Al Gore Compares His Climate Mission to Jackie Robinson

Jackie Robinson (Public Domain Image), and Al Gore
Jackie Robinson (Public Domain Image), and Al Gore. By Crop by Gralo of original image by Brett Wilson (brettw AT gmail DOT com) [CC BY-SA 2.5], via Wikimedia Commons
Guest essay by Eric Worrall

In a recent interview, former Vice President Al Gore suggested his mission to save the world from Global Warming is comparable to Jackie Robinson‘s achievements, Jackie’s effort to break down US racial segregation, by becoming the first African American to play Major League Baseball in modern times.

I don’t want to compare you to Jackie Robinson, but I’m going to draw a parallel. When you’re first at something or, in your case, out front, it’s often difficult. You had naysayers. Even though you were at the top of the New York Times bestseller list, there were people who made fun of it.

Oh, yeah. A few still do.

How do you deal with that? How are you able to keep putting yourself out there? How do you emotionally tell yourself, “It’s worth it?”

There is a time-honored tradition of people who strongly disagree with a message and take it out on the messenger, and opponents of integration had a personal animus for Jackie Robinson. Opponents of all the great social movements would take out after the advocates that were most effective in asking people to change.

As a result, I don’t take it personally when the criticism comes at me. I believe so passionately in this mission, if you will. The word “mission” might sound a little grandiose, but that’s kind of what it feels like to me. Honestly, it is a joy and a privilege to have work that justifies pouring every ounce of energy you can pour into it. That is a blessing that is to be cherished.

Read more: http://www.tennessean.com/story/news/2016/07/03/al-gore-climate-issues-were-far-where-we-need/86266230/

Words fail me.

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Reed Coray
July 5, 2016 10:16 pm

Oh how it warms the cockles of my heart to know that Man/Bear/Pig compares himself to Jackie Robinson. I do see one difference, however. Robinson had talent.
I do have to agree with Al in one regard. He likened the AGW movement to a “social movement.” AGW as practice by Al and his acolytes sure isn’t scientific.

Bryan A
Reply to  Reed Coray
July 6, 2016 8:03 am

He also described it as a mission. Sounds similar to a religious missionaries job of spreading the good word and increasing the faithful numbers.
This truly time for the AGW faithfulls to start practicing what they preach. Time for the old Gore Hippocrite (Hypocrite) to prove his beliefs and abandon his palatial mansion for a more ecologically economical living space.

Bryan A
Reply to  Bryan A
July 6, 2016 8:06 am

Hypocrite
[hip-uh-krit]
noun
1. A person who pretends to have virtues, moral or religious beliefs, principles, etc., that he or she does not actually possess, especially a person whose actions belie stated beliefs.
2. A person who feigns some desirable or publicly approved attitude, especially one whose private life, opinions, or statements belie his or her public statements.

Reply to  Bryan A
July 6, 2016 1:45 pm

“Hippo-crit” suits him well.

tgmccoy
Reply to  Reed Coray
July 6, 2016 8:42 am

Jackie Robinson and Willie Mays were my sports heroes as a kid. Al Gore is simply a jackass
in ManBearPig Clothing…
He doesn’t deserve to be Robinson’s bat boy…

Neo
Reply to  tgmccoy
July 6, 2016 11:02 am

Jackie Robinson, Willie Mays and Muchael Jackson all achieved their goals while wearing one glove.

Allencic
Reply to  tgmccoy
July 6, 2016 4:27 pm

Or carry Robinson’s jockstrap

Reply to  Reed Coray
July 6, 2016 8:44 am

Recall that Al Gore was and is getting advice and encouragement from the likes of Jim Hansen, Stephen Schneider, Gavin Schmidt, Michael Mann, Kevin Trenberth, Gerald Meehl, Phil Jones, and a coterie of other well-trained people all of whom portray themselves as objective scientists and all of whom have put their advocacy for “the cause” ahead of science.
Al Gore has been systematically misinformed. As far as Al Gore knows, he really does have science on his side.
On the other hand, it is true that right from the start as Senator Gore, he bullied the scientists who disagreed with his view. Richard Lindzen has written a thorough record on that. So, Gore is an advocate as well, choosing to believe one side and not the other, while lacking the education (and acuity, most likely) to make an independent judgment.
I believe that Gore thinks he really is correct. His stable of scientifically well-credentialed (but incompetent for reasons of training or integrity) advocates tell him so. No authoritative body contradicts them.
That last leads to this: if anyone is to blame for this mess, it is the scientific societies, especially the American Physical Society and the American Institute of Physics, which have betrayed their trust and stupidly neglected the due diligence they owe their profession and their country. If they had treated the AGW claim with the same critical skepticism with which they treated the cold fusion claim, we’d not have seen science polluted by this corrosive stench of politics.

Reed Coray
Reply to  Pat Frank
July 6, 2016 9:53 am

Pat Frank, I agree. Later in his life my father, a lawyer, told me he was ashamed of the legal profession. He said there were many reasons, but the key event that in his opinion brought corruption upon the legal profession was when the various bar associations allowed lawyers to advertise (other than listing their office in a phone book) and solicit business. Examples now abound. I can’t watch television for an hour without seeing an advertisement from some law firm (think Screwem, Scruem, and Screwumsomemore) soliciting cases against some past alleged medical malpractice. As a physicist by education, but not by profession, I am ashamed of all major “physical societies” who, as I see it, bought into AGW scare for either political or financial reasons. Shame on them.

Paul Penrose
Reply to  Pat Frank
July 6, 2016 10:25 am

Pat,
I understand that you are giving Al Gore the benefit of the doubt, however he does not deserve it. If he really believed in AGW, he would be living a very different life style. Instead, like all the other hypocrites, he continues to live a life of ease made possible by abundant fossil fuel based energy. All the while demanding that the rest of us suffer in energy poverty. You first Al, you first.

Joe Crawford
Reply to  Pat Frank
July 6, 2016 10:46 am

The scientific societies were easily duped by the advocates since CAGW slots right into the emotionalism of the left and their belief that mankind is destroying the planet. Besides, most of academia have become so specialized that they can no longer spot feces outside their area of expertise. They’ve lost their BS detectors, which make them susceptible to any number of scams.

Reply to  Pat Frank
July 6, 2016 1:16 pm

Reed
‘Private Eye’ – a ‘satirical, yet strangely prescient (SOMETIMES) fortnightly here in the UK – has a term of derision for Lawyers’ partnerships – Sue, Grabbit and Runne.
Unless they are being very roooode indeed about one of our foremost Libel hunter-gatherer packs, which is not named F@rter-Ruck, nor Carter_PHuck – and is – of course – staffed entirely by wonderful human-beings and demi-gods, seeking always to protect the weak.
[Weak-willed? Surely not]
Joe Crawford July 6, 2016 at 10:46 am
“The scientific societies were easily duped by the advocates since CAGW slots right into the emotionalism of the left and their belief that mankind is destroying the planet. Besides, most of academia have become so specialized that they can no longer spot feces outside their area of expertise. They’ve lost their BS detectors, which make them susceptible to any number of scams.”
Wow! A stunning précis of modern society.
Almost everyone has
” lost their BS detectors, which make them susceptible to any number of scams.”
Many here strive to keep those detectors in good health – but it is hard work!
Joe is right – but we need – all of us – to try to keep our BS Detectors in fine fettle.
And those of our contacts – family & friends, etc.
Auto

Reply to  Auto
July 6, 2016 1:37 pm

The BS detectors are not missing, just calibrated to what they want, rather than to what is. For example, most warmists consider anything coming from a skeptic to be BS, independent of technical merit. The decision threshold seems to be that if it contradicts the narrative, it must be BS and not worth consideration, which is the same BS detector used to support the wrong side of partisan politics when only one side can be right. While the left is clearly on the wrong side of climate science, when the right is on the wrong side of an issue, it does the same thing.

Joe Crawford
Reply to  Pat Frank
July 7, 2016 8:30 am

co2isnotevil, I must disagree. What you described is just confirmation bias at work. A true BS detector must be totally independent of one’s personal beliefs and prejudices. There should be no home for BS, of any kind, on any side of an issue (yours or another’s).
A good BS detector must be capable of telling whether the source is a snake oil salesman, a parrot of another, or an honest presenter. Then it must determine whether the data is logically or emotionally derived. Only then can you make the decision to consider or ignore.

Barbara
Reply to  Reed Coray
July 6, 2016 1:30 pm

Is this a set-up question to inject race into this interview article?

Robert from oz
Reply to  Reed Coray
July 6, 2016 6:27 pm

Neither had anything to do with science both had a cult following !

george e. smith
Reply to  Reed Coray
July 7, 2016 11:38 am

Well Alphonse, I knew Jackie Robinson; and YOU are no Jackie Robinson !
Well in retrospect, on second thoughts, It was Satchel Paige, not Jackie Robinson; and also, I misremembered and I only saw him play (and pitch) for the Saint Louis Cardinals, in Busch Stadium.
Hey, I really did. He sort of renewed his unretirement for that special game. That was between June 1964, and July 1967; too long ago to remember when.
He was either 157 years old, or 197; I can’t recall which.
IANABBFBAM. But I consider it to have been a privilege to have seen one of the great characters of the game, in real life.
And Al you ain’t even a Satchel Paige either nor a Yogi Berra; not even a yogi bear !
G

ngard2016
July 5, 2016 10:23 pm

Here’s a few facts for poor silly Al. The latest US govt EIA May 2016 report tells us that Co2 emissions will increase by 34% by 2040 and the vast majority of that increase will come from developing countries. See page 3 at the link.
And Gore’s chief adviser Dr Jim Hansen told us Paris COP 21 was a fra-d and BS. He also said that a belief in solar and wind energy was akin to believing in fairy stories, like the easter bunny and the tooth fairy. Will this joker ever wake up?
https://www.eia.gov/pressroom/presentations/sieminski_05112016.pdf

Reply to  ngard2016
July 6, 2016 3:10 am

Al wants to jail the skeptics and eradicate those green pants who call for more CO2.

john
Reply to  ngard2016
July 6, 2016 4:58 am

Al Gore+Baseball = Casey at Bat
…“Fraud!” cried the maddened thousands, and echo answered
“Fraud!”
But one scornful look from Casey and the audience was awed.
They saw his face grow stern and cold, they saw his muscles
strain,
And they knew that Casey wouldn’t let that ball go by again.
The sneer is gone from Casey’s lip, his teeth are clenched in hate,
He pounds with cruel violence his bat upon the plate;
And now the pitcher holds the ball, and now he lets it go,
And now the air is shattered by the force of Casey’s blow.
Oh, somewhere in this favoured land the sun is shining bright,
The band is playing somewhere, and somewhere hearts are light;
And somewhere men are laughing, and somewhere children
shout,
But there is no joy in Mudville—mighty Casey has struck out.

Eugene WR Gallun
Reply to  john
July 6, 2016 5:59 pm

john — Perfect!!!!!! — Eugene WR Gallun

Mike McMillan
July 5, 2016 10:25 pm

It’s tough, brutal work, but it has its compen$ations.

Skiphil
Reply to  Mike McMillan
July 5, 2016 10:30 pm

The UN needs to create a position of “Planetary Messiah” to be filled by Albore so that he is getting proper recognition for his stupendous efforts.

Patrick MJD
Reply to  Skiphil
July 5, 2016 11:10 pm

Then we can say he is not the messiah, he’s a very naughty boy!

Bryan A
Reply to  Skiphil
July 6, 2016 8:09 am

And don’t forget about his
Climate
Reality
Awareness
Project

Reply to  Skiphil
July 6, 2016 10:27 am

They should just go ahead and make him head of the next phase of IPCC projects…he already has the sexual harassment part of the qualifications to be there.

Jack
July 5, 2016 10:35 pm

Delusions of grandeur seem to go with the saving the planet theme.

G. Karst
Reply to  Jack
July 6, 2016 11:17 am

A.G. – a legend in his own mind. GK

Reply to  G. Karst
July 6, 2016 1:37 pm

G
AG – a legend in his own liquid lunchtime.
Or may even that be bestowing too much light on, essentially a creature of darkness?
Auto

rogerthesurf
July 5, 2016 10:36 pm

I don’t think Al Gore would bother to save the planet if there was no money or power attached to the project:)
Cheers
Roger
http://www.rogerfromnewzealand.wordpress.com

Manfred
Reply to  rogerthesurf
July 6, 2016 1:36 am

“Words fail me.”
They may well. But money hasn’t failed him.

Jono1066
July 5, 2016 10:40 pm

There are the Jackie Robinson`s of this world, and there are the Florence Foster Jenkins`s,
probably in equal measure and each desperately believing in their own belief and with a means to promulgate their views.
Only the slow march of time will show the validity of their position.

John M. Ware
Reply to  Jono1066
July 6, 2016 2:05 am

Thank you–you made me refresh my memory concerning Florence Foster Jenkins, whose painful but hilarious recordings (all too few, sadly) amused many people. I also remembered Anna Russell, a far better musician than Jenkins and well-known comedy figure in the mid-20th century whose “Ring cycle” parody very much deserves hearing; Russell apparently originated the saying, “I’m not making this up, you know!”
As far as Algore is concerned, he may not be making it up, and he does (sadly) still have a lot of company; but his relationship to the truth is hazy at best, and his scientific background is nil. The comparison to Jackie Robinson is ludicrous, and he doesn’t even see it.

Burch
Reply to  John M. Ware
July 6, 2016 5:53 am

Wow, an FFJ reference in WUWT! Whoda thunk it?

H.R.
Reply to  John M. Ware
July 6, 2016 6:11 am

Burch: I believe this is the second time Florence Foster Jenkins has been mentioned on WUWT.

Reply to  John M. Ware
July 6, 2016 6:12 am

And an Anna Russell one, too! I should find that old album.
/Mr Lynn

Ggdon
Reply to  Jono1066
July 6, 2016 2:38 am

He too could sing if he had Al Gore rhythm.

Jason Calley
Reply to  Ggdon
July 6, 2016 6:37 am

groan! ….. but LOL!

kim
July 5, 2016 10:47 pm

All Gore’s got on the ball is a fadeaway.
===============

Reply to  kim
July 5, 2016 11:24 pm

Ahh, a low blow. That fits.

July 5, 2016 10:48 pm

If you believe that science should be driven by the scientific method and not by conformance to a political narrative then its your mission to save the world from people like Al Gore who think otherwise.

Lenny
July 5, 2016 10:50 pm

you can’t make this stuff up.

AllyKat
Reply to  Lenny
July 6, 2016 4:32 pm

This is the sort of thing that makes me act like a cartoon: double takes, wide eyes, rub them, look again. Wide eyes, slack jaw again. Sputter incoherently as eyes roll back in head…
Who comes UP with these things??? Really, who would EVER think to mention Robinson and Algore in the same day, let alone the same sentence? I know that most interview questions are plants and/or approved, but how does that much hubris exist? Just reading the excerpt above makes my head spin and start to ache.
For anyone who ever faces this question/comparison, there is only one correct response: “I really do not know why you are referencing Mr. Robinson, complimentary as it may be. He was a great man who had qualities worthy of emulation, but I am certainly not going to compare our situations or lives. Next question.”
Oh wait, no one will ever face this question unless they plant it!

kim
July 5, 2016 10:56 pm

Al Gore is to be judged not on the color of his skin, but on the content of his documentary.
==============

ClimateOtter
Reply to  kim
July 6, 2016 1:01 am

It had content?

Felflames
Reply to  ClimateOtter
July 6, 2016 4:14 am

The raw materials for fertilizer, if you get my drift.

Reply to  ClimateOtter
July 6, 2016 1:40 pm

Felf
I suggest an equivalence with the southern excreta of a bovid headed, essentially, north.
“The raw materials for fertilizer” for sure!
Auto

BallBounces
Reply to  kim
July 6, 2016 7:12 am

good one.

kim
July 5, 2016 11:03 pm

How many years after Jackie Robinson enlightened baseball with his entrance was it that Al Gore, Senior, Senator, voted against the Civil Rights Act of 1964? You could look it up.
==================

Reply to  kim
July 5, 2016 11:25 pm

Great pitch, that was a strike for certain.

Reply to  goldminor
July 5, 2016 11:39 pm

Strike three and the ball game is over!

Reply to  asybot
July 6, 2016 12:32 pm

I must have missed a few innings.

Thomas Homer
Reply to  kim
July 6, 2016 5:28 am

Thank you Kim, that’s the first thing that came my mind as well.

Walter Sobchak
Reply to  kim
July 6, 2016 10:07 am

19

Logos_wrench
July 5, 2016 11:17 pm

Probably the biggest difference is that Jackie was not a demagogic blow hard.

Simon
July 5, 2016 11:30 pm

Ummm ….. did the guy asking the questions make the comparison?

ClimateOtter
Reply to  Simon
July 6, 2016 1:02 am

Yes, but algor didn’t object to it.

lee
Reply to  Simon
July 6, 2016 1:53 am

Do you think Algore might have primed the pump?

Michael Jankowski
Reply to  Simon
July 6, 2016 5:48 pm

Sure, the interviewer made the comparison. Gore not only ran with it, but compared himself to all of the “advocates” of the “great social movements” who were “most effective in asking people to change.

July 5, 2016 11:36 pm

the comparison to jackie robinson can be made when the oppressed deniers finally win and cleanse the world of fear mongering disguised as environmental concern.

Martin A
July 5, 2016 11:38 pm

Vainglory

Johan
July 5, 2016 11:41 pm

I am now intentionally rude: there are pills or injections for curing delusions like that, you know.

PA
July 5, 2016 11:46 pm

The primary difference between Al Gore and Jackie Robinson is Jackie Robinson was black on the outside, whereas Al Gore is black …

Patrick MJD
Reply to  PA
July 6, 2016 12:51 am

Coal, oil and tobacco?

peter
July 6, 2016 12:45 am

as with so many other current events South Park nailed Gore ages ago. Man Bear Pig is the greatest threat facing our nation. I’m super serious.

Reply to  peter
July 6, 2016 6:48 am

Peter I think you meant to say ” I’m super serial ”
I just about busted a gut because I was laughing so hard the first time I saw that episode. I am still smiling thinking about him in the episode standing there in a cape and every time he would move he put his arms in front of him like Superman and made wind noises.

Coeur de Lion
July 6, 2016 12:49 am

How come no journo on the Tenessean asked the hard questions? I think they were frightened.

Charlie
July 6, 2016 1:16 am

I feel it is appropriate now to congratulate all those who hit the Gore endorsed AGs for Clean Power out of the park.

SteveC
July 6, 2016 1:32 am

You mean there’s a “Robinson Effect” too?

AndyG55
July 6, 2016 1:35 am

Back to the Junior league, Al Gormless,
Field position.. left right out !!!

Joel
July 6, 2016 1:38 am

Baseball and climate change fraud are totally two different unrelated topics. Doesn’t make any sense to compare himself to a baseball player.

Just some guy
July 6, 2016 1:41 am

Here’s what I can’t decide: Is Al Gore a bigger liar than Hillary? Or not? Not sure that’s possible but if it is, Big Al would be the one who could pull it off. Go team!

ClimateOtter
July 6, 2016 1:54 am

Who’s on First?

H.R.
Reply to  ClimateOtter
July 6, 2016 6:18 am

I Don’t Know.

D. J. Hawkins
Reply to  H.R.
July 6, 2016 7:54 am

… is on third.

arthur4563
July 6, 2016 1:56 am

Al Gore is pure stupidity. Well ….. 9.99% pure.

PiperPaul
Reply to  arthur4563
July 6, 2016 5:04 am

97% sounds like a more believable number, let’s use that.

Robin Hewitt
July 6, 2016 2:02 am

I suppose a man might get ideas above his station when he discovers he can control the weather by his mere presence. I had a spooky 3 months back in ’83 when it rained on everyone else but not on me. Luckily it ended with a good soaking before I published.

July 6, 2016 2:03 am

Al Gore is a prime example of the danger of seeking religious purpose in life through political interests and activism.
The Church of Global Warming, http://www.christianpost.com/news/the-church-of-global-warming-opinion-165985/

Krudd Gillard of the Commondebt of Australia
July 6, 2016 2:48 am

Insulting to the memory of Mr Robinson.

Reply to  Krudd Gillard of the Commondebt of Australia
July 6, 2016 3:01 am

Agreed

lyn roberts
Reply to  Krudd Gillard of the Commondebt of Australia
July 6, 2016 5:50 pm

Couldn’t agree more.

July 6, 2016 3:29 am

Enough about Al Gore – this is about Jackie Robinson.
Jackie Robinson’s old Montreal apartment to be commemorated by U.S. government
Sidhartha Banerjee, The Canadian Press
Published Monday, February 28, 2011 7:56AM EST
http://montreal.ctvnews.ca/jackie-robinson-s-old-montreal-apartment-to-be-commemorated-by-u-s-government-1.612682
MONTREAL- A quaint Montreal home that served as a sanctuary to Jackie Robinson and his wife in his pursuit of knocking down baseball’s colour barrier is being officially recognized by the U.S. government.
That chapter in American civil-rights history will be celebrated Monday when U.S. diplomats unveil a commemorative plaque at the apartment Robinson and his wife Rachel called home in the summer of 1946.
The event will be attended by the U.S. ambassador to Canada, Montreal’s mayor and Robinson’s daughter, and is being timed to coincide with Black History Month.
Not too far away from the house, Robinson made history at old Delorimier Stadium, thrilling fans of the minor-league Montreal Royals for one season in his final stop before breaking the infamous colour barrier in Major League Baseball the next year with the Brooklyn Dodgers.
His widow remembers the home fondly — and considers the residence on de Gaspe Avenue a critical part of their story.
It was in that lower-level duplex apartment on a quiet street that their new marriage blossomed, and Robinson found refuge from the taunts he often endured during road trips.
“You can’t make (enough) of the house because it’s where the experiment started and the experiment went on to be a national success, so it led to something,” Rachel Robinson said in an interview with The Canadian Press.
“What was nourished there in that house . . . had widespread influence in our society.”
Robinson, now 88, still recalls arriving in Montreal, newly married and having survived the Jim Crow south during spring training in Florida.
There they were met with racism at every turn: on whites-only flights, in hotels, in restaurants and at ballparks. In some cities, they were chased out of town.
The couple was twice bumped off airplanes while trying to get to Daytona. When they arrived, Jackie Robinson wasn’t allowed to stay with teammates at their hotel.
The team didn’t have a spring training facility of its own and many opponents wouldn’t allow them into theirs. Robinson was forced to leave one town and in another, Jacksonville, Fla., the stadium was locked on game day.
“To appreciate how special the experience was in Canada, you have to think about the experience we had in the south going to spring training,” Rachel Robinson said.
The couple initially felt some trepidation heading north to post-war Montreal, with its housing shortages.
It had never occurred to the Robinsons to look for a black neighbourhood in Montreal.
The Royals had provided a list of homes — all in predominantly white areas at a time when the black community made up about two per cent of Montreal’s population.
Robinson said they were more focused on the professional task than on neighbourhood demographics.
“We didn’t consider it or think about it — in an experimental situation like that, you have to stay focused on what’s before you,” Robinson said.
“We were not looking for black people. We had found an apartment which was the most important thing, in a supportive, friendly neighbourhood.”
Robinson said she picked one on the list, and the way she was received at the apartment took her by surprise — by a friendly French-Canadian woman who spoke English and welcomed her into the home.
“She received me so pleasantly,” Robinson said. “Then she poured tea for me and agreed to rent the apartment to me furnished and she insisted I use her things — like her linens and her china.
“It was an extraordinary welcome to Canada.”
Home life was important because the intermittent road trips were difficult for her husband.
Jackie Robinson would be the target of slurs and attacks just about everywhere he travelled, so the couple cherished their time together in Montreal.
“The home was critical,” Robinson said. “Because we never knew what was going to happen outside our home.”
De Gaspe Avenue was predominantly French, but language didn’t stop Rachel Robinson from making friends — especially when the neighbourhood women noticed she was pregnant.
The women would give her ration coupons and help sew maternity clothes.
A couple with eight children lived above the Robinsons. While Rachel couldn’t speak to them, she’d leave them a bowl of fruit on the porch.
“The children had to come down and pass my kitchen door to go to school, so I used to put fruit out just to attract them and they’d stop by on their way,” she said.
The children would reciprocate, rushing down the street to help her with her grocery bags as she walked home.
“Little things (like) that turn into big pieces of your experience,” Robinson said. “They were friendly, they were protective, they were supportive and it was not something that I’d have expected.”
The Robinsons formed a strong and long-lasting friendship with famed Montreal sportswriter Sam Maltin and his wife, Belle, who would invite them into their home and take them to concerts on Mount Royal.
Rachel Robinson was a fixture at the Montreal stadium, never missing a home game.
She also recalls roaming the narrow, European-style streets of the city’s old district, finding spots that suited her love of books and music — especially when Jackie was on the road.
The city would become caught up in baseball fever that summer. With the help of Robinson’s .349 batting average and 40 steals, the Royals would go on to win the Little World Series over the Kentucky Colonels.
Afterwards, a jubilant crowd chased Robinson down the street. That’s when Maltin penned the famous phrase: “It was probably the only day in history that a black man ran from a white mob with love instead of lynching on its mind.”
The couple soon left Montreal. A few months later, Jackie Robinson joined the Dodgers in the National League.
One author says Montreal was integral to the strategy concocted by Dodgers executive Branch Rickey to smash the segregation system in America’s national pastime.
Like other places, Montreal had its own sources of social tension. But they weren’t the same as those in the United States.
“When you talk about the social cleavages, it was more linguistic and religious than it was in terms of skin colour,” said William Brown, a journalist and author of the book, “Baseball’s Fabulous Montreal Royals.”
“Montreal was perfect for him because it wasn’t going to be a big political thing and the Montreal that he moved to wasn’t as divided racially along colour lines as the average American city.”
The couple never had a proper honeymoon after marrying in February 1946.
They would always appreciate the experience, however, of a summer spent in Canada, playing baseball in Montreal, and building a little home at 8232 de Gaspe.
“It showed what we could do if we learned how to exercise tolerance and sharing and all those good things,” Robinson said.
“So I would say that coming to Montreal at that time in our lives and the kind of reception we got — that was our honeymoon,” Robinson said.
++++++++++++++

davideisenstadt
Reply to  Allan MacRae
July 6, 2016 6:31 am

Thank you Allan.
One wishes that Gore would simply shut his well fed pie hole.

ozspeaksup
July 6, 2016 3:35 am

well Id like to take to the goracle with a bat..

ClimateOtter
Reply to  ozspeaksup
July 6, 2016 5:19 am

Brown, Fruit or Vampire?

D. J. Hawkins
Reply to  ClimateOtter
July 6, 2016 8:00 am

Aluminum. Better energy transfer.

Marcus
Reply to  ClimateOtter
July 6, 2016 9:37 am

Louisville Slugger ??

Dr. S. Jeevananda Reddy
July 6, 2016 3:48 am

Al Gore interested in two things:
Money
&
Fame
nothing more
Now few other Noble prize winners started canvassing for GMOs. When nobleprize is available to people like Malala — minting money — through politicalizing innosents.
Dr. S. Jeevananda Reddy

July 6, 2016 3:57 am

Ah, jeez you guys, he invented the internet. The achievements are like the god like status of the captain in N. Korea. Nobel prize for Al. They must hand out those prizes like at a circus. The Nobel prize committee must have nothing better to do. . Why if Al had the power of the captain here in the US, he could shut all of us skeptics up and Save the World. You can say anything you want as long as it sings the praises of Al and agrees with his policies. And somewhere, don’t know where, Al is so great that if the climate turns colder, he told us so. Al probably doesn’t need to go to the bathroom either. I can’t decide if they are full of it, full of themselves, or both. In their fantasy world, anything is possible!

Tom Halla
July 6, 2016 4:01 am

The horrid thought is that bad cliche could have been US president.

July 6, 2016 4:06 am

Jackie was the first black MVP and never claimed that the interior of the Earth was thousands of times hotter than the surface of the sun. But Gore gets the Oslo Emmy!

Paul Schnurr
July 6, 2016 4:10 am

Really the only parallel I see is that both attracted some criticism, Mr Robinson for his race and Mr. Gore for his chosen beliefs. The journalist drew a very trivial comparison and Gore let him.

JohnWho
July 6, 2016 4:16 am

The word “mission” might sound a little grandiose, but that’s kind of what it feels like to me. …That is a blessing that is to be cherished.
A mission that is a blessing.
Sort of like a Jihadist terrorist.
Jackie Robinson was nothing like that.

July 6, 2016 4:22 am

Except that Jackie Robinson was dealing with a physical, verifiable phenomena that no one could miss seeing whereas Al Gore is dealing with computer models and no physical evidence of any kind which a large number of people would miss seeing if Mr. Evangelist Gore wasn’t proclaiming the existence thereof.

tadchem
July 6, 2016 4:30 am

So Al gore is getting pity. If he were a Christian, he would be comparing himself to the original 12 Apostles, meeting resistance as he brought the Gospel to the unbelievers.
Jackie Robinson could perform. Over 30% of his times at bat he could get a base hit. Al Gore, not so much. He hasn’t gotten anything right yet.

Killer Marmot
July 6, 2016 4:40 am

Gore complains about taking personal abuse, all the saying that
climate-change deniers should be punished.
The word is “crybully”.

PiperPaul
July 6, 2016 4:54 am

Jackie Robinson = Hero
Al Gore = Moron

July 6, 2016 5:02 am

Twenty years ago I would have laughed out loud at Gore’s insufferable pomposity, but I’ve gotten so used to hyperbole and absurd comparisons in American politics that the best I can muster now is a roll of the eyes.

K. Kilty
Reply to  tim maguire
July 6, 2016 6:58 am

I know. We all try to be cynical, but it’s hard to keep up.

July 6, 2016 5:16 am

Uhhhh … didn’t he just strike out earlier this year when his ten year prediction flopped?
TIME RUNS OUT ON AL GORE’S GLOBAL-WARMING ARMAGEDDON
http://www.wnd.com/2016/01/time-runs-out-on-al-gores-global-warming-armageddon/

fizzissist
July 6, 2016 5:28 am

Gore believes in his mission so much that he created Generation Investment Management.

john
July 6, 2016 5:30 am

Al Gore faces the Green Monster at Fenway in the latest episode of ‘Casey at Bat’. Former Red Sox Coach was seen wearing this apparel whan Al showed up.
http://boston.cbslocal.com/2011/10/06/terry-franconas-t-shirt/

john
Reply to  john
July 6, 2016 5:57 am

FJ Shepherd
July 6, 2016 5:33 am

I would prefer to compare Al Gore to saviour-want-to-be Adam Dollard at the Battle of Long Sault. That is my Canadian contribution.

Tom Judd
July 6, 2016 5:48 am

White boy Al Gore’s getting ready to pull the race card. Brilliant!

PaulH
July 6, 2016 5:52 am

To be fair, it seems the interviewer proposed the Jackie Robinson comparison first. Gore saw this as an easy pitch to hit, and went with the “yeah, it’s tough saving the planet when people don’t like you but I care and I’m wonderful” meme.

AllyKat
Reply to  PaulH
July 6, 2016 4:06 pm

One has to wonder what is wrong with the reporter. Actually, I think we know: $$$$$$$.

Bill Powers
Reply to  AllyKat
July 6, 2016 5:21 pm

He is a Moral Narcissist. You should pick up Roger Simon’s book “I Know Best”

Jason Calley
July 6, 2016 6:44 am

I suspect that Al Gore truly believes that he would be a good Master. He cares. He knows science! What a GOOD Master! How lucky that we mundanes have such a good master overseeing us!
/sarc off for the humor impaired

MarkW
July 6, 2016 6:52 am

These guys take it as a given, that if people are criticizing them, it just proves they are right.

Jenn Runion
July 6, 2016 8:13 am

So the E he put at the end of potato stands for “environment” then? Well, lets see where his E really is shall we:
MonEy
PowEr
FamE
Hmmm…seems that E stands for more than environment Al.
As for the comparison, the man is so dumb he probably didn’t know who Jackie Robinson was unless the reporter outlined it for him first. Chances are once the interview was finished he ran a search on his internet invention to find out.

Marcus
Reply to  Jenn Runion
July 6, 2016 9:50 am

…Ummm, you missed Egotistical Error loving Elitist !

Jenn Runion
Reply to  Marcus
July 6, 2016 1:41 pm

You are so right! How could I miss those? How about:
Egregious Egotistical Enormous Error Eluding loving Entitled Elitist.
Hmm…I’m sure there are a few more E words we could add….

Frank Kotler
Reply to  Jenn Runion
July 6, 2016 10:11 pm

‘Twas Dan Quayle put the e in potato.

Jenn Runion
Reply to  Frank Kotler
July 7, 2016 5:24 am

OMG, you are so right! LMAO at my faux pas! Whoops.
The two are linked in my head—being so similar in their worldview–only they know what is right.

Bill Powers
Reply to  Jenn Runion
July 7, 2016 11:57 am

Please articulate their worldviews and how they are the same.
Aside from being dim bulbs what other ideologies do they share? What similar policies do they advocate?
I am not sure Quayle has articulated a position on the religion of Anthropogenic Global Warming. Do you know what it is?

Jenn Runion
Reply to  Frank Kotler
July 8, 2016 6:58 am

@ Bill Powers:
“I am RIGHT!” even when they are wrong. Worldview wasn’t a good choice of wording on my part–as it does imply ideologies how bout blinder viewpoint due to low intelligence?

Bruce Cobb
July 6, 2016 8:20 am

I don’t want to compare Al Gore to a pompous ass but one could certainly draw a parallel.

Jason Calley
Reply to  Bruce Cobb
July 6, 2016 8:31 am

Al Gore actually claimed that as a young man he used to plow the steep side of a hill with a mule.
No. Really, he did. The same young man that grew up as the rich son of a powerful US Senator used to plow hillsides with a mule. Sure…

n.n
July 6, 2016 8:45 am

Today we have [class] diversity and scientific mysticism. Progress.

Steve
July 6, 2016 9:00 am

I would compare Al Gore’s mission to Scientology and David Miscavige. The relentless pursuit of money and fame, all the while saying they are the victims of evil people trying to bring them down. You can really compare anyone to anyone if you want. At least he’s not comparing himself to Jesus Christ. Yet.

Joel Snider
Reply to  Steve
July 7, 2016 8:22 am

Flunked out of Divinity school and started his own religion. I’d buy that comparison.

July 6, 2016 9:39 am

Yeah, like all great people who make it their mission/embark on profound social changes for the benefit of humanity…………..also make hundreds of millions of dollars from their actions (-:
Give me somebody not getting filthy rich or reaping gains to themselves from their actions and I’ll give you somebody, who’s actions stand out as being intended entirely to benefit others.

Michael Jankowski
July 6, 2016 9:59 am

It was probably 20 years ago, but I recall him likening someone (Rachel Carson?) to Rosa Parks while he himself was the Martin Luther King of the enviro movement.

Joel Snider
July 6, 2016 10:00 am

VERY prominent tactic currently engaged by the Progressive Left on almost ALL issues – attach it to racism somehow, playing on the hyper-sensitivity that has been taught to any reference at all to ethnicity, as well as attributing hateful qualities to those they’ve decided to attack – i.e. making them someone they are allowed to hate. People LOVE being allowed to hate and vent on an approved target. And it’s amazing how fast and how total the paint job happens.
Imagine how surprised I was to find my views on Climate Change made me a racist.
In addition to being a Bible-thumping, science denier, of course.

Barbara Skolaut
July 6, 2016 10:11 am

Arrogant, self-centered b@stard.
It may take a while, but it warms the cockles of my heart to know he’s going to be very hot for all eternity.

Resourceguy
July 6, 2016 10:42 am

He’s no Jackie Robinson. He considered MLK first, but his handlers talked him out of that. He may end up like H. Hughes over time. How long are his fingernails by the way?

Snarling Dolphin
July 6, 2016 10:54 am

Al Gore. The one and only ballot choice on the planet who could make me vote for Hillary.

Resourceguy
July 6, 2016 11:32 am

Except Jackie Robinson had statistics and results in his case to demonstrate plainly and fairly and with independent checking.

Bill Powers
July 6, 2016 11:50 am

Having listened to the man speak often (too often) I have never considered him the sharpest pencil in the box but in his defense it was the fawning interviewer who drew out the Jackie Robinson comparison. I wouldn’t lay that at ALGORE’s feet. There is a different metaphor i would use to describe that portion of the oral interview and ALGORE didn’t have to pay for it.
It is worth noting however his “Mission” analogy is stomach turning. Missionary brings to mind charitable acts done to help the downtrodden out of love and mercy without regard to personal sacrifice. ALGORE has parlayed his “mission” into personal wealth measured in multi-millions thanks in large part to the very same fawning media that sees him as a white Jackie Robertson (pardon my retching). That led to large speaking fees, a Head scratching Nobel prize, an Oscar for a fictional documentary (can anyone say oxymoron) and partnership in a cap and trade plan that is nothing more than a license to print money. His Mission is to get as rich as he can. Screw the downtrodden who can’t pay their electric bills. Is this a great country or what.

TDBraun
July 6, 2016 11:58 am

I don’t see the problem here. It was the interviewer who suggested the analogy with Robinson because of the controversy and criticism Gore has “endured”. Gore didn’t exactly reject the analogy, but neither did he accept it either… he deflected the question into a discussion of one similarity with Robinson, the idea that he felt like he was on a mission, and even allowed that this was a “grandiose” way to phrase it. Maybe he should have explicitly downplayed the analogy, but he is a politician and they seldom reject praise.
The interviewer’s fawning softball question is what deserves derision here.

marlolewisjr
July 6, 2016 12:22 pm

I wrote the first in-depth critique of An Inconvenient Truth (in March 2007: https://cei.org/pdf/5820.pdf), co-produced and narrated the first documentary rebuttal to AIT (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=w6dlGpDXkb8), and sung out against Gorethodoxy on Youtube (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IbmnODQPFcM). So clearly I’m not a Gore apologist.
Nonetheless, in the text quoted above, it was the interviewer, not Gore, who suggested the Jackie Robinson analogy, and the interviewer who asked Gore to comment on the “parallel.” So Gore can hardly be blamed for discussing it.
Moreover, Gore’s point that people “who strongly disagree with a message take it out on the messenger” is in fact what happens in some cases, just as, in other cases, people who strongly dislike the messenger take it out on the message.
In short, the headline in the post imputes to Gore a megalomaniacal boast that he did not make in the interview.

Joel Snider
Reply to  marlolewisjr
July 6, 2016 12:28 pm

Very often interviews are done – most particularly with people like Al Gore – with questions provided by the interviewee. You do not interview Gore without a great deal of oversight.

clipe
July 6, 2016 2:28 pm

When Al Gore sees a picture of Jackie Robinson, he only sees the man’s skin colour.
Typical “Progressive”.

lyn roberts
July 6, 2016 5:41 pm

Ohhhhhh dear – digging a hole, keep going Al, you are doing a good job there.

July 6, 2016 6:31 pm

He hits everything out of the park, but they’re all foul balls.

Eugene WR Gallun
July 6, 2016 6:43 pm

AL GORE — AMERICAN BLOVIATOR
Forever, forever it’s all Al Gore
Now, in the future and always before
Spinning himself with the words he can whirl
The earth is his oyster, he is its pearl
Carbon dioxide is filling the air!
And there’s no escaping — IT’S EVERYWHERE!
it’s up in the sky, it’s under your bed
It’s deep in your lungs, comes out of your head!
The polar caps melt from CO2’s heat
The seas with be rising twenty-five feet
The Ocean Conveyor ceasing to flow
Where water goes stagnant algae will grow!
A growth in plant life carbon promotes!
Green seas where sargasso seamlessly floats!
If acid rain scared you — THINK ABOUT THIS!
Oceans acidic and warmer than piss!
The teddy bears — Wait! — the polar bears drown
As carbon goes up survival goes down!
Once as a young man Al fully believed
First before others himself he deceived
Then sure of THE TRUTH his dictums were hurled
Like God, by The Word, creating the world!
The sky! It is falling upon your head!
Sharknaoes increasing with millions dead!
(That’s in a movie — I make movies too
Seeing’s believing so all of it’s true!)
Weather is weirding and it’s everyplace!
Our footprint of carbon on Gaia’s face!
Calamitous Climate! None can escape
Gaia’s revenge for Capitalist rape!
Science is settled! We know all the facts!
These super storms need a new super tax!
The U.N. will lead! The models are right!
Peer reviewed models! — Mankind is a blight!
So go buy a bike and pedal to work!
2000 WAS MINE! AND BUSH IS A JERK!
Al’s actions say more than bluster explains
A hypocrite now he flies private planes
Mansions and autos, a party time yacht
Al owns such but preaches — others must not!
Note: Al’s four decker, fantasy class yacht is named the Bio-Solar One
and where it is docked called by all the BS One.
Eugene WR Gallun

July 6, 2016 6:58 pm

He never mentions me.
https://youtu.be/2Ku6oBDiZ28

July 7, 2016 3:35 am

Once upon a time I saw a group of people standing in a field. They had been there for a couple of months. Another time I saw a group of people who not only killed themselves by drinking poisoned Kool aid, but forced their children to drink it as well.
Can you imagine the jokes about humans in an alien civilization? It’s sad, and it’s embarrassing. The 10 year window to Save the World came and went. I keep saying this, but the ultimate proof of the end was near in warming terms was/is their math. They weren’t/aren’t kidding. They haven’t/aren’t kidding about trying to use the law to silence skeptics. They’ve been saying we should be tried on the same basis as war criminals. I think the crazies will be competing to see who has standing room in that mental hospital.
I don’t think Al is dumb. He’s making a boat load of money. I also don’t think he’s doing the world any good. In fact, ” to thine own self be true “, I don’t think he believes it either or he wouldn’t have bought property that would have been literally underwater by now. His mission of disrupting people’s lives is just as wrong as getting people to stand around wasting their lives or drink poison for some greater good.
The difference in the two men couldn’t be any clearer. They share nothing in common.
By the way, pushing the dates out on AGW disproves AGW…. why? It’s the math.
In order to make a nuclear weapon you have to know when it goes critical. It can’t be 1 second later. It’s the math. AGW is a weapon built on math. The math is wrong.

RoHa
July 7, 2016 5:55 pm

Two late comments.
1. Most of of us in the real world have never heard of of Robinson.
2. What was Al Gore first at?