BREAKING: Greenpeace co-founder reports Greenpeace to the FBI under RICO and wire-fraud statutes

‘Greenpeace has made itself the sworn enemy of all life on Earth’

By Dr. Patrick Moore, a co-founder of Greenpeace

Greenpeace, in furtherance of what is in effect its war against every species on the planet, has now turned to what, on the face of things, looks to me like outright breach of the RICO, wire-fraud, witness-tampering and obstruction-of-committee statutes. I have called in the FBI.

Greenpeace appears to have subjected Dr Will Happer, Cyrus Fogg Brackett Professor of Physics at Princeton University, to a maladroit attempt at entrapment that has badly backfired on it.

clip_image002
Greenpeace used this dismal rent-by-the-hour office block in the Beirut souk for its entrapment scam

The organization I co-founded has become a monster. When I was a member of its central committee in the early days, we campaigned – usually with success – on genuine environmental issues such as atmospheric nuclear tests, whaling and seal-clubbing.

When Greenpeace turned anti-science by campaigning against chlorine (imagine the sheer stupidity of campaigning against one of the elements in the periodic table), I decided that it had lost its purpose and that, having achieved its original objectives, had turned to extremism to try to justify its continued existence.

Now Greenpeace has knowingly made itself the sworn enemy of all life on Earth. By opposing capitalism, it stands against the one system of economics that has been most successful in regulating and restoring the environment.

By opposing the use of DDT inside the homes of children exposed to the anopheles mosquito that carries malaria, Greenpeace contributed to the deaths of 40 million people and counting, most of them children. It now pretends it did not oppose DDT, but the record shows otherwise. On this as on so many issues, it got the science wrong. It has the deaths of those children on what passes for its conscience.

By opposing fossil-fueled power, it not only contributes to the deaths of many tens of millions every year because they are among the 1.2 billion to whom its campaigns deny affordable, reliable, clean, continuous, low-tech, base-load, fossil-fueled electrical power: it also denies to all trees and plants on Earth the food they need.

Paradoxically, an organization that calls itself “Green” is against the harmless, beneficial, natural trace gas that nourishes and sustains all green things. Greenpeace is against greenery. Bizarrely, it is opposed to returning to the atmosphere a tiny fraction of the CO2 that was once present there.

In November 2015, out of the blue, Professor Happer received an email from “Hamilton Ellis”, a soi-disant “business consultancy” operating out of rent-by-the-hour offices in a crumbling concrete block in the Beirut souk.

The bucket-shop “consultancy’s” email said that a “client”, an energy and power company “concerned about the impacts of the UN climate talks”, wanted to commission Professor Happer to prepare a “briefing” to be released early in 2016 “which highlights the crucial role that oil and gas have to play in the developing economies, such as our client’s Middle East and North Africa region”.

The email smarmed on:

“Given your influential work in this area and your position at Princeton we believe a very short paper authored or endorsed by yourself could work strongly in our client’s favour. Does this sound like a project you would be interested in discussing further?”

Will Happer replied enclosing a white paper written, with major input from him, by the CO2 Coalition, a new group that he had helped to establish earlier in 2015. He also sent a copy of testimony on the “social cost of carbon” that he had given at a regulatory hearing in St Paul, Minnesota. Crucially, he added: “I would be glad to try to help if my views, outlined in the attachments, are in line with those of your client.”

In short, he was not prepared to be bought. He would help the “client” of the “business consultancy” if and only if he was not asked to attest to anything that he did not already believe.

The “consultancy” replied:

“It certainly sounds like you and our client are on the same page.” It went on to ask whether Professor Happer’s two papers had been “part of the same initiative on CO2 reported on [by Matt Ridley] in the London Times recently, and added: “The focus we envisage for this project comes from a slightly different angle. Our client wants to commission a short briefing paper that examines the benefits of fossil fuels to developing economies, as opposed to a switch to so-called clean energy.”

The “consultancy” also wanted to know whether it “would be able to reference you as Cyrus Fogg Brackett Professor of Physics at Princeton University if this project were to go ahead?”

It also tried to smoke out the identity of Professor Happer’s contacts in the U.S. media, and ended with a classical entrapment line:

“It would be useful to know, in your experience, whether you would need to declare the source funding when publishing research of this kind”.

Professor Happer replied that Matt Ridley was “someone the CO2 Coalition is in close touch with” and said: “The article also mentions Patrick Moore, like me a member of the CO2 Coalition, and my friend from Princeton, Freeman Dyson, who shares our views.”

He confirmed that his official title is Cyrus Fogg Brackett Professor of Physics, Emeritus. He also reinforced his earlier message indicating he could not be bought by stating, very clearly:

“To be sure your client is not misled on my views, it is clear there are real pollutants associated with the combustion of fossil fuels, oxides of sulfur and nitrogen for most of them, fly ash and heavy metals for coal, volatile organics for gasoline, etc.  I fully support regulations for cost-effective control of these real pollutants.  But the Paris climate talks are based on the premise that CO2 itself is a pollutant. This is completely false. More CO2 will benefit the world. The only way to limit CO2 would be to stop using fossil fuels, which I think would be a profoundly immoral and irrational policy.”

Professor Happer added that he no longer had external funding following his retirement, and went on:

“My activities to push back against climate extremism are a labor of love, to defend the cherished ideals of science that have been so corrupted by the climate-change cult.  If your client was considering reimbursing me for writing something, I would ask that whatever fee would have come to me would go directly to the CO2 Coalition.  This was the arrangement I had with the attorneys representing the Peabody Coal Company in the regulatory hearings in Minnesota.  The fee I would have received was sent instead to the CO2 Coalition, a 501(c)(3) tax exempt educational organization.  The CO2 Coalition covers occasional travel expenses for me, but pays me no other fees or salary.”

The “consultancy” replied that the “client” was “completely comfortable with your views on fossil-fuel pollution”. It asked whether Matt Ridley might “help to disseminate our research when it is ready”, and whether the briefing could be peer-reviewed. “On the matter of reimbursement, we would of course remunerate you for your work and would be more than happy to pay the fee to the CO2 Coalition.”

Then another classic entrapment line:

“Our client does not want their name associated with the research as they believe it will give the work more credibility. What provisions does the CO2 Coalition provide? Would this be an issue?”

Professor Happer replied that he was sure Matt Ridley would be interested in the briefing and that Breitbart would be among blogs and syndicated columnists that could also be interested.

As for peer review, he explained that

“this normally refers to original work submitted to a scientific journal for publication, and not to the sort of articles that Ridley writes for the media, or what I think you are seeking to have written.  If you like, I could submit the article to a peer-reviewed journal, but that might greatly delay publication and might require such major changes in response to referees and to the journal editor that the article would no longer make the case that CO2 is a benefit, not a pollutant, as strongly as I would like, and presumably as strongly your client would also like.”

He said his fees were $250 per hour, and that his Minnesota testimony had required four eight-hour days, so that the total cost was $8000. He said that, if he wrote the paper alone, he did not think there would be any problem stating that “The author received no financial compensation for this essay”. He added that he was pretty sure that the “client’s” donation to the CO2 Coalition would not need to be public  according to US regulations of 503(c)(3) educational organizations, but that he could get some legal advice to confirm this if asked.

The “consultancy” replied:

“The hourly rate works for us and, as previously discussed, we are happy to make a direct donation to the CO2 Coalition, providing it is anonymous. We can look into the official disclosure regulations, but it would be useful to know whether the CO2 Coalition voluntarily discloses its funders? Presumably there are other donors in a similar position to us?”

They added:

“With regards to peer review, I raised this issue because Matt Ridley’s article on Dr Indur Goklany’s recent CO2 report said that it had been thoroughly peer reviewed. Would it be possible to ask the same journal to peer review our paper given that it has a similar thrust to Goklany’s? It’s not a deal-breaker, but I felt that it helped strengthen that piece of work.”

Professor Happer replied that early drafts of Goklany’s paper had been reviewed by him and by many other scientists; that he had suggested changes to which the author had responded; that Matt Ridley might also have been a reviewer; and that, although some members of the academic advisory board of the Global Warming Policy Foundation might have been too busy to respond to a request to comment on the first draft, “The review of  Golkany’s paper was even more rigorous than the peer review for most journals”. Professor Happer said he would be glad to ask for a similar review for the first drafts of anything he wrote for the “client”.

He said he would double-check on the regulations, but did not think the CO2 Coalition, a 501(3)c tax-exempt educational organization, was required to make public any donors, except in Internal Revenue Service returns.

He checked with the CO2 Coalition, which replied that the Coalition was not obliged to identify any donors, except to the IRS, who would redact the list of donors if it received a request for the Coalition’s form 990.

On December 7 he received an email from one Maeve McClenaghan of Greenpeace, telling him that they had conducted what she grandiosely described as an “undercover investigation” – actually a criminal entrapment scam contrary to the RICO and wire-fraud statutes, and a flagrant attempt both to tamper with a Congressional witness (he is due to testify today, 8 December) and to obstruct committee proceedings – and that they intended to publish a “news article … regarding the funding of climate sceptic science.

She said: “Our article explores how fossil fuel companies are able to pay academics to produce research which is of benefit to them” and added that the story would be published on a Greenpeace website and “promoted widely” in the media. She gave Professor Happer only hours to respond.

Many of the points she said she proposed to include in the article were crafted in such a way as to distort what the above correspondence makes plain were wholly innocent and honest statements, so as to make them sound sinister. The libels Ms McClenaghan proposed to circulate will not be circulated here.

I am profoundly dismayed that the organization I founded – an organization that once did good work addressing real environmental concerns – has descended to what I consider to be criminality and also proposes to descend to libel.

Accordingly, I have decided to inform the Federal Bureau of Investigation of Greenpeace’s dishonest and disfiguring attempt at entrapment of Professor Happer, whom I know to be a first-rate scientist, one of the world’s half-dozen most eminent and experienced physicists, and one who would never provide any scientific advice unless in his professional opinion that advice was correct.

The organization’s timing was clearly intended to spring the trap on Professor Happer hours before he was due to appear in front of Congress. This misconduct constitutes a serious – and under many headings criminal – interference with the democratic process that America cherishes.

I have reported Greenpeace to the FBI under 18 USC 96 (RICO statute); 18 USC 1343 (wire fraud); 18 USC 1512 (tampering with a witness due to appear at a Congressional hearing); and 18 USC 1505 (obstruction of proceedings before committees).

I shall also be asking the Bureau to investigate Greenpeace’s sources of funding. It is now an enemy of the State, an enemy of humanity and, indeed, an enemy of all species on Earth.


Note: This article was updated shortly after publication to better delineate some quoted text

0 0 votes
Article Rating

Discover more from Watts Up With That?

Subscribe to get the latest posts sent to your email.

153 Comments
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
benofhouston
December 8, 2015 12:36 pm

How could they think that threatening a witness to Congress was acceptable? That is what this is, after all, a threat. Do they simply think that the law does not apply to them, or are they so insular that they have never so much as watched Law and Order?

CD153
Reply to  benofhouston
December 8, 2015 1:20 pm

@benofhouston: Ben, this is just my opinion, but I think their motivation for this has to do with the size of their heads. Green NGOs like Greenpeace have endowed themselves with so much righteousness, virtuosity and nobility that they feel they are above the law and entitled to do things like this.
It doesn’t matter to them if pushing fossil fuels and nuclear energy out of the picture is irrational due to the lack of viable and scalable alternatives. Fossil fuels and nuclear are just way too evil to tolerate. If western civilization has to collapse in the absence of fossil fuels and nuclear, then so be it. It is the price that western society must pay for its evil ways.
When it is an issue of Greenpeace the “good” vs. humanity and fossil fuels the “evil”, then anything goes. IMO, this is the way the are wired to think. I wouldn’t waste my time in an effort to rewire their brains so that they think in a more rational way.

Rosie Atkinson
Reply to  CD153
December 10, 2015 9:49 am

bang on

1saveenergy
Reply to  benofhouston
December 8, 2015 3:35 pm

They are zealots, they don’t think. They believe they are on gods mission & are above the law.
As with any self perpetuating religious cult you can never have enough martyrs to boost your ratings.

Arsten
Reply to  benofhouston
December 8, 2015 7:33 pm

This is the same Greenpeace that destroyed parts of a world heritage site in Peru last year.
Their message if everything to them, and nothing will stand in their way. Not even the law.

Reply to  Arsten
December 9, 2015 8:04 am

Thanks Arsten for reminding us of that. In today’s world incidences like those and others seem to quickly forgotten they are just as barbaric as ISIS and the Taliban’s destruction of ancient and religious sites all across the ME and Africa and elesewhere. And a BIG thanks to Dr Patrick Moore for this outstanding letter to the FBI!

Bert Walker
Reply to  benofhouston
December 8, 2015 8:46 pm

Ben you asked “How could they think…”
I suspect the leaders at Greenpeace are feeling rather invincible lately. The F.B.I., by all accounts will do a fair and thorough investigation. But let’s not forget Greenpeace has an advocate, President Obama, who has grossly influenced investigations and selective prosecution in government agencies during his two terms in office. Likewise the Attorney General, Loretta Lynch who is proving to be a perfect pawn of the POTUS, may well quash any prosecution of Greenpeace should one be warranted.
Such is the current political reality having a community organizer in the White House. Perhaps in 2017 the table will be turned and credibility restored.

Owen in GA
Reply to  Bert Walker
December 8, 2015 9:13 pm

The real fun part that the left may not realize. All these cases where the Attorney General has used “Prosecutorial Discretion” to drop investigations, can be picked back up by the next Attorney General. Only if a case is dismissed by a judge in court “with prejudice” does the accused walk free.

Reply to  Bert Walker
December 9, 2015 1:30 pm

Exactly, Owen. The statutes of limitations will not expire on these crimes for quite some time, if ever.

sciguy54
Reply to  benofhouston
December 8, 2015 9:28 pm

RULE 12: Pick the target, freeze it, personalize it, and polarize it.” Cut off the support network and isolate the target from sympathy. Go after people and not institutions; people hurt faster than institutions. (This is cruel, but very effective. Direct, personalized criticism and ridicule works.)
Source: 12 Rules for Radicals by Saul Alinsky
This is especially effective when most of the press is in on the “sting”, either intentionally or by virtue of ideological blinders.

Hivemind
Reply to  benofhouston
December 9, 2015 2:19 am

Look at how they behaved when the oil platforms from the North Sea had to be dismantled. Their campaign was founded on the lie that a gigantic amount of oil remained in the tanks and would create giant oil spills. As if an oil company would be so stupid it would leave valuable oil in place. It cost the companies a billion dollars to tow it back to land and cut it into small pieces.
Years later, when the lie was outed, Greanpiece said it alway knew. So what, it was for a good cause.

MarkW
Reply to  benofhouston
December 9, 2015 7:46 am

The law only applies to someone, if the govt is willing to prosecute.
This administration does not prosecute it’s friends and allies.

Catcracking
Reply to  MarkW
December 9, 2015 10:48 am

Bingo!!

Cameron
Reply to  benofhouston
December 9, 2015 5:20 pm

The law generally has not been applied to these groups, and the people in them, for the past few decades. Why would they, or anyone else for that matter, assume that it will be applied them in this case. If the FBI does decide to investigate. Greenpeace will immediately start a campaign against the US world wide, with the help of other groups such as the WWF, to claim victimization and that they are the subject of a witch hunt be the evil imperialist capitalists and oil Barons who secretly run the USA. This campaign will be supported by the UN and the current US government, who also believes that the US is evil will fold and shut down the investigation.
This will go nowhere while the current President is in office.

Old England
December 8, 2015 12:38 pm

I hope that the FBI treats this with the diligence and vigour that they have used in investigating FIFA under RICO. Above all I hope they are immune to political pressure from the CiC.

mikewaite
Reply to  Old England
December 8, 2015 2:24 pm

Old England : exactly my thoughts, inspired by yesterday’s BBC Panorama programme about the corruption exposed at the heart of FIFA.
The investigator , Andrew Jennings, had been researching the FIFA bosses around Seff Blatter for fifteen years , but basically made no effective impression.
A book written about the Qatar world cup bid unmasked similar corruption , but also with no visible effect .
The only breakthrough came when the FBI started to investigate the American and Caribbean FIFA bosses and the manipulation of fees (100s million dollars) affecting world Cup ticket sales (think of the corruption around carbon credits and carbon taxes). Since Obama has no knowledge of or interest in soccer FBI were permitted to get involved with , so far , the arrest , suspicion or suspension of 39 FIFA bosses including the Godfather , Seff Blatter.
By analogy,if there is scandal and corruption involving Greens , bankers and politicians and the billions being discussed at Paris , and already paid into the renewable subsidies, it will only be opened up by the efforts of the FBI – but will Obama allow them to investigate ?

seaice1
Reply to  mikewaite
December 9, 2015 6:05 am

That is Sepp Blatter. He is actually called Joseph – I don’t know why he is known as Sepp. Any allegations of racism are unfounded. White or brown, Sepp does not care. It is the contents of the envelope he cares about.

Brian D Finch
Reply to  mikewaite
December 9, 2015 12:54 pm

@seaice1
JoSEP[P]h Blatter

seaice1
Reply to  mikewaite
December 10, 2015 2:49 am

Thank you Brian. So Sepp is simply a common version of Joseph.

MarkW
Reply to  Old England
December 9, 2015 7:49 am

Look at the white wash over the IRS selectively refusing to grant non-profit status to conservative organizations, their illegal demands for supporter information and their release of confidential information to supporters of Obama.

Ray Boorman
December 8, 2015 12:40 pm

Go Patrick!!
Downside is, what are the chances of finding a Federal agent willing to investigate a “goody 2 shoes” such as Greenpeace? Surely their career would be mud if they tried?

Titan 28
December 8, 2015 12:40 pm

A largely pointless exercise. The current FBI isn’t gong to investigate a thing.

brians356
Reply to  Titan 28
December 8, 2015 2:06 pm

Yes, but Congress just might. Attention Senator Inhofe.

albertalad
Reply to  Titan 28
December 8, 2015 2:09 pm

Completely agree with you – Obama’s FBI will never investigate this in a million years.

Owen in GA
Reply to  albertalad
December 8, 2015 9:15 pm

The FBI will investigate, but when the case is ready for DOJ review for indictment it will likely get dropped.

Reply to  albertalad
December 9, 2015 11:12 am

The investigation will take at least a year ….

December 8, 2015 12:46 pm

Sympathy for Professor Happer. And for Dr Moore, who must be grieving as well as outraged.

December 8, 2015 12:54 pm

After reading the e-mail exchange, I’m not sure what Greenpeace things Professor Happer did wrong, or what they think should be the appropriate way to get funding.

benofhouston
Reply to  Jeff in Calgary
December 8, 2015 1:37 pm

He didn’t. From what I can tell, they believe that the only proper response to someone saying “I am from a coal company” is to hold up a silver cross to ward them off.

BFL
Reply to  benofhouston
December 8, 2015 4:19 pm

And the proper response to Greenpeace is a cross of two middle fingers at right angles….

Dave in Canmore
Reply to  Jeff in Calgary
December 8, 2015 2:54 pm

Greenpeace doesn’t appear very smart let alone moral. You are trying to make sense from nonsense!

andersm0
December 8, 2015 12:54 pm

What goes through the minds of people who will sit in their dark little holes and dream up these sleazy scams to stifle honest scientific comment? Thank-you, Dr. Moore, for presenting this information. I’ve forwarded the link to your article to several people who are Greenpeace supporters.

December 8, 2015 12:54 pm

Well, it couldn’t happen to a nicer bunch of people.
I have no idea what Greenpeace was originally like, but I do know what it is today: an activist organisation, which has become almost immune to the facts and any form of science.
Like a cancer, or a big bureaucracy, Greenpeace lives only to grow and grow, always damaging and eventually killing its host. Its fund raising tactics would shame some of the worst pseudo-Christian cults.
And like any good cult, it has a strong following of the faithful; those who are truly gullible and stupid, eager to open their wallets at every opportunity in order to have their souls continually cleansed and thereby rewarded in recognition for being a true acolyte.
The economic and environmental damage that Greenpeace can claim responsibility for through its actions and persistent peddling of bad science is truly incredible. Anything ISIL might try and do fades into insignificance against what Greenpeace has achieved.

Dog
Reply to  Peter Miller
December 8, 2015 1:16 pm

“…but I do know what it is today: an activist organisation, which has become almost immune to the facts and any form of science. ”
Call them for what they really are: eco-terrorists.
From destroying world heritage sites to the deaths of millions of children. I would say they’re even worse than ISIS.

Reply to  Dog
December 8, 2015 1:19 pm

The Indian government think so, they declared Greenpeace a threat to national security a few weeks ago.

Duster
Reply to  Dog
December 9, 2015 10:25 am

“…they’re even worse than ISIS..”
Not yet. They aren’t posting videos of beheadings yet, Let’s not get carried away. There is a gulph, a broad one, between vile and monstrous. ISL is monstrous, GP so far is merely vile.

Auto
December 8, 2015 12:56 pm

Umm,
Noble Cause Corruption?
Reads hat way to me.
But when a founder refers the organisation to the FBI – referencing RICO – it suggests that, maybe, perchance, there is at least the faintest shadow of a – hypothetical – problem.
Conceivably.
?Sarc/Sarc
Auto – as you have gathered, not wholly doubt-free.

fretslider
December 8, 2015 12:56 pm

Having been subjected to the alarmfest of the BBC this week and the horror that is Roger Harrabin, it is clear to me that just about every organisation at just about every level has been ‘appropriated’ – Trojan horse fashion.

Reply to  fretslider
December 8, 2015 1:03 pm

Yup. You cant believe that what appears to be happening is a gigantic conspiracy, fraud and attempt to subvert democracy and political and scientific freedom, but every time you check, there it is staring you in the face.
Germans didn’t believe that the Nazi party were killing Jews on an industrial scale, either..

Ray R.
Reply to  Leo Smith
December 8, 2015 3:36 pm

And the money! They along with their ilk thrive by demonizing capitalism/Monsanto/Exxon/ et al for the eyes and ears of those ignorant, gullible….charitable saviors of mother earth. I’ve lectured myself not to become the cynical old ranting guy, but damn Leo, Its wide spread and poison to our society.

MarkW
Reply to  Leo Smith
December 9, 2015 8:07 am

When communism fell in Russia, the communists needed another cause to champion. Most of them chose environmentalists. Most major environmental organizations are now watermelons. Green on the outside, red to the core.

Auto
Reply to  fretslider
December 8, 2015 1:05 pm

fret,
Agree.
How much of the Desmond damage is referenced to Abigail/B/C not being much more than ‘winter storms’?
Granted Desmond turned out to dump a ‘record’ amount of rain [details to check], the ease with which we glided through Abigail, and the B and C ‘storms’, may have – possibly – lulled folk to ignore that build up – it’s just ‘another’ storm.
Tragically, Desmond was not that.
Are bad outcomes on the Met Office’s conscience? ?
I ask . . . .
Auto.

fretslider
Reply to  Auto
December 8, 2015 1:11 pm

Slingo Bingo is a game of chance, Auto. No conscience required. However a lot of luck is.

John Peter
December 8, 2015 1:02 pm

This might be investigated only if a republican president is elected next year. With Obama in office there is not a snowball’s chance in hell of the FBI lifting a finger. Congress can’t even get hold of supposedly publicly owned e-mails from NOAA.

Jim Francisco
Reply to  John Peter
December 9, 2015 8:17 am

Would it not be a hoot if Ted Cruz, the chairman of this hearing, became the next US president?

Ole
December 8, 2015 1:04 pm

Reply to  Ole
December 8, 2015 1:53 pm

Someone put this on another thread.
A classic.

BFL
Reply to  Ole
December 8, 2015 4:26 pm

Yeah, PC used to primarily mean Personal Computer, now it stands for cultural suicide.

Ole
December 8, 2015 1:06 pm
1saveenergy
Reply to  Ole
December 8, 2015 3:38 pm

blocked !!

RCS
December 8, 2015 1:13 pm

If the FBI investigates, as we hope, they have the reputation for leaving no stone unturned. This could be the first pebble that starts the landslide as they look in detail at GreenPeace’s funding, organisation and activities.
Remember GreenPeace has been chucked out of India and hopefully they will be chucked out of the US. As they get funding from the EU, they might find that they are being asked difficult questions across the World.
I expect Greenpeace will say that this is simply an unsanctioned act by a junior member of their staff and they would never sanction it, being as pure as drivem (unpolluted) snow.

RobW
Reply to  RCS
December 8, 2015 3:41 pm

GP lost tx-exempt status in Canada a long time ago.

Reply to  RobW
December 8, 2015 6:22 pm

The new kid in charge will give it back with an apology.

Greg Kaan
December 8, 2015 1:14 pm

And here is the “expose” https://energydesk.greenpeace.org/2015/12/08/exposed-academics-for-hire/
Of course, it’s OK for Maeve McClenaghan to be paid by GreenPeace for her “investigative journalism”
http://www.theguardian.com/media/2015/sep/09/greenpeace-hires-investigative-journalists-meiron-jones

cassandra
December 8, 2015 1:20 pm

Many of us in the UK would like to see, in the UK, USA style States’ and Federal investigations and prosecutions that have recently been organised and carried through on major companies, including banks, and their senior Board Members as well as organisations such as FIFA. Bankers and senior Directors here have been getting away with a great deal with only a light slap on the wrist and even hardly any financial penalties.
As to Greenpeace, this episode and evidence of their perfidy does not surprise me. I hope the Feds hit them hard. 20 years or so ago, North Sea Oil Operators wanted to dispose of a North Sea Oil Platform, which was being shutdown, by simply sinking it in deep water in the North Sea. Greenpeace typically protested loudly via rent-a-gob and rent-a-mob and their tame media contacts that the Rig was full of extremely hazardous materials and chemicals and that sinking the Platform would create a catastrophic environmental marine disaster. They insisted that the Rig be towed back to land in the UK and dismantled under very tight conditions with massively expensive measures to separate out and safely dispose of all the hazardous materials and chemicals. The Operator said that no such significant problems existed but, eventually, they backed off as there was a lot of bad publicity, and they did, at very considerable cost, what Greenpeace wanted.
Surprise, surprise! When the rig was dismantled onshore virtually none of the hazardous materials and chemicals claimed by Greenpeace were found, and nothing that the vast diluting effect of the North Sea could not have naturally and safely accommodated. Predictably, Greenpeace never commented, let alone apologised, and for reasons unknown, apparently, the Operator nor any UK government or legal entity thought fit to sue Greenpeace.
Their arrogance and deceit continues under various banners! They need stepping on – severely, if only because they tar all environmentalists, many of whom do an excellent service for the world, with the same brush!

Reply to  cassandra
December 8, 2015 3:45 pm

My recollection of the Brent Spar episode was that Greenpeace openly stated afterwards that the message was more important than the facts.

Hot under the collar
December 8, 2015 1:25 pm

Contacting Professor Happer and threatening him (blackmail?) the day before he was due to appear as a Congressional witness certainly looks like a possible attempt to interfere with the testimony of a witness.
Here in the UK, if proved I believe this would be grounds for prosecution for “perverting the course of justice”. (maximum sentence – life imprisonment).
What hope freedom of speech if they will not even allow you to testify to congress without interfering or blackmailing you!
Wow, these people really are radicalised.

Nigel S
Reply to  Hot under the collar
December 8, 2015 1:48 pm

BBC seem to be in on this racket too.
http://biasedbbc.org/blog/2015/12/08/bbc-journalist-for-hire/
The Tower for Harrabin (Cambridge graduate in English) with luck!

Nigel S
Reply to  Nigel S
December 8, 2015 2:15 pm

This site says Gavin Schmidt too although the tweet has disappeared. That would be quite something for a US government employee if proved.
http://scottishsceptic.co.uk/2015/12/08/major-climate-scandal-breaking-as-greenpeace-reveal-sceptics-hiding-funding-not-lol/

Peter Lusby Taylor
December 8, 2015 1:27 pm

I saw this spun earlier today something similar too climate denier scientist ready to take bribes to work for fossil fuels industry and not disclose sources or some such rubbish. The headline was effective and thousands will buy into it. Pitiful and pitiless.

Crispin in Waterloo but really in Bishkek
Reply to  Peter Lusby Taylor
December 8, 2015 5:13 pm

Please document actual harm and forward it to the author. For example if a more extreme miswording of the claims makes it into print, possibly by pre-arrangement, it adds to the damage to his person and may show RICO intent to commit character assassination. Look in your papers, TV’s and document the calumny. If the harm is real, following a threat that is real, the consequences must also be real.
One line of attack for Greenpeace is to ‘make an example’ of someone, in this case a witness, so as to exert pressure on other witnesses in future with a demonstration of the ability to cause actual harm and therefore showing the capacity to make a threat ‘with menaces’ – backed up by a credible threat of personal harm, particularly harm of reputation and therefore credibility.
It is clear that Greenpeace makes threats against individuals and companies, and backs up those threats with actions intended to cause harm. They do this to raise funds, as has been previously described here in relation to squeezing money out of companies they ‘choose not to expose’ if ‘donations’ are made to then ‘undo’ or ‘compensate’ for the ‘harm’ they have identified. In most precincts it is called a ‘shake down’.
Greenpeace has for a long time operated outside the law as a tactic, mostly civil disobedience but not all. Patrick claims it was effective. He should know as he participated. We remember. Well, they learned didn’t they. Their motto is ‘we break the law in order to save you from yourselves’. Maybe it is time to start applying the law to save Greenpeace members from themselves – – funders and the managers.
I’ll bet they carefully checked to see if the operation was not illegal if conducted from within Lebanon. If the threat with menaces was issued from the UK it is likely they can be prosecuted successfully. Given the geographic spread, it is going to be difficult to claim it was not a sanctioned operation.

Reply to  Crispin in Waterloo but really in Bishkek
December 8, 2015 9:38 pm

Crispin … here’s a couple headlines I found, right away, by simply googling Greenpeace.
1. Greenpeace exposes sceptics hired to cast doubt on climate science. (The Guardian)
2. Undercover Greenpeace activists buy off corrupt academics in a climate science sting. (Boing Boing)
‘Extreme miswording,’ indeed.

Another Scott
Reply to  Peter Lusby Taylor
December 8, 2015 7:21 pm

“The headline was effective and thousands will buy into it” Luckily putting a detailed account of the episode on this website will reach tens of thousands of people who can help them return it for a full refund.

JJB MKI
December 8, 2015 1:46 pm

Their vandalism of the Nazscar Lines seemed to me a clear confirmation that Greenpeace is now driven by pure misanthropy at the expense of any intelligent thought. I am wary of bandying around the word ‘fascist’ as it is far too easily diluted, but the tone of shrillness in the voices of special interest groups operating under the banner of environmental ‘justice’, along with the self image of ideological superiority and purity is chilling. I hear the feet of the disaffected, spoiled, angry Facebook generation (of which I am one), falling ever more closely into step. They are guided by the emotional manipulation of a coterie of failed ex Marxists and rent-seekers, able to indulge the god complex of a cult leader spouting any kind of pseudo scientific nonsense, knowing every word will be swallowed wholesale by legions of insecure idiots desperate for social approval, while themselves stuffing their trousers full of money, all in a paper thin ‘good cause’. While there is genuine poverty and injustice in the world, and real environmental damage being done, the entire CAGW movement is just a huge circle jerk for the biggest group of a***holes ever to walk the planet.

JJB MKI
Reply to  JJB MKI
December 8, 2015 2:58 pm

Oops, dumb typo.. *Nazca Lines*

schitzree
Reply to  JJB MKI
December 8, 2015 4:43 pm

The NASCAR lines? They run in a circle I believe. ^¿^

Patrick MJD
Reply to  JJB MKI
December 9, 2015 2:38 am

No, an oblique spheroid. Well that’s what I call my friend…and she hasn’t slapped me…yet! There is still time…

December 8, 2015 1:47 pm

GreenPeace is worse than the above evidence shows.
It being I was out and about counting the NVA and VC gathering to attack Ka Shan Marine Base I-Corps S. Vietnam and the count was large, very large and enough that without the new sensor tech we had the base would have been over run. Too the big brass ask our unit how many we figured were in the pipe line. We reported , huge numbers it is clear. So the big brass did start talking about possible use of nukes.
Use of nukes would have been and still is a real bad thing in my humble opinion.
That took me to GreenPeace later after my time in senor work over in Laos etal.
After a time I too saw the problem and was vocal in my interactions with those in leadership at the time.
I was approached before a meeting and told in plain thug language that it would be in my health’s best interest to no longer be there and not to come back.

1saveenergy
Reply to  fobdangerclose
December 10, 2015 3:02 am

read my post fully it stated –
‘Weeds’ are ALL beneficial…..IF you know what you are doing.”
YOU clearly don’t.

Brandon Gates
December 8, 2015 1:51 pm

By opposing fossil-fueled power, it not only contributes to the deaths of many tens of millions every year because they are among the 1.2 billion to whom its campaigns deny affordable, reliable, clean, continuous, low-tech, base-load, fossil-fueled electrical power: it also denies to all trees and plants on Earth the food they need.

Dr. Moore may have left Greenpeace, but he has apparently not lost their mutual flair for hyperbole and dubious logic.

Korwyn
Reply to  Brandon Gates
December 8, 2015 1:59 pm

I’m not sure what you mean by hyperbole or dubious logic. He didn’t state that it denied all food to trees and plant, he stated that “…it denies to all trees and plants…”
In my opinion this is a true statement. If I deny you a portion of your required caloric intake, I am denying you the food you need. I’m not denying you all food, but I *am* denying you a portion of it.

Brandon Gates
Reply to  Korwyn
December 8, 2015 2:15 pm

If I deny you a portion of your required caloric intake …

… then I will likely become ill and possibly die. Since plants and trees thrived prior to the industrial revolution, obviously they were already obtaining the required amounts of CO2.

Markstoval
Reply to  Korwyn
December 8, 2015 3:13 pm

Brandon,
The people who raise plants in real greenhouses pump in CO2 to 1200 or more ppm. They do this because it helps the plants grow. There is an upper limit after which more CO2 does not help. I think it is somewhere around 1500 ppm. This looks to be the level evolution has programmed into the plants.
They can live at 200 ppm but they really need much more to flourish. See?

Brandon Gates
Reply to  Korwyn
December 8, 2015 4:40 pm

Markstoval,

The people who raise plants in real greenhouses pump in CO2 to 1200 or more ppm. They do this because it helps the plants grow.

No dispute. Note, however, that the argument has changed from “food they need” to “food which helps”. I don’t consider the latter formulation (yours) hyperbolic.

[1500 ppmv CO2] looks to be the level evolution has programmed into the plants.

Hothouse tomatoes are about as far from a “naturally” evolved organism as I can imagine … 🙂

They can live at 200 ppm but they really need much more to flourish. See?

No I don’t see since CO2 is not the only resource knob twiddled in the (worthy) aim of agricultural yield optimization.

Patrick MJD
Reply to  Korwyn
December 9, 2015 2:30 am

“Brandon Gates
December 8, 2015 at 4:40 pm”
Extra CO2 REDUCES the demands on WATER a plant needs. It still needs nitrogen, sunlight and water, but importantly not as much water. Commercial growers know this. It’s proven. Large expanses of Spain, which are largely arid, are covered with plastic “greenhouses” pumped full with CO2 and use less water and grow crops all year round thanks to controlled water irrigation and CO2.

Brandon Gates
Reply to  Korwyn
December 9, 2015 2:10 pm

Patrick MJD,

Extra CO2 REDUCES the demands on WATER a plant needs.

I repeat: no dispute.

Large expanses of Spain, which are largely arid, are covered with plastic “greenhouses” pumped full with CO2 and use less water and grow crops all year round thanks to controlled water irrigation and CO2.

Especially in arid regions, greenhouses also play a role in reducing evaporative losses. However, consider that the vast majority of the world’s agriculture does not take place in such tightly controllable conditions. Think of it this way: how would you respond to me if I asserted that CO2 is the sole determinant of outdoor temperature?
Also consider: weeds are plants too.

1saveenergy
Reply to  Korwyn
December 9, 2015 2:56 pm

Also consider: weeds are plants too.
so are you saying we should have less CO2 so the weeds don’t grow ??
you don’t know much about botany or the carbon & water cycles do you !!
BTW interesting food intake comparison –
Humans die at 150 calories/day, you can just survive on 250 calories/day but are healthy at 1200-1500
Plants die at 150 ppm CO2, survive on 250ppm CO2, are very healthy at 1200-1500ppm CO2.
coincidence ??

Brandon Gates
Reply to  Korwyn
December 9, 2015 4:39 pm

1saveenergy,

so are you saying we should have less CO2 so the weeds don’t grow ??

No. More weeds implies more weeding.

Plants die at 150 ppm CO2, survive on 250ppm CO2, are very healthy at 1200-1500ppm CO2.

For the third time now: no dispute.

1saveenergy
Reply to  Korwyn
December 9, 2015 4:54 pm

No. More weeds implies more weeding.”
yes but – More weeds implies more nitrogen & carbon fixing …..more composting….better soil….less artificial fertilizer. ‘Weeds’ are ALL beneficial…..if you know what you are doing.

Brandon Gates
Reply to  Korwyn
December 9, 2015 6:32 pm

1saveenergy,

More weeds implies more nitrogen & carbon fixing …..more composting….better soil….less artificial fertilizer.

Weeds compete for the same nutrients, water and sunlight to grow that the desired crop plants do, which has the effect of reducing crop yield per unit resource.

mebbe
Reply to  Brandon Gates
December 8, 2015 3:15 pm

Well,
On the one hand, the definite article does not permit of the meaning “some of the food”; it pretty much has to be “all the food”.
On the other hand, “the food they need” does not specify the criteria of “need”. It doesn’t have to be “need for survival”, it could be “need in order to look pretty”, or “smell nice” or “make a tasty,nutritious meal”.
I have no use for greenpeace but … hyperbole? That’s how I see it, too.

Brandon Gates
Reply to  mebbe
December 8, 2015 5:10 pm

mebbe,

On the one hand, the definite article does not permit of the meaning “some of the food”; it pretty much has to be “all the food”.

Yes, that’s how I read it as well.

On the other hand, “the food they need” does not specify the criteria of “need”.

Indeed. OTOH, he is explicitly making argument that elevated CO2 is good for plants, and Greenpeace are therefore hypocrites for not supporting elevated levels of it in the atmosphere. I’m taking issue with his logic on that point.

I have no use for greenpeace …

Alas, neither do I. Their stance against nuclear power as a CO2 emission mitigation scheme particularly agitates me.

David Smith
Reply to  Brandon Gates
December 8, 2015 4:15 pm

Stop nit-picking Brandon. It’s childish.

Brandon Gates
Reply to  David Smith
December 8, 2015 6:04 pm

lol, ok: charging Greenpeace with obstruction, racketeering and wire-fraud over a political stunt strikes me as a tad far fetched.

Reply to  David Smith
December 9, 2015 8:34 am

He is not “nit picking” he is diverting your attention from the main object of the article and the RICO claim ( rightfully so) by Patrick Moore, don’t fall into the trap!

rogerknights
Reply to  Brandon Gates
December 8, 2015 6:45 pm

OK, he should have said, “food they all like and some need.” (I.e., the ones around the Sahara, etc.)

Brandon Gates
Reply to  rogerknights
December 8, 2015 7:32 pm

rogerknights,
Or, ” … food, which when increased promotes growth.” I’m glad you brought up the Sahara because this is where I think the wheels fall off his argument: water is probably the limiting resource when it comes to plant growth [1] — and more to the point, improving crop yields. Even the cheapest of cheap energy would get expensive in a hurry if it were pressed into widespread service at water desalination facilities.
——————
[1] http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/grl.50563/full
[2] Carbon dioxide is a primary substrate of photosynthesis. Increases in atmospheric CO2 concentrations (Ca) are expected to lead to a CO2 fertilization effect where photosynthesis is enhanced with the rise in CO2 [Farquhar, 1997]. While a land-based carbon sink has been observed [Ballantyne et al., 2012; Canadell et al., 2007] and satellites reveal long-term, global greening trends [Beck et al., 2011; Fensholt et al., 2012; Nemani et al., 2003], it has proven difficult to isolate the direct biochemical role of Ca in these trends from variations in other key resources (such as light, water, nutrients [Field et al., 1992]) and from socioeconomic factors such as land use change [Houghton, 2003]. This complexity can be reduced by focusing on warm, arid environments, where water plays the dominant role in primary production and where foliage cover (F, the fraction of ground area covered by green foliage), plant water use, and photosynthesis are all tightly coupled. It is in these warm, arid environments where the CO2 fertilization effect on cover should be most clearly expressed. While widespread greening has been reported in these environments [Beck et al., 2011; Fensholt et al., 2012], the year-to-year variation in precipitation (P) at individual sites makes it very difficult to extract a clear fingerprint of the CO2 fertilization cover effect.

Reply to  rogerknights
December 9, 2015 4:32 pm

Brandon;
The “cheapest” way to desalinate water is nuclear. Greenpeace don’t like nuclear either.

Brandon Gates
Reply to  rogerknights
December 9, 2015 4:57 pm

Bartleby,

The “cheapest” way to desalinate water is nuclear.

Would be my vote for industrialized nations, but not for Africa. I suggest, very tongue in cheek, that it might be more viable to backhaul fresh water with oil tankers.

Greenpeace don’t like nuclear either.

The main reason I don’t much care for Greenpeace.

iMac
Reply to  Brandon Gates
December 8, 2015 6:52 pm

I’ll go out on a limb and suggest that within the context of being denied access to clean affordable power they need to burn whatever trees and plants they can find, instead of being able to let them grow and flourish. So perhaps a missing comma or two. I think of the aerial shot of the border between Haiti and the Dominican Republic. On the Haiti side, a barren wasteland on the D.R. side lush forests.

Brandon Gates
Reply to  iMac
December 8, 2015 7:59 pm

iMac,
The lack of modern power infrastructure in Haiti is not due to the meddling of external powers, but rather the presence of a repressive local regime that cares more for its own enrichment at the expense of a broadly lucrative modern economy. Same for N. Korea …
http://markhumphrys.com/Bitmaps/north.korea.night.2.jpg
… and most of Africa. One might argue that first world military intervention might be the only near-term hope for the peoples of those countries, but it hasn’t happened — and likely won’t — because, frankly, there would be very little percentage in doing it.

Reply to  iMac
December 9, 2015 12:33 pm

N. Korea, on the other hand must be a great place for astronomy, because of the lack of “light pollution”. They ought to have the greatest astronomers on the planet. It is hard to find any information about astronomy in N. Korea, but this S. Korea website has some interesting comments on Korean Astronomy.
http://www.kasolym.org/english/html/info/01.asp

Brandon Gates
Reply to  iMac
December 9, 2015 5:14 pm

The Editor,

N. Korea, on the other hand must be a great place for astronomy, because of the lack of “light pollution”.

Sure, in places that aren’t directly downwind from one of China’s major population centers … 🙂

They ought to have the greatest astronomers on the planet.

One feature of Supreme Leaders is that they tend to not leave much in the budget for doing pure science.

pat
December 8, 2015 2:03 pm

Greenpeace has its benefits:
2012: HuffPo: Joe van Brussel: Danny Kennedy and Sungevity: Solar Power Is Here
In California, one of the states hit hardest by the Great Recession, Danny Kennedy is working to spur growth and innovation by casting light on an often-misunderstood industry: solar energy…
Kennedy transitioned into the entrepreneurship game after working with Greenpeace, where he helped run the company’s Sydney office and managed campaigns in the Australia Pacific region. His experience with Greepneace not only helped him develop the tools and experience necessary to run a business, but it also taught him critical lessons about bringing people together with a common mission…
Kennedy attended a large conference in San Jose, CA, for the solar energy industry where then-Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger spoke to solar entrepreneurs. In his speech, the governor promised to support solar initiatives, and he later followed through on that promise. “He was giving that speech and the rhetoric was raving,” Kennedy recalled of the experience. “It was him at his finest form. A new governor speaking to a group of venture capitalists and entrepreneurs. People were in their chairs, pumping their fists and I was sitting there and said, ‘Wow, this is awesome. It’s really here.'”…
http://www.huffingtonpost.com.au/2012/09/04/danny-kennedy-sungevity-solar_n_1853927.html?ir=Australia
2 Dec: Politico: POLITICO California Playbook, **presented by Chevron: BROWN blasts Republican climate ‘disgrace’
By Carla Marinucci & Jesse Rifkin
Bottom line for the big Paris stage: It’s about who will emerge the winners (and losers) in the race to clean energy…
ALONG FOR THE RIDE (TO COP21): Led by Gov. Brown and NextGen Climate founder Tom Steyer, the delegation will include Jim Mahoney, Global Corporate Communications & Public Policy Executive, Bank of America; K.R. Sridhar, Founder and CEO, Bloom Energy; Thad Hill, President and CEO, Calpine; Thad Miller, Executive Vice President, Chief Legal Officer and Secretary, Calpine; Pasquale Romano, President and CEO,ChargePoint; Nancy Pfund, Founder and Managing Partner, DBL Investors; Sister Susan Vickers, RSM, VP Corporate Responsibility, Dignity Health; Bernard J. Tyson, Chairman and CEO of Kaiser Permanente, Kaiser Permanente; Raymond J. Baxter, PhD, Senior Vice President, Community Benefit, Research and Health Policy, Kaiser Permanente; David Crane, CEO, NRG Energy; Anthony Earley, Chairman, Chief Executive Officer and President, PG&E Corporation; Cathy Zoi, CEO, SunEdison Frontier Power; Rob Davenport, Chairman, ***SUNGEVITY and Lyndon Rive, Co-Founder and Chief Executive Officer, SolarCity
** Presented by Chevron: California’s DOERS do a lot of flying. As one of the state’s top suppliers of aviation fuel, we help millions of Californians get where they’re going. http://tinyurl.com/ov2hfu2 **
http://www.politico.com/tipsheets/california-playbook/2015/12/politico-california-playbook-presented-by-chevron-brown-blasts-republican-climate-disgrace-panettas-sigh-of-relief-perea-moving-on-211547
2009: From Greenpeace To Green Power: Sungevity CEO Danny Kennedy (Part 1 of 7)
Danny Kennedy: Greenpeace is unique in that it has an incredibly trusted brand and is well known. Even if you do not like it you know the brand, and it has a hell of a fund-raising machine.
SM: What years did that work encompass?
DK: I did that from 1993 through 2007.
SM: You left very recently!
DK: I left Greenpeace to start Sungevity.
(from Part 2 link) KENNEDY: I happen to be very close to the solar industry because I have been an advocate and champion of it for a long time. ***Greenpeace in many ways has created markets for it through its policy setting and campaign work. I knew a lot of the players, and I knew the way the industry was developing…
SM: Does San Francisco provide a rebate from the city or from the utilities?
DK: They provide it from a dedicated municipal rebate fund. It is unusually high and rich and has been brought down a bit. There are other cities around the state that do it simpler. There is also a California state rebate and a federal tax credit. In the stimulus environment that could be converted to a tax refund, almost like a cash grant…
http://www.sramanamitra.com/2009/02/25/from-greenpeace-to-green-power-sungevity-ceo-danny-kennedy-part-1/

Reply to  pat
December 8, 2015 5:04 pm

Please explain the benefits for those who can’t see them in the bumf that you posted.

Reply to  Robert Austin
December 8, 2015 5:53 pm

Heh, I stopped reading when I saw “Huffpo” cited.

pat
Reply to  Robert Austin
December 8, 2015 10:50 pm

in the piece – “From Greenpeace To Green Power: Sungevity CEO Danny Kennedy” – where Kennedy claimed Greenpeace helped to create the solar market, he also said: “I knew a lot of the players”.
would he be referring to any of the following:
13 May: Bloomberg: Stefan Nicola: E.ON to Expand Solar Sales in Germany in Tie-Up With Sungevity
The U.S. developer (Sungevity) also has sales and marketing relationships with the Sierra Club, home-improvement store chain Lowe’s Cos Inc. and General Electric Co.
http://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2015-05-12/eon-to-expand-solar-sales-in-germany-in-tie-up-with-sungevity
April 2014: Bloomberg: Justin Doom: Sungevity Receives $70 Million From Investors Including EON, GE
Sungevity Inc., a closely held developer of rooftop systems, received $70 million from a group of investors including E.ON SE and General Electric Co. to expand in Europe and Australia…
Jetstream Capital LLC led the funding round. It was the first investment from EON, the largest utility in Germany. General Electric, the world’s largest maker of power-generation equipment, had invested previously.
Sungevity now has raised more than $200 million…
http://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2014-04-04/sungevity-receives-70-million-from-investors-including-eon-ge
23 July: Huffington Post: Katherine Boehrer: Solar Company Sungevity Raises $1.5 Million For Nonprofit Partners
The company’s partnership program, Sungevity.org, works with nonprofit organizations to raise money for their causes while encouraging their members to choose Sungevity for their solar installations. Sungevity has now donated more than $1.5 million to nonprofits ranging from the Sierra Club and Save the Frogs to schools and science centers…
“Every home that we get to go solar, Sungevity gives us $750 back,” said Sierra Club Chief of Staff Jesse Simons said in a Sungevity.org promotional video. “This has been a great revenue-generating tool for the Sierra Club.”…
SOMETIMES I THINK OF COP21 AS A GIGANTIC TRADE FAIR FOR THE SOLAR, WIND AND ASSOCIATED CAGW-INVESTED INDUSTRIES.

schitzree
Reply to  Robert Austin
December 8, 2015 11:53 pm

So what? Greenpeace teaches it’s members how to milk the subsidy cows that it helped create. How does that benefit anyone but Greenpeacers?

Reply to  Robert Austin
December 9, 2015 12:39 pm

The above is all cut & paste garbage, designed to confuse and discombobulate readers. The schemes which are reported on, might provide however a handy list of names for the FBI to include in their investigations into money laundering allegations made against Greenpeace and their compadres.

December 8, 2015 2:04 pm

Roy Spencer is also writing about Greenpeace stunts.
Whose Supported Policies Kill More People: ISIS… or Greenpeace?
http://www.drroyspencer.com/2015/12/whose-supported-policies-kill-more-people-isis-or-greenpeace/

Jaakko Kateenkorva
December 8, 2015 2:07 pm
brians356
Reply to  Jaakko Kateenkorva
December 8, 2015 2:13 pm

How many Green$Please members dropped out after the Peru debacle? I’ll bet they can be counted on one hand. When you are saving the earth, you’re the Slick Willy of racketeers.

1saveenergy
Reply to  brians356
December 8, 2015 6:17 pm

When you are saving the earth, you’re the Slick Willy of racketeers.
love it !!
Where I’m from, A Slick Willy means premature ejaculation.

Owen in GA
Reply to  brians356
December 10, 2015 7:13 am

1saveenergy,
I believe that was part of the double meaning behind giving former President Clinton the nickname “Slick Willy”. The put down was implied while also being a straight play on his given name with the fact the man seems to be able to get away with anything.

Rob
December 8, 2015 2:07 pm

Greenpeace is one the many eco terrorist outfits for hire. They are all funded through big foundations like Tides and the Oak foundation. Who act as money launders for vested interests who don’t want to be identified. In the link below is an example list of eco outfits and money they’ve received. Many times these foundations will pass money from one to another before it finally goes to the outfit it’s intended for. To try and make it harder to trace.
http://business.financialpost.com/fp-comment/vivian-krause-new-u-s-funding-for-the-war-on-canadian-oil

1 2 3