celebrity leading a movement brings. I suspect he can have a pleasant meeting with a prominent ‘climate skeptic’ because he operates on an ideological level where the facts are irrelevant. He just has to keep piping about the “climate crisis,” and his enthusiastic followers will march blindly on, “with drums beating and colors flying.”
/Mr Lynn

Reply to  L. E. Joiner
June 7, 2015 5:02 pm

I was eagerly awaiting Mr. McKibbon’s response, which I hoped would show his level of sincerity and ideally provide some reaction to the comments that had been posted.
I was disappointed (but not surprised) by his subsequent input which could have been written without reading any of the previous comments! Our host showed a lot of empathy and searched for common ground. His response indicated to me that the experience was not the least bit significant to him.
I am reminded of Paul Nurse’s acceptance of a proposal for dialogue between Lord Lawson and the Royal society which in fact turned out to be an offer to “educate” the Lord to the Society’s rigid beliefs. (Maybe Bill thought he’d just give it the “old college try” to educate our host.)
I haven’t yet figured out what his “game” is; but I’m sure there is a “game”. Remember, HE suggested the meeting.

herkimer
June 7, 2015 7:23 am

It is difficult for most of us to understand how Bill Mckibben thinks mankind is causing the ” unnatural outlier” climate problems in TEXAS. According to NOAA, the average annual temperature for Texas 1895-2014 is 64.7 F . The annual temperature in 2013 was 65.1 F and last year 2014 it was 64.9 F . The 1895 -2014 trend is + 0.1F/decade and since 1998 the trend is -0.3/decade. There is cyclic pattern in the Texas climate with cooler weather 1895-1920 , warmer weather 1920-1957 , cooler weather 1957-1994 and warmer again 1994 -2012. Texas has been going through a warm phase since 1994, and this has very little to do with man. There is absolutely nothing “unnaturally outlier” about the Texas climate, Bill. It is quite natural.
Bill don’t just say what you think but do just some homework first before blaming every climate event on man. You are unjustifiably alarming people all over America. Thank goodness we have WUWT to tell the people the real facts.

Dave in Canmore
Reply to  herkimer
June 7, 2015 9:06 am

I have to show some respect to someone who wants to sit down with someone who disagrees with you but when you lead an organization and make public pronouncements, you are being extremely disrespectful of your audience if you can’t be bothered to ensure you are speaking the truth to them. I agree with you Herkimer, I can’t respect anyone who is too lazy to do even a modicum of fact checking.
If you don’t care if you are indoctrinating people with facts or disinformation, you are disrespecting people and treating them as tools for your own larger purpose. That someone could be so polite on the one hand but so disrespectful on the other hand speaks volumes about the mind of an environmental leader.

Reply to  Dave in Canmore
June 7, 2015 6:59 pm

True.

June 7, 2015 7:23 am

” he perceives things more on a feeling or emotional level and translates that into words and actions.”
That is so typical of liberals. When they act on their emotions as elected officials they cause irreparable harm to the economy (massive government debt, massive government nannystateism, and policies rammed down our throats.)

takebackthegreen
Reply to  J. Richard Wakefield
June 7, 2015 1:45 pm

No, friend. It is so typical of HUMANS. Each and every one of us, without exception. An excellent book about how our minds work is “Thinking Fast and Slow” by Kahneman, who won a Nobel Prize for his life’s work on the issue. Not a peace prize. A real one.
🙂

Reply to  takebackthegreen
June 7, 2015 5:12 pm

Mr McKIbbon is 100% System 1. (System 2 – reasoned thinking – requires effort.) 😉
Apologies to those who have not read Kahneman’s fine book.)

June 7, 2015 7:25 am

Anthony’s perception that Bill is more influenced by how he feels about GW and not influenced much by rational argument are very likely right on the money. The Thinking or Feeling preference is a basic component of temperament and is split about 50/50 in the population. Those with the Thinking preference are more likely to use rational thought and logic in formation of their beliefs and everything they do in life. Those with the Feeling preference form their beliefs based on what they feel about something. A person with a strong Feeling preference cannot be reached with logic and a rational argument. A different feeling based approach has to be used.

June 7, 2015 7:53 am

I find myself worrying that Anthony is being far too kind to Bill McKibben.
It’s all very well for people to make decisions based on feelings and intuitions rather than the facts, if that’s what they want. Even I have done that in the past. And I would never want to stop anyone else doing it, subject to one proviso. That is, that they themselves are the only ones harmed if the decision turns out to have been a bad one.
The issue here is that Bill McKibben is promoting policies that have already harmed many millions of people – including me. And yet, he doesn’t seem to be even interested in examining the possibility that those policies have been based on, at best, misinterpretations of the facts, and at worst, lies.
If you were on trial for murder, would you want someone on the jury who didn’t bother to listen to the facts of the case? Would you want someone who just said to himself something like, “His eyes are too close together. So he must be guilty?”
And this isn’t just a murder case. It isn’t just about whether one individual goes to the electric chair (or whatever other barbarous means you Yanks use these days). It’s the future of human civilization that’s at stake. For those of us who don’t believe the CAGW cant, Bill McKibben and his ilk want to destroy human civilization for the sake of nothing but a pack of lies. And for me at least, however well he can converse, and whatever his opinion of or capacity for craft beer, such an agenda cannot be forgiven.
There’s another problem too; the problem of hypocrisy. Did Bill McKibben fly from his home in Vermont to California? Did he use a car to get from the airport to Chico? Bill McKibben wants to deny to us – to all of us – the very same conveniences that he takes for granted.
Hypocrisy is very typical of collectivists. They don’t understand individual responsibility, so they don’t feel any shame for how they behave. But again, for me, hypocrisy is something that cannot be forgiven.
</rant>

steve in seattle
Reply to  Neil Lock
June 7, 2015 1:09 pm

No need to “apologize” ( rant tag ) for your post – a very worthy, on point reply.

John Whitman
June 7, 2015 7:55 am

Face-to-face casual communication is invaluable between people with very different fundamental views when it is in a private setting like a pub.
It humanizes both.
John

richard
June 7, 2015 7:58 am

“We both agreed that coal use especially in China and India where there are not significant environmental controls is creating harm for the environment and the people who live there”
Average life span in Germany is 80.89 years
Average life span in Shanghai and Beijing is 80 years. In the Rural areas less.

Dodgy Geezer
June 7, 2015 7:58 am

Whitman
…when it is in a private setting like a pub.
You have a private pub?!

John Whitman
Reply to  Dodgy Geezer
June 7, 2015 8:13 am

Dodgy Geezer on June 7, 2015 at 7:58 am

Dodgy Geezer,
My wife and I sure do have one.
We call it the Sunset Bar. It is at our Lakehouse which faces west over an Adirondack lake. We are open for every summer sunset. Come on over.
John

hunter
June 7, 2015 7:58 am

The chances of him returning the courtesy you have publicly given him is slim to none.

john
June 7, 2015 8:18 am

Glad to see dialog between camps, however, the new TPP and another trade deals (Obamatrade) are slated to include climate change provisions according to many sources including the Brooking Institute.
Recently and at the time of this (Anthony’s) meeting, a CEO of a large offshore wind concern invited an individual who has been (successfully), a very serious threat to their efforts out to lunch and a glass of wine out of the blue. Before the CEO left he made a very troubling remark to her. Somethings up.

Jeff B.
June 7, 2015 8:34 am

It can all be summed up in the picture. Anthony is the one smiling. Anthony bases his ideas in facts and analysis, Bill in feelings. Of course someone like Bill who does not understand something might be afraid of anything he reads. And it is my observation that journalists are easily led and very cynical.
No surprise then that the man confident in knowledge would be the one smiling.
I do appreciate the civility. But it is important to point out that there should be no respect for someone who puts feelings over reason in matters of great political gravity.

John C
Reply to  Jeff B.
June 7, 2015 9:23 am

Jeff you have just described the problem of our world culture of politics. The “left” feels a certain way mostly based on what they want. The “right” wants to see actual facts based on past experience or observations. This will only change when major events force the “feelers” to accept reality tho grudgingly and always hoping for a return of the days where just making it up as they go returns. Reality can be a buzz kill.
Thanks Anthony for this revealing interview.

June 7, 2015 8:36 am

Reblogged this on Aussiedlerbetreuung und Behinderten – Fragen and commented:
https://bewusstscout.wordpress.com/2015/02/10/urteil-aus-dem-istgh-den-haag-vom-03-02-2012-bestatigt-die-zustandigkeit-des-deutschen-reichs/
„Das Urteil aus dem ISTGH (Internationaler Strafgerichtshof) Den Haag vom 03.02.2012 bestätigt die Zuständigkeit des Deutschen Reichs und nicht die Zuständigkeit der “Bundesrepublik Deutschland“ mit ihrer Finanzagentur GmbH, (HRB 51411), wobei die vermeintlichen “BRD–Ämter”, Behörden, Dienststellen, “Gerichte” und Verwaltungen u.a . bei dnb.com mit eigenen Umsatzsteuernummern gelistet sind.
Urteil des BverfGE vom 25.07.2012 (-2 BvF 3/11 -2 BvR 2670/11 -2 BvE 9/11):
Nach Offenkundigkeit dürfen Gesetze von nicht staatlichen BRD-GmbH Ausnahme– und Sondergerichten (vgl. § 15 GVG) die auf altem Nazigesetz fußen und somit gegen das gültige Besatzungsrecht, gegen die Völker – und Menschenrechte verstoßen, überhaupt keine legitime Anwendung finden.
Durch Verfassungswidrigkeit des Wahlgesetzes ist seit 1956 kein verfassungsgebenden Gesetzgeber am Werk. Damit sind alle BRD-Forderungen eine private Forderung.
Verstehen Sie das bitte! Alle BRD-Forderungen (Steuern jeglicher Art, GEZ-Gebühren usw. usf. sind private Forderungen, haben also keinerlei hoheitsrechtliche Rechtsgrundlage und müssen demnach auch nicht bezahlt werden. …………………….“

Glück, Auf, meine Heimat!

Jim Francisco
June 7, 2015 8:43 am

Anthony, this article makes me wonder if your earlier meeting with Tamsin Edwards and others with the goal
Of being more civil to each other helped in any way?

June 7, 2015 8:51 am

The ethics of the persons inputting data into a computer program dictates the results, plain and simple. Keeping your job and putting food on the table is a large incentive for most people to do what is expected to keep the status quo. For the AGW industry, to take the ethical path would probably throw the world economy into turmoil. Millions would be on the street, sucking up social benefits while they retrain to actually produce something beneficial for humankind.

Steve from Rockwood
June 7, 2015 9:14 am

My problem with people like Bill McKibben is that they talk about eliminating fossil fuels but never really address the issue of energy use. I live in Canada. Solar panels and wind turbines won’t solve my energy needs. Forget the science and the politics. Tell me how you will reduce my fossil fuel footprint while still meeting my energy needs. And no unicorns. Then I’ll give up my propane, diesel and gasoline.

Jeff B.
Reply to  Steve from Rockwood
June 7, 2015 9:26 am

In fairness Anthony mentioned they did talk about Thorium which really would allow us to reduce carbon and even expand our energy usage. Bus as Bill is naïve on climate he’s also probably naïve on the forces behind climate alarmism.
The Alarmists need a big carbon bogeyman to justify their huge economy destroying movement. This they probably don’t want to see a Thorium solution anytime soon.
Again and again the Statists prove that above all they hate human success and progress.

Reply to  Steve from Rockwood
June 13, 2015 3:07 pm

Some eco-activists want you to starve in the dark. Check the editorial in the inaugural issue of The Ecologist magazine – there are other examples, including some employees of the US government.

June 7, 2015 10:13 am

Good going Anthony W and Bill M. Debate is necessary.
However, This CAGW issue has proved to be a political issue, not environmental. Bill M. in a self deprecating bit of humor says he may well be an idiot. (He has a good sense of humor.) at this stage anyone touting the falsified CAGW theories has become a “useful idiot” in the Marxist sense.
Does Bill M actually think a huge new tax on “carbon” will limit the rise in Earth’s temperature to “less than 2C”? Or will it just redistribute wealth?

Resourceguy
Reply to  RobRoy
June 9, 2015 9:27 am

That is the key question and it needs to be asked repeatedly because the extent of information distortion by so many advocates and policy leaders must indicate a revenue push is the next step. They would not go to this extreme in wrecking science and ignoring basic fact checking for just mere regulatory push. They smell big money and it drives the madness.

Joe Bastardi
June 7, 2015 10:36 am

I have always thought Bill to be a “nice guy” My beef with him and many of the others is they will reference weather events as if they have no knowledge of what actually happened before, or worse yet, they do, but believe their cause is mighty, they will not acknowledge it in the effort to sway people for one, and satisfy those who wish to push this issue. He expressed amazement at your ability to this without funding. No wonder, for what he is doing has to have someone to fund it, since our side of the debate is driven by the search for the truth and most on our side do not have blinders on
But it does not surprise me at all at his nature as I got that impression too. I think the same about Katherine Hayhoe also, that this is a nice person, ( I see the good in alot of the people I am odds with, though I doubt they feel that way about me. I dont know if any of them have been called up by their mother asking why people hate you so much..she reads the blogs) but again, am amazed at their statements, or when something happens opposite of their known position, the failure to acknowledge, or worse yet, make up excuses or spin it so its right

Jake J
Reply to  Joe Bastardi
June 7, 2015 1:04 pm

Hey Joe, I’m glad to see you here. I wanted to say a couple things about your verbal summary on Weather Bell. I’m going to be critical, but it’s intended constructively. If I thought you were a mutt, I wouldn’t bother. On the contrary, I am highly impressed, but something is bugging me.
The last couple Saturdays have been mostly AGW rants. Now look, here I am on WUWT. I’m an AGW non-believer too. And I like it when you get into the subject on Saturdays. But lately, the balance has been too much AGW, too little weather. Makes it hard for me to recommend you to friends who’d be a lot more receptive to that message of yours if it was accompanied by more of (what I think, anyway) are some of the best weather forecasts EVER.
In short: More weather! You’re a damn good forecaster. Show us more! I live in Seattle, and have friends in central Oregon and the eastern slope of the Sierra Nevada in California. You made some really good calls a couple months ago. Keep up that stuff, huh?
Past that, you get a little jargon-heavy at times. I’m a former journalist, and standard practice is to define every acronym on first use. Yep, you know what “the European” is in your sleep. But my friends don’t. And so on. You might even think of having a free acronym glossary on your site, and referring to it.
Finally, and this is much more a wish than a criticism. If you could run your recording through a voice-to-text program and post the words — and charts — out there, it’d be really useful.
Now: please take that constructively. I’m imminently going to be a pay subscriber. It’ll be on the strength of your weather forecasts this past spring, not your AGW commentary lately. But my friends can’t afford $200 a year. They’re good people, but they are struggling. So it’d be great if you’d remember that your freebie ought to be your weather billboard — because you do great work, and it can really help people.
I do not, not, not want you to stop talking about global warming. But you might want to go back and listen to your own forecasts in March and April, then listen to your last two.
Anyway: Thanks so much for what you do. I wish you maximum success and happiness. Long may you run, Joe!

steve in seattle
Reply to  Jake J
June 7, 2015 1:14 pm

Jake hits it pretty much square on the head – as an example – who is Katherine Hayhoe and why ( certainly can be brief ) ?

Joe Bastardi
Reply to  Jake J
June 7, 2015 4:13 pm

there has been alot going on with the AGW issue. But you have missed the point. All I am doing is showing linkage to the past that gave us an up on our forecasts. So the point is that these things I bring up show the linkage to the past, examples on how we use, it and then show how absurd it is to believe what is going on today has never happened before. We believe in the why before the what. My clients all see me lay out countless analogs. Last week the drought propaganda was huge. Its disaster du jour as I wrote in the patriot post. But we forecasted this drought reversal just like the last 2 cold winter based largely on analogs and so I show them and that naturally delves into the issue of people spreading a missive that this is the worst ever,
Jake, did you notice the NCEP temps. The linkage. Well we have an enso event, we had the drought in the cold pdo after the last enso event, the drop of temps in 2012. Now we have the opposite. What should happen ( what we forecasted, we went on this Texas reversal kick last year) Guess what. They know darn well what is going to happen when this enso is done. And in 3 years, we will hear about another dust bowl starting. So why shouldnt these things be pointed out, trying to link how we do things to what we forecasted and what happened. Doesnt that beat saying a dust bowl was starting, have it reversed in 3 years ( like the 52-54, 57 link. it will spooky if there is gulf tropical cyclone this month) and then say the opposite of what you forecasted is because of the reason that caused you to panic people with the opposite
Here is the other thing. I am not everyones cup of tea. I have longed since stopped trying to please everyone. I try to work before an audience of 1, and lord knows, I do fall short. Depending on what is going on, and what moves me at the time, I do the Saturday SUmmary. If people dont like it, they turn it off. That is their choice. But its about choice. You had a US senator this week calling for trials based on the Rico statutes of people that speak up out of what they know to be true. That is unbelievable in America, at least the one I know. I tried to have fun with it, with the Uncle Rico set up. Uncle rico loves readjusting the past to make what he is today bigger. But this all linked in. NOAA seems to adjust temperatures to make today look warmer
I read WUWT every day and mostly stay out of it, because the climate and weather issue has been distorted into something very different than what I know and love, so its really beyond me now. But people who come to my site, well if I have something to say, I say it And it happens I believe this issue is about, limiting freedom and choice, but not about weather and climate. But when someone comes into my backyard and trashes it ( as the agw agenda does with their mssive) , something I have known and loved since my first memory, I am going to speak up And I wont hold it against you if you disagree. Contrast that with a US senator calling for a prosecution, when over 200 billion dollars has been spent on this issue while the earths temp by undadjusted objective standards has held steady
Thank you for giving me the chance to explain Jake. You will find that if we get a couple of weeks with no agenda driven drivel ( its every week now) It will be more to your liking

Reply to  Joe Bastardi
June 7, 2015 6:24 pm

Having lived in Vermont I read far more about him than I ever wanted to. Almost everything he knows about climate change is based on what he thinks he has seen from his backyard. I suspect he is a nice guy. But to base your entire knowledge of climate on what you can see from your backyard is totally idiotic. Unless he has measurements it doesn’t even count as the true weather in his backyard, and my guess is Bill’s backyard has been a bit snowier the last few years than in the last decade or so , he discounts everything that doesn’t support his belief that his backyard has gotten warmer.

Jeff Mitchell
Reply to  Joe Bastardi
June 8, 2015 3:42 pm

Evil people are frequently nice to talk to, polite and well dressed and do not look like the caricatures in movies and other media. To paraphrase Neville Chamberlain: “I think we can work with this guy.”
Be careful. And remember, you don’t actually have to be evil to do evil.