Brexit: Greenpeace, FOE fears a "Bonfire" of Green Regulations

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Guest essay by Eric Worrall

Evidence is mounting that Brexit, and possible “contagion” of the British exit from the EU, the empowerment of nationalist movements throughout Europe demanding their own exit referenda, is the worst nightmare come true for green groups which had been counting on the bureaucratic authoritarianism of the European Union to bind democratically elected politicians to strong green policies.

Brexit: Environmentalists fear ‘bonfire’ of regulations designed to fight climate change and protect wildlife

Remain campaigners have argued that EU legislation has helped towards tackling water and air pollution, protect endangered species and imposed tough safeguards on the use of genetically modified crops and potentially dangerous chemicals.

Regulations set in place to help fight climate change and protect Britain’s wildlife may be destroyed following the Brexit result, top environmentalists have warned.

Reacting to the vote to leave the European Union, charity groups and climate change campaigners said the result could have a “devastating” effect on the UK environment, since more than 70 per cent of environmental safeguarding comes from European legislation.

Greenpeace UK executive director John Sauven said: “Many of the laws that make our drinking and bathing water safe, our air cleaner, our fishing industry more sustainable and our climate safer now hang by a thread… There is a very real fear that Cameron’s successor will come from the school that supports a bonfire of anti-pollution protections.”

Plastic should be considered toxic once it gets into the environment, MPs told

In an post-referendum statement, Friends of the Earth said the group could “no longer rely on the EU to protect our nature and habitats”, adding that clean beaches, air quality and bees were among the factors put at risk by potential loss of EU legislation.

Read more: http://www.independent.co.uk/environment/brexit-eu-environmentalists-fear-bonfire-regulations-designed-fight-climate-change-protect-wildlife-a7103001.html

My opinion is green groups are paying the price for putting all their eggs in one basket, for decades of ignoring the wishes of their membership, for relying on their influence with establishment politicians and agencies to fulfil their agenda. Now those establishment politicians and agencies are preoccupied with fighting for their own political survival, My guess is they are simply not taking calls from representatives of the increasingly irrelevant establishment green groups.

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June 25, 2016 8:39 pm

They put all their eggs in one Brexit.

Bryan A
Reply to  Jimmy Haigh
June 26, 2016 12:16 am

OMG we’re doomed. We’re going to Helena Handbasket. GB is obviously incapable of self governance and will fall into socioeconomic and socioenvironmental decline without the stringent EU overlording. Yea Right
/snark

Craig Loehle
Reply to  Bryan A
June 26, 2016 7:58 am

I’ve been to Helena and couldn’t even find a handbasket…

ralfellis
Reply to  Bryan A
June 26, 2016 9:44 am

Helena, the female Hell… ;-).
And ‘going to hell in a handbasket’ is a favourite Daily Mail idiom, that originalted in America, aparently.
R

Reply to  ralfellis
June 26, 2016 9:51 am

[GB is obviously incapable of self governance ..]
Just like Switserland and Norway?
Now GB has a after-party hangover but soon they start to realize their freedom and new opportunities. Wait and see.

Tom Judd
Reply to  Bryan A
June 26, 2016 5:52 pm

As Jerry Garcia and the Grateful Dead once advised in a song, “if you’re going to hell in a basket, you might as well enjoy the ride.”

emsnews
Reply to  Jimmy Haigh
June 26, 2016 9:35 am

Many laughs, top comment.

Reply to  Jimmy Haigh
June 26, 2016 6:29 pm

It amazes me that the “Greenies”never seem to understand that when-ever you are shown to tell lies constantly, it doesn’t take long before you stop listening to them.Once they would have been taken notice of,but not any more.They are no longer”Friends of the Earth”

jarthuroriginal
Reply to  Jimmy Haigh
June 27, 2016 4:49 am

Do you like
green eggs and ham
I do not like them,
Sam-I-am.
I do not like
green eggs and ham.

Texcis
Reply to  Jimmy Haigh
June 27, 2016 8:44 am

+99

Tom Halla
June 25, 2016 8:44 pm

The establishment and self-styled elites are having problems in both the US and the soon to be former EU. Trump and Sanders both ran against their parties regulars, and have had an effect we in the US are waiting to see. Johnson and Farage have done the same thing to the British political regulars, and any group that depends on influence with the regulars is metaphorically engaging in s***ting bricks and other uncomfortable and unlikely activities. I only hope Trump delivers on his promises here. The green blob deserves what it gets.

macawber
Reply to  Tom Halla
June 26, 2016 5:05 am

Ah, but be assured those bricks will be organic bricks and therefore useful to them!
On the more serious side, the Green Brigade should re-examine historical records. I can assure them that the UK led the world in the 50’s with their Clean Air Acts, and later with anti-acid rain regulation. It also had in place, and had far better performance, on water and wastewater regulation and quality. Many rivers in Continental Europe also had far worse river water quality. The Zoological Society, and UK individuals such as Attenborough and Scott had also already brought to our attention many wildlife problems. All this before the EU was started!

Goldrider
Reply to  Tom Halla
June 26, 2016 6:27 am

The end is near. George Will flounced out of the Republican Party yesterday . . .

Samuel C Cogar
Reply to  Goldrider
June 26, 2016 8:10 am

George Will is a “has been” of a journalist whose fame, notoriety and reader base has decreased significantly in the past decade or so ….. and his claim of opting out of the RP was little more than a futile attempt to get his name in the News in hope of acquiring a few anti-Trump, anti-Republican and partisan Democrats as fans of his commentary.
To opt out of the Republican Party, … George Will had to have changed his Voter Registration Status with the Secretary of State wherein he resides and/or with the County Clerk’s Office that oversees his voting precinct …….and GW has made no mention of doing said And until he states what his new Registration Status is, I have to consider his “claim” as being an untruth.
The RINOs, the lefty liberals and the partisan Democrats are not only frightened, but scared to death of a Trump Presidency simply because they all know it will surely “mess up the good thing they have had going for the past several decades”.

markl
Reply to  Samuel C Cogar
June 26, 2016 9:17 am

Samuel C Cogar commented: ” … George Will had to have changed his Voter Registration Status with the Secretary of State wherein he resides and/or with the County Clerk’s Office that oversees his voting precinct ……”
“His voter registration in Maryland has now changed from Republican to “unaffiliated,” PJ Media reported.”

Mike McMillan
Reply to  Goldrider
June 26, 2016 10:21 am

That may be enough to turn Maryland over to the Democrats.

TA
Reply to  Goldrider
June 26, 2016 3:38 pm

Will should take Romney with him when he goes. Good Riddance!

Reply to  Goldrider
June 26, 2016 8:13 pm

For every George Will leaving the GOP there will be ten Trumpers joining. Think LANDSLIDE!

MarkW
Reply to  Goldrider
June 27, 2016 7:40 am

At present, Hillary leads Trump by 10 points.

Reply to  Tom Halla
June 27, 2016 8:00 am

Tom Halla

Johnson and Farage have done the same thing to the British political regulars, and any group that depends on influence with the regulars is metaphorically engaging in s***ting bricks and other uncomfortable and unlikely activities … The green blob deserves what it gets.

I wouldn’t worry too much – Johnson’s made it clear he wants to keep the UK a part of Europe and work on improving the environment.
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/2016/06/26/i-cannot-stress-too-much-that-britain-is-part-of-europe–and-alw/

I cannot stress too much that Britain is part of Europe, and always will be. There will still be intense and intensifying European cooperation and partnership in a huge number of fields: the arts, the sciences, the universities, and on improving the environment.

Of course, whether you believe him is another matter.

Paul Westhaver
June 25, 2016 8:45 pm

Eric,
Any speculation as to the prospects of the UN caving in also?

MarkG
Reply to  Paul Westhaver
June 25, 2016 11:08 pm

The UN will stop being concerned with ‘Global Climate Warming Change’ when there’s no more money in it.
Hopefully Trump will defund the UN and kick it out of NYC.

Bryan A
Reply to  MarkG
June 26, 2016 12:17 am

Defund yes but keep it in NY where we can keep tabs on its doings

Gamecock
Reply to  MarkG
June 26, 2016 6:35 am

“keep your enemies closer.”

Samuel C Cogar
Reply to  MarkG
June 26, 2016 8:19 am

You can’t completely “defund” the UN if permitted to stay in NYC.
It would still cost NYC and/or NYC residents tens of million$ each and every year.
Lost taxes, fire and police protection, etc., etc.

TA
Reply to  MarkG
June 26, 2016 3:40 pm

The UN should move its headquarters to Brussels.

Reply to  MarkG
June 26, 2016 3:49 pm

And, the Diplomats & their staffs get to ignore the parking laws.

JimB
Reply to  MarkG
June 26, 2016 5:30 pm

Let them stay in NYC. Just tax the hell out of them, and cut our funding to about 5% instead of the over 30% (I think) currently. Lotta corruption there.

jarthuroriginal
Reply to  MarkG
June 27, 2016 4:52 am

Maybe he can acquire the UN building and turn it into condos.

Gabro
Reply to  MarkG
June 27, 2016 4:55 am

TA
June 26, 2016 at 3:40 pm
One hopes that the many EU buildings will soon be vacant there.

Reply to  Paul Westhaver
June 26, 2016 8:18 pm

We need to stop funding the UN and evict it from that fine building in New York city. The money we save could be invested in something worthwhile to make sure that New York does not suffer.
The UN could relocate to Brussels but let others pay for it.

June 25, 2016 8:49 pm

“the bureaucratic authoritarianism of the European Union”
what about the bureaucratic authoritarianism of the UNEP?
http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=2794991

Science or Fiction
Reply to  chaamjamal
June 26, 2016 2:33 am

Thanks for the link – great work – keep telling about it!
“It is well known that public sector bureaucracies without adequate constraint, oversight, audit, and accountability can devolve into self-serving organisms (Rose-Ackerman, 2008) (Gorodnichenko, 2007) (Romzek, 1987). The United Nations and its many agencies and programs are ultimately funded by taxpayers but they are too far removed from those taxpayers to be directly accountable to them. But who will discipline the UN? Agency theory ensures that no single country will venture to absorb the cost of disciplining the UN while gaining only pro-rata benefits (Jensen, 1976) (Eisenhardt, 1989). United Nations agencies and programs like the UNEP, IPCC, UNCFCCC, the Montreal Protocol, the Kyoto Protocol and their related frameworks, conventions and other bureaucratic artifacts are therefore allowed to operate under insufficient constraint, transparency, oversight, or discipline. Under these conditions they can morph into bureaucratic organisms that operate for their own needs and no longer serve the public interest (Bolton, 1994) (Halper, 1996) (Zaruk, 2014) (Zaruk, 2010).”

Reply to  chaamjamal
June 26, 2016 2:56 am

No ‘Nature – trial and error,’ no political – life on the littoral – Hammurabi consequences.
Instead, a ‘safe place’ environment for some… power w/out responsibility.
“The United Nations is financed mostly by taxpayers from a few donor countries
but the large and growing bureaucracy is too far removed from those taxpayers
to be directly accountable to them. It is run by unelected, unaccountable,
undisciplined, and incompetent bureaucrats. The organization’s size, budget, and
scope are unconstrained. The budget funding process provides perverse incentives
for these bureaucrats to increase the size and scope of their organization simply
by creating multitudes of agencies and programs, and by inventing problems and
environmental crises set on a global scale.”

MarkW
Reply to  beththeserf
June 27, 2016 7:43 am

The biggest problem is that those that aren’t paying for it, are setting the agenda.
We have a similar problem here in the US.

Science or Fiction
Reply to  chaamjamal
June 26, 2016 3:00 am

Via one of your references I found this article:
How corrupt is the United Nations?
I guess the answer to that is that due to lack of openness and transparency it is impossible to tell.
I suggest to split United Nations. Keep what is clearly in line with its charter – Article 1.1
“To maintain international peace and security, and to that end: to take effective collective measures for the prevention and removal of threats to the peace, and for the suppression of acts of aggression or other breaches of the peace, and to bring about by peaceful means, and in conformity with the principles of justice and international law, adjustment or settlement of international disputes or situations which might lead to a breach of the peace;”
Everything else should be left to survive on it´s own – just like all other political, idealistic or activist non-governmental organizations. I guess we are better of by cooperation between groups of countries than by the monstrous United Nations.
«The primary, the fundamental, the essential purpose of the United Nations is to keep peace. Everything it does which helps prevent World War III is good. Everything which does not further that goal, either directly or indirectly, is at best superfluous.»
— Henry Cabot Lodge, Jr.
“The UN was not created to take mankind to heaven, but to save humanity from hell.”
— Dag Hammarskjöld, Secretary-General from 1953 to 1961

Reply to  Science or Fiction
June 26, 2016 4:04 am

Because of UN failure to do its job we now have the worst Muslim problem the world has ever known.

Science or Fiction
Reply to  mikerestin
June 26, 2016 4:24 am

If United Nations had kept focus on their purpose it might have helped.
As a curiosity I was surprised to learn that we have two sets of human rights:
The Universal Declaration of Human Rights
And the:
Cairo Declaration on Human Rights in Islam
(Signed by 45 states):
ARTICLE 1:
(a) All human beings form one family whose members are united by their subordination to Allah and descent from Adam. All men are equal in terms of basic human dignity and basic obligations and responsibilities, without any discrimination on the basis of race, colour, language, belief, sex, religion, political affiliation, social status or other considerations. The true religion is the guarantee for enhancing such dignity along the path to human integrity.
(b) All human beings are Allah’s subjects, and the most loved by Him are those who are most beneficial to His subjects, and no one has superiority over another except on the basis of piety and good deeds.

Science or Fiction
Reply to  mikerestin
June 26, 2016 4:33 am

If United Nations had kept focus on their main mission it might have helped.
As a curiosity – I was surpliced to learn that we have two sets of Human Rights:
The Universal Declaration of Human Rights
And:
Cairo Declaration on Human Rights in Islam
(Signed by 45 states):
“ARTICLE 1:
(a) All human beings form one family whose members are united by their subordination to Allah and descent from Adam. All men are equal in terms of basic human dignity and basic obligations and responsibilities, without any discrimination on the basis of race, colour, language, belief, sex, religion, political affiliation, social status or other considerations. The true religion is the guarantee for enhancing such dignity along the path to human integrity.
(b) All human beings are Allah’s subjects, and the most loved by Him are those who are most beneficial to His subjects, and no one has superiority over another except on the basis of piety and good deeds.”

Science or Fiction
Reply to  mikerestin
June 26, 2016 4:45 am

If United Nations had kept focus on their main mission it might have helped.
As a curiosity – I was surprised to learn that we have two sets of Human Rights:
The Universal Declaration of Human Rights
And:
Cairo Declaration on Human Rights in Islam
(Signed by 45 states):
Check out article 1.
(By some peculiar reason my reply just disappeared when I tried to include copy of the first article.)

Science or Fiction
Reply to  Science or Fiction
June 26, 2016 7:28 am

Moderator – sorry for this mess – whenever things await moderation I can normally see that. This one just disappeared – feel free to clean up if you like.

Bryan A
Reply to  Science or Fiction
June 26, 2016 10:50 am

It probably contained a few select buzzwords that forced it into the moderation queue
But not onto the moderation bar-b-queue

MarkW
Reply to  Science or Fiction
June 27, 2016 7:44 am

Dump the UN altogether. Even the things that are within it’s charter are poorly run and often counter productive.

June 25, 2016 8:54 pm

This, of course, is precisely what many of us are hoping will come to pass! Instead of sticking to those environmental worries which many of us have, such as waste plastic in the oceans, these not-so green organisations have delved into political matters to the point where demi-gods such as Obama have felt happy to push for regulations far beyond their mandates. That this has displayed appalling ignorance of things which many of us learned as schoolkids has not mattered, and it seems that the majority of modern young folk are happy to swallow such garbage without any attempt to check the facts. Polar bears, glaciers, polar ice, global temperatures – anything will be swallowed if it gives an opportunity to get involved in a protest! Chickens coming home to roost? Well done, Nigel, Boris, and Donald!

simple-touriste
Reply to  Michael Lowe
June 25, 2016 9:55 pm

For most of the class, what the teacher says is morally white noise. They might respect him enough to avoid interfering with his emissions, but that’s all.
To have a semblance of effectiveness, teachers treat children as monkeys and teach tricks they can reproduce. But most children have no idea what they are doing.
At least it’s my experience, and the reason so many bright children are badly depressed (in the clinical meaning, not the today I feel sad meaning).

Reply to  simple-touriste
June 25, 2016 10:02 pm

There is a short book that explains it very clearly, “The Curse of the High IQ” by Aaron Clarey. Every one of my friends with the high IQ has the same depression problem. One learns to cope with it without pills, though.

Gentle Tramp
Reply to  simple-touriste
June 26, 2016 4:49 am

I’m afraid the green “brain washing” of our school kids (already starting at kindergarten) works very well in most cases, because it is not just “one” incompetent teacher preaching this “gloom and doom” nonsense but nearly all teachers do so…
One can test this bad influence when asking teenagers, at the beginning of their first science lessons, what they think which the most abundant and most dangerous gases in the atmosphere are. The most frequent answer to both questions will be “CO2” since about 20 years. If they are told the truth (without CO2 there would be no life on Earth and it is a trace gas of only 0,04% in dry air), most teens will look quite disbelieving and really confused.
Talking of depressed bright children: I am convinced that a significant part of this depressions comes from the endless and constant scare-mongering by school teachers about the coming anthropogenic climate disaster, the menacing nuclear danger and all the other alleged human sins against nature which will destroy our planet soon…
I know of a true case where a young intelligent girl of about 17 did commit suicide because she believed all that green scare-mongering and didn’t want to live further in such a bleak future…

Samuel C Cogar
Reply to  simple-touriste
June 26, 2016 8:50 am

Alexander Feht said:

Every one of my friends with the high IQ has the same depression problem.

Sorry bout having to tell you this but, ….“DUH”, more likely it is your perceived “depression” problems that is responsible for your “circle of friends” …… rather than it being your perceived high IQ.
“YES”, perceived high IQ, …… because iffen ya’ll were as “smart” or as “intelligent” as you think you are …. then you would surely know that one’s intelligence IS NOT a cause of any diagnosed “depression”.
Depression is a “mental” problem that is self-inflicted ….. and therefore has to be self-corrected. Medications will only “mask” the effects of depression …. but are not a cure for said.

Samuel C Cogar
Reply to  simple-touriste
June 26, 2016 9:11 am

Gentle Tramp said:

it is not just “one” incompetent teacher preaching this “gloom and doom” nonsense but nearly all teachers do so

You got that right, ….. and the reason is a simple one.
I would say that 80+% of all currently employed Public School Teachers and Principals are a product of the Public School System of the 1980’s, 1990’s or the 2000’s … wherein they were taught that same “gloom and doom” nonsense ….. along with a required “commitment” to teach “it” as a prerequisite to their receiving a Teaching Certificate along with their Diploma.

MarkW
Reply to  simple-touriste
June 27, 2016 7:47 am

My mother earned a doctorate in early childhood education. One of her classes was about teaching problem children. The biggest chapter in the book dealt with controlling the smart ones.

spetzer86
Reply to  Michael Lowe
June 26, 2016 6:18 am

The kids aren’t being taught to think anymore, as that’s now considered dangerous and unproductive. They’re being taught to react in a predictable manner to known and new stimuli. The more predictable, the better. All about being good Global Citizens and following the “correct” leadership: http://invisibleserfscollar.com/

Goldrider
Reply to  spetzer86
June 26, 2016 6:29 am

Actually, I’ve yet to see anyone under 30 who can take their eyes off their phone . . .

Bryan A
Reply to  spetzer86
June 26, 2016 10:55 am

For that matter most everyone with a cell phone tends to be married to it to a certain extent

simple-touriste
Reply to  spetzer86
June 27, 2016 3:20 pm

You rarely teach people to think or to love sports. Either they do or they don’t.
You give methods and perspective, this is all.
At the end of day, only someone who doesn’t want to think buys the Roosevelt saved the economy with big spendings. (BTW, I have learnt that “fact” and I knew what to write during the exam.)

ossqss
June 25, 2016 8:55 pm

The tme for science, not embellishing every thunderstorm, is upon us!
Hip hip Hooorrrraaay!
I am in!
Can anyone say establishment pukes, go away?

Reality Observer
June 25, 2016 8:56 pm

They made a big mistake by putting their bird-chop-o-matics all over the countryside.
Those pictures are the best things to show to anyone not a true believer (or making money off of the boondoggle).

Leon Brozyna
June 25, 2016 9:02 pm

Now is the summer of our discontent, as losers on both sides of the pond throw a hissy hit and try to have the results thrown out … in the UK, those that lost are trying to get the results thrown out by changing the rules and calling for a second referendum … what’s that? keep voting until the results you like come in? sorry kiddies, that’s not the way it works … and in the US, republican delegates are trying to change long established rules to the nominating convention that delegates not be bound to the voting results on the first round, all in the hopes of stopping Trump.
This must be the era of poor losers … if at first you don’t succeed, change the rules and try again, and again, and again, until the desired results are obtained.

Reply to  Leon Brozyna
June 25, 2016 9:46 pm

It’s like they say, “green on the outside, red on the inside.” These people will never stop voluntarily. Just more long walks to undermine western civ., liberty, and self-determination (such as they are). The financial house of cards and related asset price manipulations will fall and cease, painfully, with this setback to their central planning, and those yet to come.

Ray Boorman
Reply to  Leon Brozyna
June 25, 2016 11:07 pm

Yes Leon, that is the s.o.p. of the green marxists & their fellow travellers.

Leonard Lane
Reply to  Ray Boorman
June 25, 2016 11:26 pm

Exactly Leon and Ray. Recall the old Communist mantra which is part and parcel of all leftists and many of the elites, donor class, Big Bankers, etc; And that is :What’s mine is mine and what’s yours is negotiable.”
Well, the radical leftists usually win with such negotiating rules, but with Brexit and Mr Trump they have had some setbacks. Thank goodness.

MarkG
Reply to  Leon Brozyna
June 25, 2016 11:11 pm

“what’s that? keep voting until the results you like come in? sorry kiddies, that’s not the way it works ”
Clearly you haven’t been following EU referendums. That’s precisely how it works. If the people vote the wrong way, the EU forces them to have another referendum and another and another and another, until they finally vote ‘right’.
They’re now trying to force that on the people of Britain, but many of them realize it’s precisely what’s happening, and probably won’t fall for it.

Editor
Reply to  MarkG
June 26, 2016 12:14 am

Clearly you haven’t been following EU referendums. That’s precisely how it works. If the people vote the wrong way, the EU forces them to have another referendum and another and another and another, until they finally vote ‘right’.

Welcome to the “never-end-um”.

TA
Reply to  Leon Brozyna
June 26, 2016 4:00 pm

“This must be the era of poor losers”
This is the era of mass delusion for about half of the Western world’s population. The other half is going to have its work cut out for it keeping the Loons on the “straight and narrrow.”

markl
June 25, 2016 9:02 pm

It’s time the world wakes up to the damage against humanity by so called “Green” demands. The “burn down the village to save it” mentality is pervasive with many environmental causes. You reap what you sow.

simple-touriste
June 25, 2016 9:22 pm

Although some crazy regulations (and projects) might go (like limiting the power of some home appliance), but I fear the people have been fed too much disinfo for too long to make such a difference overnight.

John Harmsworth
Reply to  simple-touriste
June 25, 2016 9:35 pm

My fear also. The eco-Socialists are endlessly over engaged, while the education system is run by uncritical leftists. Only some sort of watershed “loss of credibility” event can shut them up.

simple-touriste
Reply to  John Harmsworth
June 25, 2016 9:46 pm

Does the “Immediately after brexit, Nigel Farage admits he made an impossible promise” claim (except he did not admit there is an impossibility and he never made the (alleged) “promise”) debunking destroy the credibility of “journalists”?

Reply to  John Harmsworth
June 25, 2016 9:53 pm

The collapse in 2007-08 was that event. They just pretend it wasn’t and create “academic reasearch” that says so. Almost ten years on, and interest rates near zero, but the economies are supposedly performing well. As with Brexit claims, they (central bankers and corrupt governments they enable) have created much instability and then threaten to tip it over if some population engages in some rude act od democracy. The English will get it good and hard. Not for them, but for all the others watching.

Reply to  John Harmsworth
June 25, 2016 9:55 pm

Sorry – Welsh, Scots, and N. Irish too.

rogerknights
Reply to  John Harmsworth
June 26, 2016 11:44 am

“As with Brexit claims, they (central bankers and corrupt governments they enable) have created much instability and then threaten to tip it over if some population engages in some rude act od democracy. ”
Britain was the first domino, pushed by reality, but it will get the blame from all the downstream dominoes.

Felflames
June 25, 2016 9:23 pm

To paraphrase.
Sow the wind, reap the storm.
There comes a point where the general populace will no longer tolerate intrusions into their lives.
The green groups may find very shortly that their calls for prosecutions of sceptics backfires , and they are the ones being called to account.

Reply to  Felflames
June 25, 2016 9:52 pm

The Greens act as if the decision to leave the EU means Britons will just start pissing and crapping in their water supply just because there is no longer an EU nanny watching and saying “No.”
Dumb, beyond belief.
The Greens are the real petulant children in the room. Cry babies, in fact.

simple-touriste
Reply to  Joel O’Bryan
June 25, 2016 10:05 pm

“Okay, listen up! We have the obligation to make this thing right and tell people what is and what isn’t safe to eat. We are the USDA! Without us people would be eating dirt and chairs!”
South Park Season 18 Episode 2: “Gluten Free Ebola”

MarkG
Reply to  Joel O’Bryan
June 25, 2016 11:13 pm

Leaving the EU means the Greens will need to get their BS regulations through the British Parliament, with politicians who are at least somewhat beholden to the opinions of the British people, not push them through unelected burrowcrats in Brussels who’ll then tell the British Parliament they must impose said regulations or else.

Reply to  Joel O’Bryan
June 25, 2016 11:26 pm

The UK needs to go further. Historically, much much further.
Never, ever let watermelon politicians subjugate UK citizens to an un-elected continental governance ever again.
Write your own British/ Scottish/Irish Bill of Rights that every Scot, Brit, and Irishman can stand behind with his life to save his family from tyranny.
The time is now.

mwhite
Reply to  Joel O’Bryan
June 26, 2016 2:05 am

“Remain campaigners have argued that EU legislation has helped towards tackling water and air pollution, protect endangered species and imposed tough safeguards on the use of genetically modified crops and potentially dangerous chemicals.”
All true. Elected politicians gave away those powers to the European bureaucracy.

Reply to  Joel O’Bryan
June 26, 2016 4:14 am

Dr. John Snow, call your office.

Brian Jackson
Reply to  Felflames
June 26, 2016 2:05 am

The correct quote is “sow the wind and reap the whirlwind”.

Reply to  Felflames
June 26, 2016 6:50 pm

They may find out very soon.The DemocRATS calling for RICO are now $hitting them-selves,because if they are forced to court,they won’t be able to control the questions that will be asked.

June 25, 2016 9:33 pm

Bonfire of the Vanities!!! I’ll bring the marshmellows!

Reply to  Aphan
June 26, 2016 4:12 am

I’ll bring the matches!

Greg Cavanagh
Reply to  A.D. Everard
June 26, 2016 7:32 pm

I’ll bring the petrol.

June 25, 2016 9:36 pm

I congratulate the British for striking another blow (just one of countless since 1054 AD) for self-determination of a free people.
In 1781, the American colony’s armies under George Washington had pushed King George’s Army back to the sea and forced their final surrender at Yorktown, Pennsylvania. Freedom… yes.
From there It required over 6 years before the free colonies found themselves a nation worth keeping. and 4 more for the Bill of Rights in 1791 to ensure their freedom from a tyrannical government.
When the US Constitution was finally written in 1787, Benjamin Franklin, a man who had spent much time in London and Paris was asked, “What have you wrought?”
“A Republic, if you can keep it.” was Franklin’s recorded reply.
Now I realize the UK is a parliamentary democracy-monarchy, But still I ask our UK friends here at WUWt the similar question posed to Benjamin Franklin those 229 years ago.
“What Britain, have you wrought with Leave the EU, I ask?”

Reply to  Joel O'Bryan
June 25, 2016 10:00 pm

I suppose after a bit of refresher, the Magna Carta was signed in 1215 AD at Runymede. The Magna Carta was the true starting point of a Western-style political system of self-rule of a free people.. A self-rule the Green Socialists despise.
2016 June 23, is a significant point in that history. Congratulations by fellow freemen and freewomen in your demand for self-determination.

Chris Riley
Reply to  Joel O’Bryan
June 25, 2016 10:31 pm

Exactly seventy six summers ago, at an enormous cost, the British struck a historic blow to a different brand of socialist.

Reply to  Joel O’Bryan
June 25, 2016 11:18 pm

I made that point 2 weeks ago here at WUWT, before the Brexit vote.
Would the RAF of summer 1940 been proud or sad to see their nation ruled by an unanswerable government from the Continent?
Obvious. Their summer 40 sacrifices with their lives against Hitler’s Luftwaffe were to keep Brittania a free nation of free people.

Gamecock
Reply to  Joel O’Bryan
June 26, 2016 6:47 am

Having won the Battle of Britain, Britain promptly fired Hugh Dowding, the leader of the “so few.”
5 years later, having “won the war,” they fired Winston Churchill.
Perfidious Albion.

Crispin in Waterloo
Reply to  Joel O’Bryan
June 26, 2016 9:07 am

Always something to broaden your mind to be found on WUWT. If we are referring to things as far back as the Magna Carta, oppose the tyranny of the grammatically incorrect:
“Congratulations by fellow freemen and freewomen in your demand for self-determination.”
“Freemen” is a gender-neutral term. If you wanted to have a gendered version it would be, “Congratulations by fellow freeweamen and freewomen in your demand for self-determination.”
Wea- means male, wo- means female, and ‘men’ means people. English also has a gender-neutral word for the singluar of ‘cattle’, not that anyone remembers what it is.

Leon Brozyna
Reply to  Joel O'Bryan
June 25, 2016 10:02 pm

Yorktown, Virginia, just north of Newport News, was the scene of the undoing of Lord Cornwallis.

Reply to  Leon Brozyna
June 25, 2016 10:28 pm

You are correct sir. my bad remembrance of Hgh School history.
Yorktown, Virginia. It was.

JPeden
Reply to  Joel O'Bryan
June 25, 2016 10:47 pm

Joel O’Bryan
June 25, 2016 at 9:36 pm
“But still I ask our UK friends here at WUWt the similar question posed to Benjamin Franklin those 229 years ago.
“What Britain, have you wrought with Leave the EU, I ask?”
America. It seems obvious….Between Totalitarianism and Individual Freedom, it’s never over, at least until we are all wiped out by Nature aka The Infinite Universe…which means it’s never over.

Reply to  JPeden
June 25, 2016 10:56 pm

You fight then not for yourself, but for your children and grandchildren.
President Obama is trying to make me accept comfort and riches, so that my grandchildren will be his slaves.
Fuck Obama and the Greens.

Dodgy Geezer
Reply to  Joel O'Bryan
June 26, 2016 4:36 am

…“What Britain, have you wrought with Leave the EU, I ask?”…
The Brits have no problem with a ‘free Parliamentary Monarchy’. We quite like our Royal Family,

Monna Manhas
Reply to  Dodgy Geezer
June 26, 2016 10:11 am

As a Canadian, I have no problem with our Royal Family either.

TA
Reply to  Dodgy Geezer
June 26, 2016 4:13 pm

As an American, I have no problem with the British Royal Family, either. 🙂
Long Live the Queen!
Our little spat was a long time ago, and we have made up for it in spades ever since, by being steadfast allies.
If Britian needs the U.S., we will be there. You can count on it.
That is, in about seven more months. Until that time, all bets are off as to what our president might do, but the American people are still with you all the way.

AndyG55
June 25, 2016 9:57 pm

“Plastic should be considered toxic once it gets into the environment, ”
I’ve often wondered by WWF or Greenpeace isn’t going out in boats to clean up the “island of plastics”
No money to be made from it, is my guess.

simple-touriste
Reply to  AndyG55
June 25, 2016 11:08 pm

Not just island, continent.
They would need to bring a large net and then do some “selective sorting” as we say (“tri sélectif”).

markl
Reply to  simple-touriste
June 26, 2016 8:54 am

simple-touriste commented: “….They would need to bring a large net and then do some “selective sorting”…”
A large net would be useless as most of the plastic is eroded into micro particles and sinks just below the surface where it becomes non nutritional food for the lower organisms. The correct way to stop this type of pollution is to keep it from entering the oceans.

jorgekafkazar
Reply to  AndyG55
June 25, 2016 11:48 pm

The “Island” is extremely diffuse particulates, maybe 1# of material per acre.

Chris Riley
June 25, 2016 10:17 pm

At the minimum we can confidently say that Hayek’s ” Road to Serfdom” has run into a unexpected and serious construction delay. We can hope the vote in the UK on Thursday will go down in history as not the “beginning of the end” but the “end of the beginning” of the struggle against the worldwide P.C.-NWO assault on individual sovereignty.

Dodgy Geezer
Reply to  Chris Riley
June 26, 2016 4:38 am

The Brits are quite used to leading this sort of thing…and standing alone for a bit while the rest of the world catches up…

James Francisco
Reply to  Dodgy Geezer
June 26, 2016 10:32 am

Dodgy Geezer. I have wondered for a long time what would have happened if we Americans and others would have stood with you British and the French against the Axis powers from the beginning. I think there was a good chance we could have prevented WW2.

Christopher Hanley
June 25, 2016 10:28 pm

“Environmentalists fear ‘bonfire’ of regulations designed to fight climate change [sic] and protect wildlife …”.
==========================
Linking the ‘fight against climate change™’ with protecting wildlife is typically unscrupulous green sophistry, the two are mutually exclusive when it comes to windmills.

TA
Reply to  Christopher Hanley
June 26, 2016 4:17 pm

Yeah, I don’t think you can call yourself a wildlife protector if you promote building windmills.

TA
Reply to  TA
June 26, 2016 4:50 pm

And another thing about the windmills killing birds:
A few commenters expressed the thought when this was mentioned previously, that complaining about windmills killing birds was not an effective argument.
I don’t think that is true. My personal experience is, I was unaware that an estimated 573,000 birds were killed by windmills in 2013. I learned this about two months ago and was *shocked* at the numbers. I had no idea they were even near that high.
I think most people would be shocked at the numbers, if they were aware of them. How could you not be shocked? I think the people should be told the truth about the birds, and what is happening to them in order to supply humans their electricity.
The People should be told that windmills are *optional* not essential, to our future. That there are other, better ways to supply electricity that don’t kill birds. If their leaders can’t see that, throw them out of office and get new leaders who can.

Gabro
Reply to  TA
June 26, 2016 4:55 pm

Not just birds but also bats.
Crop-eating insects rejoice!

Gabro
Reply to  Christopher Hanley
June 26, 2016 4:26 pm

Also certain types of solar.

Reply to  Gabro
June 27, 2016 1:12 am

According to a report by Ferroni & Hopkirk, a solar panel in it’s 25 yr lifetime produces less energy than it’s production costs.
see:
https://collapseofindustrialcivilization.files.wordpress.com/2016/05/ferroni-y-hopkirk-2016-energy-return-on-energy-invested-eroei-for-photo.pdf

June 25, 2016 10:44 pm

With all the joy, do not forget the lesson of the EU.
When all the levers of power are concentrated at the center, partisans and extremists have a target.
They will always and inevitably work, scheme, and lie to gain control of them. And once those levers are in their hands, they will use them to ring down tyranny on all.
The American Founders showed their deep wisdom in distributing the powers of government among independent branches. Distributed, independent, and, dare I say it, jealous, powers are the guarantee of freedom.
A Europe of independent self-protective democratic republics of free people is the best and only hope of a better future.
The battle joined in the Greek city-states versus the Persian Empire. The free against the enslaved. It continues to today. Don’t lose sight. We celebrate a desperate battle and a razor-thin victory for freedom.

TA
Reply to  Pat Frank
June 26, 2016 4:30 pm

Pat Frank wrote: “They will always and inevitably work, scheme, and lie to gain control of them. And once those levers are in their hands, they will use them to ring down tyranny on all.”
Which is what has happened to the Western world over the last 30 years. The Socialists/Totalitarians have gotten their hands on *all* the levers of power in Western society, and are using them to push their Totalitarian agenda. And its working, as they have convinced about half the population that they have the formula for the future.
And there is the added complication of BIG MONEY on the side of the socialists, which gives them an option to buy the levers of power as well.
We have a huge fight on our hands with the Socialists/Totalitarians and it has barely gotten started yet. Brexit is a good start, but it is just one battle of many to come. Get yourself prepared for the debate.
The Left is not going away quietly. But neither is the Right, and we have an advantage over them: We have the facts on our side, on every issue.

Reply to  TA
June 26, 2016 4:52 pm

TA, see Alan Kors’ talk:

don penman
June 25, 2016 10:45 pm

The green coalition running the British government are talking about voting against the will of the British people and remaining in Europe. It could be that we are facing a Prague spring in Britain if we are then the world should take notice that green policies cannot be refused.

Reply to  don penman
June 25, 2016 10:52 pm

That would match up to the US President Obama trying to engineer a domestic crisis so he may serve a 3rd term. The voters’ vote in the watermelons’ view needs to be silenced. No matter which side of the Atlantic you are on.

June 25, 2016 10:48 pm

The Clean Air Act 1956 was introduced in the UK long before the EU came into existence. We are quite capable of looking after our own environment without interference from the bureaucratic EU.

Billy Liar
Reply to  Phillip Bratby
June 26, 2016 7:55 am

The SMOKE NUISANCE ABATEMENT (METROPOLIS) BILL 1853 was introduced in the UK over 100 years before the Clean Air Act.
http://hansard.millbanksystems.com/lords/1853/aug/16/smoke-nuisance-abatement-metropolis-bill

June 25, 2016 10:50 pm

Our Green Betters can take heart from South Australia and Tasmania, far from the EU. It is possible to be a destructive and wasteful green basket-case all on one’s own.
No need to go on incinerating American forests in English power stations to conform to some EU directive. One can wreck local while thinking global.

Ex-expat Colin
June 25, 2016 11:02 pm

Article 50 of the Lisbon Treaty sets out how an EU country might voluntarily Leave the union.
The majority voted for Brexit or Leave the EU and as such is a rejection of the Treaty and any others. I as a UK voter for Brexit would now wish to see a calm clean break from nanny EU. The main items which Leave voters wanted can be summarised:
1. UK control over new law making and over our courts
2. Cancellation of our EU contributions, with more spending on the NHS and repeal of VAT on fuel out of the cancelled contributions we do not get back
3. A new fair system of immigration control, delivering lower overall numbers
4. Replacement of lost EU spending by UK spending paid for out of saved contributions we do get back
5. Maintenance of trade, tourism and other regular contacts through negotiation of the best deal for future relations
http://johnredwoodsdiary.com/2016/06/26/getting-on-with-brexit/

Reply to  Ex-expat Colin
June 25, 2016 11:10 pm

Ex-ex,
That’s just a start. The Greens will not rest until you submit to their will. And as Charlatans they will lie. The Greens acting as mermaids calling you to the rocks in a gale, they will seduce you to steer toward their direction.
Enact a set of unalienable rights you must.

Ex-expat Colin
Reply to  Joel O’Bryan
June 25, 2016 11:54 pm

joelobryan:
Yes..we have a long way to go and need to strike down all of the Climate Change Act and its related teet suckers. We have 2 houses of a Administration that are wholly vested interests to the detriment of the people. As such its going to be heavy going I think.
We shall see…and await common sense to come through?

View from the Solent
Reply to  Joel O’Bryan
June 26, 2016 3:09 am

joelobryan, as you pointed out earlier, we have the Magna Carta for our “unalienable rights”. Plus 800 years of legal precedent in the form of decisions by our Courts. Which will no longer be superseded by a remote so-called justice system.

Reply to  Ex-expat Colin
June 25, 2016 11:55 pm

And engaging more with the rest of the world through trade on a fair playing field.

Gamecock
Reply to  Ex-expat Colin
June 26, 2016 8:55 am

2. Cancellation of our EU contributions, with more spending on the NHS and repeal of VAT on fuel out of the cancelled contributions we do not get back
4. Replacement of lost EU spending by UK spending paid for out of saved contributions we do get back
=================================
Corrupt local government is only a little better than corrupt distant government. Just let the people keep their money. Get government out of their lives.

Tom in Florida
Reply to  Gamecock
June 26, 2016 2:52 pm

That is the problem. Progressives believe that the government owns everything including all the money and only through their goodness do they allow people to have some of it.

Yirgach
Reply to  Ex-expat Colin
June 26, 2016 11:01 am

As I understand it, that was a non-binding referendum in Britain.
Therefore it takes an act of Parliament, triggering Article 50 of the EU’s Lisbon Treaty to start the withdrawal.
Will that ever happen and when??

BoyfromTottenham
June 25, 2016 11:21 pm

Hi from Oz. So Greenp*ss says:
“Many of the laws that make our drinking and bathing water safe, our air cleaner, our fishing industry more sustainable and our climate safer now hang by a thread…”
As an ex-POM, I remember that before Britain joined the EU the drinking water was safe, the air was clean (thanks to the phasing out high sulphur coal for domestic heating in the early 60s), and the fishing industry was thriving (before stupid EU regulations made it economically ‘unsustainable’ and allowed other EU nations to strip-mine our rich fisheries). So Greenp*ss evidently still knows how to use Disinformation, but maybe now the electorate won’t buy it and said so last week. Well done, voters.

Reply to  BoyfromTottenham
June 26, 2016 7:28 am

Boyfrom: I have had Greenpeace come to the door collecting donations and on two occasions have caught them in very specific, easily checked, lies that came within my own area of knowledge. The earnest, bearded young men at the door, naturally had no idea that they were uttering untruths – these were just the selling points handed down for that week or month.
They just don’t care about the truth. They need scare stories to sustain the bloated, self-sustaining organisations that they’ve become. They did useful work in raising consciousness in the 1960s and 70s but that work was done, and now they really serve no function any more – does anyone actually want dirty air, dirty water, allowing endangered species to go extinct, fishing to exhaust stocks, etc.?
Patrick Moore is right, Greenpeace and all its various clones wear the cloak of environmentalism but they are acting to promote an anti-human agenda as articulated by the Club of Rome.

jorgekafkazar
June 25, 2016 11:51 pm

The Greens lie, and they lie, and they lie, and they lie. . .

Reply to  jorgekafkazar
June 26, 2016 12:14 am

+100,000,000,,000,000,000,000.00

MartinR
June 25, 2016 11:57 pm

When I lived in the UK, the bonfire on Guy Fawkes Night was a cool thing 🙂 Us kids would be enlisted to round up as many logs and sticks as we could find! Throwing Climate Alarmism on the bonfire this November would be cool 🙂

Marcus
June 26, 2016 1:28 am

Just think of all the fine feathered friends this Brexit will save !!

June 26, 2016 1:49 am

Britain votes to exit EU. A Limerick on the teakettle revolt.
Item: EU bureaucrats hold off banning high power small appliances such as electric teakettles until just after the British referendum to stay in or leave EU.
With bureaucrats wisdom uncanning;
electrical teakettles banning.
T’was the last straw for Brits,
so they did call it quits.
End EU one world order planning? https://lenbilen.com/2016/06/24/britain-votes-to-exit-eu-a-limerick-on-the-teakettle-revolt/

Gerry, England
June 26, 2016 3:32 am

‘Greenpeace UK executive director John Sauven said: “ …..our fishing industry more sustainable…’
Would these be the same laws that see more fish thrown back dead than our landed? And that have seen ‘Our’ fishing industry in the UK destroyed after the EU illegally declared fish as a common resource? The Maastricht Treaty finally closed the fish snatch loophole. Fish stocks are best managed locally where people know what they are doing not by some gauleiter in Brussels. Norway is doing just fine with its fish stocks.

June 26, 2016 3:58 am

Music to my ears.
The Green idea of fishing sustainability is no fishing industry. Maybe now too Britain can dredge its rivers properly. And did anyone notice suddenly protecting wildlife is back on their list? Didn’t seem to be there when they were drowning small furry creatures in the flooded meadows of Somerset, and where has it ever been shown in regard to bird dicing windmills littering the landscape?
Good riddance, I say, to the lot of them.
May the bonfires be big and bright everywhere.

Graham
June 26, 2016 4:21 am

Hopefully that bonfire will spread Down Under to spell the demise of abominable alarmist agencies like the Climate Council.
April 2016: “Endless summer” squawks the Climate Council.
https://www.climatecouncil.org.au/endless-summer-australias-hottest-march-on-record
But not a peep this weekend about coldest days on record.
http://blogs.news.com.au/heraldsun/andrewbolt/index.php/heraldsun/comments/coldest_june_day_on_record_but_theres_no_scaremongering_though/

June 26, 2016 4:26 am

I think the big thing here is that the world has now been shown there are more people against green nonsense and dictatorial policies than the Greens and their handlers would ever want known. Dissent is popular, not rare. Those people thinking they were on their own with their doubts and their questions will be more willing to speak up now.
Watch the avalanche, it ought to be a beauty. 🙂

Brian of Oz
June 26, 2016 4:28 am

Michael Rimmer and of course Hitler would have been very disappointed by this result! Who remembers Michael Rimmer???

Dodgy Geezer
June 26, 2016 4:34 am

…Brexit: Greenpeace, FOE fears a “Bonfire” of Green Regulations…
That’s funny. I welcome a “Bonfire” of Green Regulations…

Doug Huffman
June 26, 2016 5:01 am

Bonfire, bonnefyre, quite coincidentally I was reading about the Midsummer traditions.
TRUMP/BREXIT nationalism ignites the Bonfire of the Vanities of environmentalism, while the ‘weepers’ (It. piagnoni) cry inadequate crocodile tears.

Bruce Cobb
June 26, 2016 5:05 am

The Greenie’s pretense at being interested in the environment is laughably transparent. They use it as a smokescreen for their real interest; authoritarianism.

Stephen Greene
June 26, 2016 5:09 am

How does one make climate safer?! How do they prove that they have made climate safer!?
This alone shows that the EU AND the UN are Bureaucracies that cannot be trusted and need to go or greatly modified!

June 26, 2016 5:25 am

The green NGO’s haven’t considered that they are part of the problem that has led to their worst case scenario – they were the ones pushing for elitist authoritarian rules & the public is sick of it & collectively flipping them the bird & saying we’ll take our chances with something different as the current situation is unacceptable.
With just a little self-examination, they should be able to see this – that they are their own worst enemy for environmental protection, if that is in fact their goal ( vs what appears to be actually left wing political goals under the guise of environmental protection).

Reply to  Jeff L
June 26, 2016 8:51 am

Similarly from a previous post,
Naomi Klein doesn’t consider that it’s the Climatists that are the “racists”,
not everyone else

Graphite
June 26, 2016 5:29 am

Gotta love this bit: “our fishing industry more sustainable . . .”
As anyone who has seen Brexit: The Movie would know, the EU has stuffed the British fishing industry. And no doubt many more industries besides.
On a sideline topic, if a nation with some 60 to 70 million population such as the UK can’t survive (according the the Remainers) without belonging to a larger organisation, how is it that small countries like New Zealand (population four million) survive and thrive on their own. Virtually all of the countries which figure in the top ten of most desirable places to live have populations in the single-figure millions.

Gregory
June 26, 2016 5:35 am

England just showed the importance of smaller, local government. Force government to be accountable, not appointed bureaucrats far away.

James Bull
Reply to  Gregory
June 26, 2016 5:50 am

Much “local government” has been hamstrung by EU and central government regulation that makes it as near pointless as it can be. You cannot take part in a debate on some local issue if you have “an interest” in it even if that was what you were elected for?
James Bull

June 26, 2016 5:35 am

Some guy once wrote along the line that, “By their fruit, you shall know them.”

Gregory
June 26, 2016 5:37 am

P.S. Stop making the claims Trump was somehow the source of this. You are grasping.

Doug Huffman
Reply to  Gregory
June 26, 2016 6:03 am

??? TRUMP was certainly not the source, no more than the kindling is the source of the bonfire, but TRUMP is certainly an anti-establishment nationalist pro-BREXIT, Bonfire of the Vanities of the environmentalists.

David Schofield
June 26, 2016 5:40 am

Watch this space. The remainers have a petition going with 2 million signatures to do the referendum again. Until they get the result they want I guess. That’s their understanding of democracy for you.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-politics-eu-referendum-36629324

Patrick MJD
Reply to  David Schofield
June 26, 2016 5:56 am

The alarmist media are all over this like a rash. Apparently, the person who created the petition did so in jest.

Bruce Cobb
Reply to  David Schofield
June 26, 2016 6:02 am

Much of the push for Bremain was from the younger crowd, full of brainless emotion and zeal. But traditionally, they are the ones less apt to actually vote, having more important things to do like Partying, Texting every 5 minutes, and Chattering, just to name a few.
But wait, what happened? We lost? Waaaaaah! No fair! You’re just old stupid people who don’t care about our futures! This is our world now, old stupid people. And we make up the rules, because we “Care About the Planet”, and you don’t.

RobbertBobbert GDQ
Reply to  Bruce Cobb
June 26, 2016 8:22 pm

Bruce,
The poor loser reaction by The Remain crew is priceless and one of the best sooky sooky la la comments comes from a Facebook posting by Hermione H.
…Watching an interview with Brexit voters, who are shocked that we are out and that David Cameron has resigned, which in itself proves why the decision should never have been put in the general public’s hands…
I know, I know Hermione. You just cannot trust the general Public to vote the proper way and in a manner approved by the socially and intellectually superiors.
Do not invite any of them to your next dinner party. That will show them! At that party you and the right thinking people can discuss how the democratic process would be greatly improved if ‘Certain Classes’ of people were discouraged from being a part of the democratic process or even if The Democratic process is a failed experiment that needs replacing.
You will find some sympathy for that action in the bitter vengeful tears of the Remain Wake. Comforted by their Big Green Associates.

jazznick1
Reply to  David Schofield
June 26, 2016 6:52 am

David
This is a totally bollox story – read all about it here.
http://www.breitbart.com/london/2016/06/26/questions-raised-3m-remain-petition-activists-encourage-foreign-signatories/
Site was hacked and a ‘bot’ inserted to create fake signatories at a rate that only just enabled the site to cope.
Even the code itself has been located now. Totally bogus – BBC ran with it as did all the MSM and they all now look even more compromised than they were already !

markl
Reply to  jazznick1
June 26, 2016 9:08 am

The the US online petitions are not considered valid. Only actual signatures count.

Reply to  jazznick1
June 26, 2016 6:17 pm

Jazznick1 – Thanks for that. What a laugh!

James Bull
June 26, 2016 5:46 am

What do you mean they won’t get backing for bird and bat choppers, anti drainage channel dredging which caused floods that drowned so much wildlife and the throwing dead fish back to keep in the “quota”.
How will we survive?
James Bull

June 26, 2016 6:06 am

@James Bull: Exactly. there now is a chance to gauge public opinion and abandon all ‘renewable’ energy and forget about climate change and concentrate on saving birds from bird choppers, getting industrial costs down yet still caring about the lesser spotted watermelon as an endangered species in need of help, now its natural habitat of the EU gravy train is denied it.
I think a zoo is the optimal solution.
And that is of course what scares the pants off the globalists: If Britain can throw two fingers at the received wisdom of the Virtue signalling Left, it might start a fashion.

Bruce Cobb
June 26, 2016 6:07 am

I’d call it a “Bonfire of the Inanities”.

June 26, 2016 6:30 am

Brexit: Environmentalists fear ‘bonfire’ of regulations designed to fight climate change and protect wildlife

A “bonfire of regulations”? Sign me up!
Reminds me of a news story back in the ’80s about a man who got on every junk mailing list he could manage, so companies would send him catalogs. He burned them in his wood stove to heat his house.
I don’t know about the UK, but in the US the GPO (Government Printing Office) prints a huge amount of official documents (including regulations) in way more copies than anyone ever wants, so we end up paying warehouse space to store it all. If we burned it instead to keep warm or fuel biomass generation plants, it would actually save the warehousing costs.

Gamecock
June 26, 2016 6:53 am

British environmental bureaucrats remain in place.
Their tendency to gold plate EU directives may diminish, but they won’t go away. What the EU is doing will continue to be used ad Verecundiam. In all fields.

Craig Loehle
June 26, 2016 8:00 am

The problem with an overbearing bureaucracy that micromanages everyone’s life and starts shutting down power plants is that eventually (one hopes) people notice that they are being strangled, and object. That is what Brexit was. The greens have a right to be worried. hahaha

Bitter&twisted
June 26, 2016 8:44 am

Let’s get that bonfire going.
The bigger, the better!

June 26, 2016 8:47 am

..and our climate safer

A safe climate??
WUWT?

Billy Liar
Reply to  RobRoy
June 26, 2016 9:44 am

Yes, apparently Greenpeace is working on project ‘Camelot’:
It’s true! It’s true! The crown has made it clear.
The climate must be perfect all the year.
A law was made a distant moon ago here:
July and August cannot be too hot.
And there’s a legal limit to the snow here
In Camelot.
The winter is forbidden till December
And exits March the second on the dot.
By order, summer lingers through September
In Camelot.
Camelot! Camelot!
I know it sounds a bit bizarre,
But in Camelot, Camelot
That’s how conditions are.
The rain may never fall till after sundown.
By eight, the morning fog must disappear.
In short, there’s simply not
A more congenial spot
For happily-ever-aftering than here
In Camelot.

June 26, 2016 9:02 am

the main faults of the EU are : excess regulations and the extraordinay influence of lobbyists and ill-minded activists.

rogerknights
Reply to  David
June 26, 2016 11:57 am

And excessive salaries, corruption, and the useless monthly cycling to Strassbourg. Those who want the EU to survive should tackle those obvious points of rebellion pronto.

TA
Reply to  rogerknights
June 26, 2016 6:12 pm

You are both describing bureaucracies.
The bigger a bureaucracy gets, the more unwieldy and unresponsive it becomes. It is true for any form of human organization.
I once worked in a 1,500-person Railroad company, that was extremely responsie to problems and customer needs. My company was then bought out by a 15,000-person Railroad company, and the bureaucracy of that company was like a stone wall.
I could call the president of the small railroad company personally on the phone if I needed something. I couldn’t talk to the president of the other company unless I was related to Henry Kissinger. Otherwise, I got some lower level bureaucrat about five steps below the president, and nothing ever got done. Extremely frustrating.
It’s a matter of size. The smaller the government/bureaucracy the more efficient it will be. The bigger it gets, the more out-of-control it gets. The best government is the one closest to the people. That way the people can look over their representative’s shoulder and give them advice. 🙂
Britain has taken a step to reduce the unelected bureaucracy that was ruling over it, has made its government closer to the British people, and no doubt, more responsive, as now the pressure is on the local politicians to get their act together.

Gamecock
Reply to  David
June 26, 2016 4:07 pm

Lobbyists are not a cause, they are a symptom. Excess government power begets reaction. Limit government power and the lobbyists will disappear. Nothing to fight against nor advantage to be gained.

Reply to  Gamecock
June 27, 2016 1:21 am

True !

Latitude
June 26, 2016 9:13 am

“Many of the laws that make our drinking and bathing water safe ( men are growing breasts)
, our air cleaner, ( people can not afford to heat their homes)
our fishing industry more sustainable (the EU has effectively shut down the fishing industry)
and our climate safer (only a moron would think a 1/2 degree through adjustments)
now hang by a thread…good

Reed Coray
June 26, 2016 9:59 am

Anthony, when I logged onto WUWT (I logged on by clicking on the WUWT button from Jo Nova’s blog), a message appeared on my screen indicating that the WUWT Blog’s certificates of “pureness” were out of date and implied that by logging on my computer might suffer. I was given the option of “continuing” which I selected. Then at least twice during my time on WUWT the same message appeared. Just thought you’d like to know.

E.M.Smith
Editor
Reply to  Reed Coray
June 26, 2016 1:58 pm

The two most likely reasons are that you have been hacked via a Man In The Middle attack, or are running an old browser that doesn’t support the newest SSL TSL standards (and the old ones are being shut down as a security flaw was found in them).
Run a good Antivirus and malware detection kit, update to a browser from the last 2 years, and try again (there are other causes too, but more rare).

AJB
June 26, 2016 10:35 am

It’s somewhat bigger than that Eric. Someone’s “Opening Statement” …

While the UK gets its ducks in a row, maybe the US will finally start getting its indigenous hoodlums under control.

E.M.Smith
Editor
Reply to  AJB
June 26, 2016 2:10 pm

OMG, & Woo Hoo!

AJB
Reply to  E.M.Smith
July 3, 2016 5:57 am

Well crafted over and unders take years to perfect. Take a potty mouthed musical interlude in political correctness …

Reply to  AJB
June 26, 2016 6:28 pm

Wow! That was excellent! The tide has turned and how! Beaut stuff. 😀

Chuck
June 26, 2016 11:28 am

The EU was okay when it was just a European free trade zone with a common currency but of course the goal of the leftists/statists/progressives that ran it was never so modest. They wanted a one Europe government unelected and run by them. That’s what’s happened over the decades. The Brits finally got smart and decided to take their sovereignty back. Hopefully the rest of the EU nations will do the same.
Now we’re hearing the same sort of doom and gloom put out by the alarmists over Brexit as we do about climate change. Most if not all of it will prove to be untrue.

jazznick1
Reply to  Chuck
June 26, 2016 11:57 am

Chuck,
Fortunately we weren’t daft enough to take on their currency ! I was one of those who voted 41 years ago
to stay in the EU. What it was then and the monster it has grown to be are vastly different – the opportunity to get out was provided by one brave man – Nigel Farage. Without him there would have been no Brexit.
Cameron saw 4 million voters move over to his UKIP and saw the writing on the wall and allowed a referendum – Cameron thought he could contain the ‘sheeple’ by frightening the crap out of them through the BBC and Project Fear aided by that gobby knob of a “president” you have.
Ironically, that’s what did it. We weren’t going to take it anymore-especially from a guy trying to act the part of a president in the style of Sidney Poitier !
He’s a waste of space but it seems to have taken a while for you to realise this.
I was once the Youth of the country and was taken in by the ‘cum-by-ya ness’ of it all, as are the current kids; but this time we were very close to becoming totally stateless serfs in an EU governed by the unelected fourth reich.
The sooner this is realised by the rest of Europe the better. There is evil at the heart of this monster and it must be slain.

Andrew
June 26, 2016 12:28 pm

Oh no – the UK’s enviro standards might slip all the way to those of Switzerland and Norway if not for the EUSSR!
There’s only 1 deg they care about: The one that forces members to build and subsidise wind. I’m sure if the Czechs commercialised thorium tomorrow they would find a reg prohibiting it.

jazznick1
Reply to  Andrew
June 26, 2016 12:45 pm

Quite so – the non-problem must not be solved at any cost.

Griff
Reply to  Andrew
June 27, 2016 8:20 am

Er… The Swiss and Norwegians had to sign up to all EU directives (including freedom of movement) as part of their trade deal.
In effect, thy have to run on EU environmental law, without having any vote, MEPs etc

Uncle Gus
June 26, 2016 1:09 pm

It’s kind of doubtful at the moment whether the pro-Brexit politicians over here are going to keep *any* of their promises. Even the one to actually leave the EU. (They are dragging their feet over Article 50, mostly because they see it as the kiss of death and nobody wants to be the individual to actually invoke it!)
A bonfire of regulations of any kind seems unlikely any time soon.

jazznick1
Reply to  Uncle Gus
June 26, 2016 1:31 pm

Gus,
Sure, bonfires are a long way off. There are many other issues that need resolving first before the Climate Change Act and Green slimy issues get to the top of the pile.
The problem with Article 50 is that it’s a virtual pamphlet. A piece of incomplete law that was never expected to be invoked. It is so open to interpretation that no one knows quite how it works until we dive in.
Ducks need to be lined up before anyone goes near the Invoke button !
It might help if we had a credible government and someone with a brain heading it up (certainly the opposition is falling apart – 11 resignations/sackings so far today !)
Nature (and the electorate) abhor a vacuum.

simple-touriste
Reply to  Uncle Gus
June 27, 2016 12:42 am

Who is panicking? The europists.
It doesn’t matter whether the article 50 is invoked as long as the effect of leaving are there.
UK should begin dismissal of UE regulation and inform UE leaders that tax money is going to be sequestered if they make any more threats against UK.
UE is weak, UK is strong.

Mike Smith
June 26, 2016 3:58 pm

I’m stacking up on popcorn. And matches 🙂

jimheath
June 26, 2016 4:39 pm

People under the age of 40 years have been raised with the indoctrination of the NWO in all of their schooling. They literally need time to be deprogrammed there is so much rubbish sloshing around inside their scull its’ not their fault.

Michael Ozanne
June 26, 2016 4:47 pm

The British Parliament has been enacting environmental regulations since 1848. British influence for environmental action was key to the setting up of a number of European and Global environmental commitees (UNEP, Berne Convention, RAMSAR, CITES, MAR). The environment only became an EU competence in 1987. And arguably has been less effective since than the National action and international cooperation that preceded it…
There really isn’t a case for suggesting that the UK is incapable of undertaking responsible effective necessary financial regulation outside the structures of the EU. It is Horse Puckey*** and splinters of the first water….
*** I should get bonus points for “Puckey”……..

michaelozanne
June 26, 2016 4:49 pm

Strike “Financial” substitute “environmental” I have no idea what the apple programmers are smoking……

Derek Colman
June 26, 2016 5:34 pm

I hope so. I have a box of matches and am ready to light the bonfire. I am totally angry that because of these greenies, in 10 years of retirement, I have gone from having a nice warm house in winter to having to turn the heat down 5 degrees and don loads of woolies to keep warm. Even more galling is that I know these middle class morons on their 40 grand a year or more, can afford to put solar panels on their houses and get free electricity and a profit at my expense.

NZPete
June 26, 2016 7:59 pm

Wonderful news. Being it on. Reality.
Tnx Eric, for this uplifting post.

dave
June 26, 2016 8:31 pm

For what it’s worth i watched an interview with a group of young voters from Birmingham and one of them said they’d all voted for remain on facebook but he thought they may have forgotten to go and vote in the referendum.

Reply to  dave
June 27, 2016 1:38 pm

How helpful of them!

higley7
June 27, 2016 12:18 am

It is to be willfully ignorant and stupid to assume that the only way that environmental concerns are taken care of is to impose regulations by a totalitarian, unelected EU Commission. Each country can enact all the same regulations or do it in a more democratic manner by passing relevant laws, to which the people would be willing to comply since they and their elected representatives passed them.
Environmentalists are inherently liberal and assume that people have to be forced to do good things. Actually they could not be more wrong. I believe that the average individual is indeed an environmentalist, he/she cleans things, fixes things, takes care of their property, grow things, has an interest in the environment being a nice place to be and live. Liberals assume the average individual is a blithering 2-year old that must be ordered about and forced to comply; liberals having the arrogance of believing that anything they think of, no matter how stupid, must be brilliant.
In fact, having laws and their rationales worked over by discussions in Parliament or a Congress is a horribly healthy thing, as it would allow both large and small errors to be corrected. Only from an unelected, unanswerable group of all-powerful commissioners, such as the EU Commission in Brussels, would you get this:
June 27, 2016
“EU bans claim that water can prevent dehydration.
Brussels bureaucrats were ridiculed yesterday after banning drink manufacturers from claiming that water can prevent dehydration.”
One has to wonder what these guys are smoking shen they come up with such patently erroneous conclusions and regulations.

Ian Maconald
June 27, 2016 3:34 am

Should be: Bonfire of “Green” regulations.
Bonfire could be literal. Green is a euphemism, hence quotes. They are mostly to do with promoting vested industrial interests such as wind turbine manufacture and diesel cars. Nothing to do with protecting the environment.

ulriclyons
June 27, 2016 3:47 am

“Regulations set in place to help fight climate change and protect Britain’s wildlife may be destroyed following the Brexit result, top environmentalists have warned.”
Well good riddance, the regulations can do nothing to effect the climate measurably, and the only climate change we need to fight in the future is the onset of glaciation.

MarkW
June 27, 2016 7:37 am

Sooooo, Greenpeace is claiming that prior to entering the EU, bathwater in Britain wasn’t safe?

Griff
Reply to  MarkW
June 27, 2016 8:22 am

The beaches were filthy with sewage, that’s for sure. EU blue flag scheme forced clear up govts wouldn’t previously undertake

Paul Penrose
Reply to  Griff
June 27, 2016 11:11 am

Come on Griff, you used to make your nonsense deflections a little less transparent. You didn’t even try here. No entertainment value at all.

June 27, 2016 8:23 am

From Nuccitelli… Think of the children! Brexit = GW de-nial
The inter-generational theft of Brexit and climate change
Youth will bear the brunt of the poor decisions being made by today’s older generations
https://www.theguardian.com/environment/climate-consensus-97-per-cent/2016/jun/27/the-inter-generational-theft-of-brexit-and-climate-change

Paul Penrose
June 27, 2016 11:08 am

The Brexit fear mongering has already reached shrill proportions. Soon they will reach ludicrous speed!