Climate Change is Killing Us: My Open Letter to Prime Minister Trudeau & Environment Minister McKenna

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Laurentide Ice Sheet. Credit: SERC-Carleton, Google Earth kml file from NOAA Science on a Sphere (Public Domain)

By Allan Chatenay

(sent via email 21-Oct-2017)

Dear Prime Minister Trudeau and Minister McKenna; Canada has a problem.

Climate Change is Killing Us.

Or more precisely, your view of climate change is killing us.

The first issue is to understand the words “climate change.” In the recent public discourse, “climate change” has come to mean “blaming humans for changing the climate by using oil and gas and coal.” That creates a major difficulty, because it means that anytime the uninformed see an aspect of climate that either they haven’t seen before or an aspect that is genuinely changed, the underlying assumption is that it must be our own fault and it must be change for the worse. This view of our climate as primarily anthropomorphic is useful for scaring the populace into submission so you can tax and regulate us to death, but in fact it is the modern-day equivalent of the geocentric view of the universe dating back to Ptolemy.

So, let’s be clear. There is no doubt that the climate is changing. The climate has always changed and always will. The climate will never stay the same – nor should it. The only thing more absurd than denying climate change is thinking that humans can stop it from changing. But when people today say the words “climate change” they mean something else. They mean that humans are to blame.

It is only natural that because we humans tend to incorrectly perceive our- selves as the centre of things we would tend to blame ourselves when the earth’s climate changes. This flaw in human thought is not new.

The Maya, Inca and Aztecs used to do the same thing. In a vain attempt to control the weather and the resulting crop yields, they would engage in human sacrifices including decapitation, blood offerings and live heart extractions. If those efforts didn’t work and the crops failed, then the assumption would be that they didn’t do enough of it – leading to more sacrifices. Today it seems obvious to almost all of us that blood offerings don’t change the weather. I find it strange though that when the sacrificial offerings are from our own treasury, especially if the victims of sacrifice are either corporations or wealthy individuals, you and many other Canadians continue to believe essentially the same thing. And what leaders know is that being the master of the sacrifice concentrates power in those conducting the ritual.

Your government’s view that Canada can stop the global climate from changing by taxing Canadians, killing billions of dollars of new projects and chasing foreign investment away when none of the major global powers are doing the same is profoundly harmful and irresponsible. You have created a graveyard of cancelled mega-projects that are severely damaging to Canada but that strongly benefit other nations for no good reason. The Energy East cancella- tion resulting from the NEB including ‘climate change’ considerations in its evaluation of that project is the latest serious casualty. Insanity! You should be ashamed that we will now unnecessarily import oil from dictatorships when we could be building a stronger Canada.

Just 18,000 years ago almost all of Canada sat under giant thick sheets of ice. Both the Cordilleran and Laurentide Ice Sheets were continuous sheets thousands of kilometres across and several kilometres thick. They melted entirely without human intervention (as did their equivalents in Asia and Europe). They melted so quickly that the rocks upon which they rested (including the Canadian Precambrian Shield) are still rebounding from the rapid removal of their incredible weight. Sea levels have risen over 100 metres during that period separating Alaska from Russia and modifying ocean cur- rents around the globe. The changes we are observing and living through at present are simply the tail end of that monumental transformation and are absolutely in keeping with natural climate change.

Imagine the energy required to melt several continental ice sheets thousands of kilometres across and several kilometres thick, thereby raising the sea level by over 100 metres in just a few thousand years – a blink of an eye in geological time just on the edge of recorded human history. Let the fact that humans had nothing to do with that sink in, and then ask yourself how taxing Canadians and issuing government subsidies to install windmills and solar panels will stop that sort of planetary-scale climate change.

Rather than the disaster that you would have us believe has befallen us or will befall us in future, what we have in fact observed is that access to abundant and reliable energy has increased human life spans, reduced famine and suffering and lead to unprecedented levels of prosperity around the globe. Access to secure sources of energy reduces the impact of climate to humans, not the other way around.

Today, humans are more able to respond to natural disasters than ever before largely because we have access to abundant energy – and this is a good thing. Life before hydrocarbon energy was available was much harder and many lives were cut short by starvation and disease. Today, anti-hydrocarbon positions are written with computers made of and powered by hydrocarbons by people who got to work in a vehicle powered by hydrocarbons, who demand access to health care that is only possible because of hydrocarbon energy and who go on vacations to warmer climates in planes powered by hydrocarbons. The hypocrisy is telling – no opponent of hydrocarbon energy seems prepared or willing to live without it – including you and your government.

It is noteworthy that the two primary products of hydrocarbon combustion are H2O and CO2, which (along with the sun and nutrients from the earth) also happen to be the very building blocks of life on earth. This is because hydro- carbons are themselves the natural product of organic growth and decay. The primary indisputable and measurable impact of increased levels of CO2 on earth is that plants will grow quicker – which is why greenhouses routinely pump CO2 into their greenhouses (to levels 300% higher than current atmos- pheric levels) to accelerate plant growth. CO2 should be celebrated just as water is, not vilified as a ‘pollutant’ – which it clearly is not.

There is no invisible thermometer controlled by taxation and regulation and subsidy that will change the output of the sun or our relationship with the sun. It turns out that the earth and the sun and the universe at large just don’t care that much about humans or our actions. The simple fact of the matter is that we are vastly more affected by the planet than the planet is by us – and one day in the distant future we will simply be another sedimentary layer in the geological record.

However, just as Galileo was persecuted during his time for advancing a heliocentric theory and questioning the geocentric view of the universe, those of us who question this anthropocentric view of climate are now also subject to ridicule and persecution.

This persecution takes shape in the notion that if I deploy scientific knowledge to refute many of the alarmist claims made by those who believe climate change is anthropogenic, then I must be a ‘denier’ – an epithet closely linked

to neo-Nazism that would subtly try to link me to that horrible way of thinking.

Statements like “the science is settled” or “97% of scientists agree” are extremely troubling as they are themselves anti-scientific and designed to sup- press the relentless questioning that is essential to the scientific method. Even Neil DeGrasse Tyson’s statement that “the good thing about science is that it’s true whether or not you believe in it” misappropriates the scientific method to declare science as an infallible source of truth rather than a process of finding and discovering truth through questioning and testing. People in your government tend to say things like “Canadians know…” or “We all know…” when it comes to the anthropocentric view of climate change. In fact, we may not know, or we may know the opposite.

Instead, I prefer Albert Einstein’s statement that The important thing is to never stop questioning” as the ultimate piece of scientific advice.

The anthropocentric view of climate change has confused the masses and under your leadership is causing Canada to make a series of terrible decisions. In subscribing to this ill-conceived view of hydrocarbon energy as a bad thing, Canadians are suffering terrible casualties to your Liberal government’s economic friendly fire.

I have no doubt that you believe you are doing the right thing and that your intentions are good. The road to hell is paved with good intentions and history is full of leaders who destroyed their nations in fits of madness and in pursuit of vanity and folly.

It is high time you considered that you might be wrong. Many of us can already see that you are.

Best Regards, Allan Châtenay

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John Bills
March 22, 2018 3:30 pm

Despite What You’ve Heard, Global Warming Isn’t Making Weather More Extreme
https://www.investors.com/politics/editorials/despite-what-youve-heard-global-warming-isnt-making-weather-more-extreme/

Alan Tomalty
March 22, 2018 4:31 pm

Don’t forget Trudeau is the Prime Minister who as soon as he took office stopped Canadian jets from bombing ISIS positions. Yes you read that correctly. He is a looneytune.

March 22, 2018 4:39 pm

This is an excellent letter to Prime Minister Trudeau & Environment Minister McKenna, unfortunately as they are both first-grade idiots, they will not understand it and probably will not even notice it.

March 22, 2018 5:31 pm

“CO2 should be celebrated just as water is, not vilified as a ‘pollutant’ – which it clearly is not.”
Wow, great line! Can’t wait to deploy it in the wild.

willhaas
March 22, 2018 7:05 pm

The reality is that the climate change we have been experiencing is caused by the sun and the oceans over which mankind has no control. There is no real evidence that CO2 has any effect on climate and plenty of scientific rational to support the idea that the climate sensivity of CO2 is zero.
If the future is anything like that past, the current interglacial period will end and during the next ice age ice sheets will eventually cover most of Canada as wiell as parts of Europe and Asia and ther is nothing that we can do to stop it. So we need to enjoy the current interglacial period while it lasts..

March 22, 2018 9:51 pm

Anthony Watts has given is a good overview of past climate change. I will concentrate on recent time is misrepresented by alarmist “climate science” of people who do not know what climate science is. Current opinion among this group is that global temperature is rising because of the greenhouse gases like carbon dioxide in the atmosphere that we, the people, put there. There The gas then absorbs radiant energy coming from the sun, gets warn, and passes that warmth on to other gas molecules in the air. People like James Hansen have warned us that this heating can become a “dangerous greenhouse warming.” According to Hansen this could go far enough to evaporate the oceans. All this amounts to nothing but pseudo-scientific hypothecating. If you look at recent climate history, you will find that since the late 1800-s global temperature has gone through several stages if warning and cooling. According to HadXRUT3 graph, which I showed as figure 23 in “What Warming,” there was a cooling period over 30 years long that lasted from 1887 tp 1910. In 1910 warming took over and it lasted till 1940, another 30-year stretch. Then in 1940 cooling returned and so on. Warming did follow that 1940 cooling nut slowly; such that global temperature did not reach the 1940 values again until the year 1980. It is quite impossible to attribute any of these up and down temperature changes to carbon dioxide greenhouse effect. Fortunately, the HadCRUT3 temperature curve I used also shows carbon dioxide amount in air. That curve is extremely smooth, no kinks or anything.. In 1910 when cooling suddenly becomes warming, carbon dioxide had to be added to the atmosphere but the carbon dioxide curve proves it did not happen. . Such c changes in atmospheric CO2 amount simply never happen. It follows that bone of the global temperature changes for the past century and a half can be attributed to the greenhouse effect as constantly drummed into our ears. It has gone further of course and influenced politicians to fund expensive projects to decarbonize the atmosphere because these bozos really believe that carbon dioxide is warming up the world. And now the Prime Minister of Canada has fallen for the same trap. The greenhouse theory just may be a useful theory in an appropriate setting but invoking it for global warming is nothing but pure pseudoscience.

March 23, 2018 1:29 am

Good letter, but with the odd editorial hiccup, for example: “which is why greenhouses routinely pump CO2 into their greenhouses”.

Eric Gisin
March 24, 2018 12:10 am

Toronto Sun just did a piece on Gerald “PM” Butts, Trudeau’s principal secretary. He is a far-left Green and is compared to Bush’s Cheney.
http://torontosun.com/opinion/columnists/furey-youd-think-sooner-or-later-trudeaus-going-to-have-to-cut-gerald-butts-loose

Charles Glenn
March 25, 2018 12:06 pm

An excellent and accurate article. It will, of course, be ignored by those it is written to.

Mike
March 25, 2018 2:07 pm

As a person with a long history of interest in climate change (>40 years since high school) I share the same view. My interest was brought about primarily due to my fascination of the many ice ages that have come and gone and also the theory that the Dark Ages in Europe were due to a drop in global temperature….long before the extensive use of hydrocarbons.
We should be spending to adapt to the coming changes. Trying to stop it is farcical, like trying to stop a speeding train.

Ron Eftodie
March 27, 2018 7:49 pm

I have stated many times before that very powerful people have changed word pollution to global warming as cleaning up pollution does not keep the power with the elite ,the change to global warming can be turned on the public and tax is the tool .

Murphy Slaw
March 28, 2018 11:15 am

Allan Chatenay,
Hear, hear!

Nancy in Alberta
March 28, 2018 7:14 pm

Thank you for putting forth so many logical points. I could not have worded it like this, and am so happy you did!

Chris
March 30, 2018 1:13 pm

Fantastic letter hitting this progressive ‘fantasy’ squarely on the head!!

LORRE SCHARTNER
March 31, 2018 5:36 am

I couldn’t agree more! Very well said.

Time Traveler
March 31, 2018 6:16 pm

Barbara shared this information and link on March 23rd as one of the first comments after the letter.
I am wondering if everyone who follows the link below realizes the information on that page was last updated in 1997??? Maybe there is a more current reference that could be provided?
Barbara March 23, 2018 at 8:14 pm
UN Agenda21 – Canada
‘Economic Aspects Of Sustainable Development In Canada’
Webpages at:
http://www.un.org/esa/agenda21/natlinfo/countr/canada/eco.htm

Kelly Daniel
April 3, 2018 2:50 am

Exactly what I’ve been saying for quite a while now. This letter is spot on.

Greg Egan
April 4, 2018 10:30 am

A fabulous treatise to “reason” i would add the carbon emissions from forest fires in BC last year should have caused a huge rise in temperatures but for some reason we were really cold with lots of precipitation – thank God for hydro carbons enabling effective fire fighting. – even if a fire started from a careless humans cigarette, the forest by my house was ready for a forest fire that cleaned the forest floor , killed bad bugs and prepped the soil for new forest – we couldnt see the mountain side for 3 weeks this summer because of terrible carbon laced smoke – pity!!!
But a natural phenomena