Environmentalism In America Is Dead

It has been replaced by climatism and renewable energy fetishism.

From the Robert Bryce Substack

Robert Bryce

The movement birthed by Rachel Carson’s Silent Spring in the early 1960s and Earth Day in the 1970s — a movement that once aimed to protect landscapes, wildlands, whales, and wildlife — has morphed into the NGO-corporate-industrial-climate complex. Rather than preserve wildlands and wildlife, today’s “green” NGOs have devolved into a sprawling network of nonprofit and for-profit groups aligned with big corporations, big banks, and big law firms. In the name of climate change, these NGOs want to pave vast swaths of America’s countryside with oceans of solar panels and forests of 600-foot-high wind turbines. They are also promoting the industrialization of our oceans, a move that could put hundreds of massive offshore wind turbines in the middle of some of our best fisheries and right atop known habitat of the critically endangered North Atlantic Right Whale.

The simplest way to understand how climatism and renewable energy fetishism have swamped concerns about conservation and wildlife protection is to follow the money. Over the past decade or so, the business of climate activism has become just that — a business. As I reported last year in “The Anti-Industry Industry,” the top 25 climate nonprofits are spending some $4.5 billion per year. As seen below, the gross receipts of the top 25 climate-focused NGOs now total about $4.7 billion per year.

These groups — which are uniformly opposed to both nuclear energy and hydrocarbons — have budgets that dwarf those of pro-nuclear and pro-hydrocarbon outfits like the Nuclear Energy Institute, which, according to the latest figures from Guidestar, has gross receipts of $194 million, and the American Petroleum Institute which has gross receipts of $254 million. (Unless otherwise noted, the NGO figures are from Guidestar, which defines gross receipts as a “gross figure that does not subtract rental expenses, costs, sales expenses, direct expenses, and costs of goods sold.” Also note that in many cases, Guidestar’s gross receipts figure doesn’t match the revenue that the NGOs are reporting on their Form 990s.)   

To understand the staggering amount of money being spent by the NGO-corporate-industrial-climate complex, look at the Rocky Mountain Institute, the Colorado-based group founded by Amory Lovins, the college dropout who, for nearly 50 years, has been the leading cheerleader for the “soft” energy path of wind, solar, biofuels, and energy efficiency. (Click here for my 2007 article on Lovins.) Between 2012 and 2022, according to ProPublica, Rocky Mountain Institute’s annual budget skyrocketed, going from $10 million to $117 million.

Indeed, the group provides a prime example of how corporate cash and dark money are fueling the growth of the NGO-corporate-industrial-climate complex.  Among its biggest donors are corporations that are profiting from the alt-energy craze. Last year, Wells Fargo, a mega-bank that is among the world’s biggest providers of tax-equity financing for alt-energy projects, gave Rocky Mountain Institute at least $1 million. On its website, Wells Fargo says it is “one of the most active tax-equity investors in the nation’s renewable energy sector, financing projects in 38 states.” In 2021, the bank bragged that it had surpassed “$10 billion in tax-equity investments in the wind, solar, and fuel cell industries. Wells Fargo has invested in more than 500 projects, helping to finance 12% of all wind and solar energy capacity in the U.S. over the past 10 years.”

Another mega-bank giving big bucks to RMI is J.P.  Morgan Chase, which gave at least $500,000 in 2023. I took a deep dive into alt-energy finance last year in “Jamie Dimon’s Climate Corporatism.” I explained:  

About half of all the tax equity finance deals in the country (worth about $10 billion per year) are being done by just two big banks, J.P. Morgan and Bank of America. The two outfits have the resources to handle the tax credits that are generated by renewable projects and pair those “tax subsidies” (the term used by Norton Rose Fulbright) with the capital financing needed to get the projects built. 

Last year, Rocky Mountain Institute got a similar amount from European oil giant Shell PLC, which has been active in both onshore and offshore wind. In addition, last year, the Rocky Mountain Institute published a report in  partnership with the Bezos Earth Fund, which claimed, “the fossil fuel era is over.” The Bezos Earth Fund, of course, gets its cash from Amazon zillionaire Jeff Bezos. Last year, Bezos’s group gave Rocky Mountain Institute at least $1 million. In addition, Amazon, which claims to be “the world’s largest corporate purchaser of renewable energy,” is a significant donor and was the sole funder of a report published earlier this year by RMI that promotes increased use of — what else? — solar, wind, and batteries

RMI also got at least $1 million from two NGOs — ClimateWorks Foundation and the Climate Imperative Foundation — which funnel massive amounts of dark money to climate activist groups. San Francisco-based ClimateWorks has gross receipts of $350 million. ClimateWorks lists about two dozen major funders on its website, including the Bezos Earth Fund, Bloomberg Philanthropies, the Ford Foundation, and the Hewlett Foundation. However, the group’s tax filings show that it gets most of its funding from individuals, none of whom are disclosed on its Form 990. In 2022, ClimateWorks got $128 million from an unnamed individual, $45 million from another individual, and $24 million from another. In all, ClimateWorks collected about $277 million — or roughly 84% of its funding — from a handful of unnamed oligarchs. Who are they? ClimateWorks doesn’t say, but notes that it has “several funders that [sic] prefer to remain anonymous.”

Climate Imperative, also based in San Francisco, doesn’t reveal the identities of its funders, nor does it publish the names of all the activist groups it funds. But it is giving staggering sums of money to climate groups. Climate Imperative’s gross receipts total $289 million. The group’s goals include the “rapid scaling of renewable energy, widespread electrification of buildings and transportation, [and] stopping the expansion of fossil fuel infrastructure.”

Elite academics produce studies that provide ammunition to the NGO-corporate-industrial-climate complex. Last year, in an article published in the left-wing magazine Mother Jones, Jesse Jenkins, an assistant professor of mechanical and aerospace engineering at Princeton University, claimed, “We now have the potential to rebuild a better America.”

Doing so, he explained, will require a much larger electric grid with “up to 75,000 miles of new high-voltage transmission lines by 2035.” That’s enough, he noted, to “circle the Earth three times.” He continued, saying the U.S. will also need utility-scale solar projects covering “an area the size of Massachusetts, Rhode Island, and Connecticut combined, and wind farms that span an area equal to that of Illinois, Indiana, Ohio, Kentucky, and Tennessee.”

Jenkins claims we can have a “better America” by covering an area the size of eight states with solar panels (most of which are made with Chinese components) and endless forests of massive, noisy, bird-and-bat-killing wind turbines. Put another way, the Princeton net-zero plan would require paving some 239,000 square miles (620,000 square kilometers) of land with solar and wind projects, and that doesn’t include the territory needed for all the high-voltage transmission lines that would be needed!

On its face, the notion is absurd.

Nevertheless, the scheme, published in 2020 and known as the Net-Zero America study, got positive coverage in major media outlets, including the New York Times.

Despite the cartoonish amount of land and raw materials it would require, the Princeton net-zero plan shows how renewable energy fetishism dominates today’s energy policy discussions. Nearly every large climate-focused NGO in America claims our economy must soon be fueled solely by solar, wind, and batteries, with no hydrocarbons or nuclear allowed. But those claims ignore the raging land-use conflicts happening across America — and in numerous countries around the world — as rural communities fight back against the encroachment of Big Wind and Big Solar.

Perhaps the most striking example of the environmental betrayal now underway is the climate activists’ support for installing hundreds, or even thousands, of offshore wind platforms on the Eastern Seaboard, smack in the middle of the North Atlantic Right Whale’s habitat. Last month, I published this video showing habitat maps and the areas proposed for wind development.

Among the climate groups shilling for offshore wind is the Center for American Progress (gross receipts: $40 million), founded by John Podesta, who now serves as President Biden’s advisor on “clean energy innovation and implementation.” Last year, Podesta’s group published an article claiming “oil money” was pushing “misinformation” about offshore wind.

Rather than defend whales, the group claimed the offshore wind sector is “a major jobs creator and an important tool in reducing greenhouse gas emissions.” Who funds the Center for American Progress? Among its $1 million funders are big foundations, including Bloomberg Philanthropies, the Gates Foundation, and the Chan Zuckerberg Initiative. Two familiar names, Climate Imperative and ClimateWorks, each gave the group up to $500,000 last year. On the corporate side, the group got up to $500,000 from Amazon.com and Microsoft.

Now, let’s look at the Sierra Club (gross receipts: $184 million), a group whose mission statement states that it aims “To explore, enjoy, and protect the wild places of the earth.”

Alas, protecting wild places doesn’t include our oceans. In March, Ben Jealous, the executive director of the Sierra Club, defended the offshore wind industry, claiming that “fossil fuel industry front groups” were trying to make “whales and other marine species a cultural wedge issue.” He also claimed that “disruptions in the whales’ feeding patterns, water salinity, and currents are likely the result of climate change,” adding that “climate change perhaps is the largest overriding problem, and our transition away from fossil fuels to clean energy the solution.”Just for a moment, imagine what Podesta’s group, or the  Sierra Club, would be saying if those scalawags from the oil industry were planning to put hundreds of offshore platforms in the middle of whale habitat. The wailing and gnashing of teeth would be audible from here to Montauk. Those NGOs would be running endless articles about the dangers facing the Right Whale — of which there are only about 360 individuals left, including fewer than 70 “reproductively active females.” But since the industry aiming to industrialize vast swaths of our oceans has been branded as “clean,” the response from the Sierra Clubbers has been, well, crickets.

If the climate groups are seriously concerned about reducing emissions, they would be clamoring for the increased use of nuclear energy, the safest form of zero-carbon electricity generation. It also has the smallest environmental footprint. But the Sierra Club, in its own words, “remains unequivocally opposed to nuclear energy.” Furthermore, leaders at the Natural Resources Defense Council (gross receipts: $548 million) cheered in 2021 when the Indian Point nuclear plant in New York was prematurely shuttered. What does NRDC claim we can use to replace nuclear? Offshore wind, of course

The punchline here is obvious: it’s time to discard the shopworn label of “environmentalism.” The NGOs discussed above, and others like them, are not environmental groups. Their response to the specter of catastrophic climate change will require wrecking our rural landscapes, the killing of untold numbers of bats, birds, and insects, and industrializing our oceans with large-scale alt-energy projects.

America needs a new generation of activists who want to spare nature, wildlife, and marine mammals by utilizing high-density, low-emission energy sources like natural gas and nuclear energy. We need advocates and academics who will push for a weather-resilient electric grid, not a weather-dependent one. Above all, we need true conservationists who promote a realistic view of our energy and power systems. That view will include a positive view of our place on this planet, a view that seeks to conserve natural places, not to pave them. 

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Scissor
May 25, 2024 6:17 am

The oceans aren’t boiling, but your blood should be.

Greg Goodman
Reply to  Scissor
May 25, 2024 11:20 am

But it’s only a matter of time. The oceans will reach a million degrees. [Al Gore]

strativarius
May 25, 2024 6:32 am

Environmentalism was always an alternative tack to the [previous Marxist] attempts at bringing about the fall of capitalism. One that – with propaganda and indoctrination – gained a lot of traction. Look around.

Profit is a very dirty word, virtue must be signalled…. Most of the world’s regions have some sacrificial angle, climatism chooses birds, bats, whales etc

strativarius
Reply to  strativarius
May 25, 2024 6:35 am

Religions that should say

ballynally
Reply to  strativarius
May 25, 2024 10:55 am

It seems to me that almost every proponent of unreliable energy who writes a climate alarm piece the word ‘capitalism’ is attached. In other words: capitalism= fossil fuels= destruction of the planet Earth. So, ergo, the solution is: end capitalism= end fossil fuels= saving the planet. And then everything will be well and..mmm..balanced. Simple, innit?
I think i describe it correctly but im open to suggestions..

auto
Reply to  ballynally
May 25, 2024 12:46 pm

ballynally
I think you’re right … as far as you go.
The religion will need sacrifices.
And if we’re to live in – effectively – the Seventeeth Century, that will be billions of us, denied effective warmth in winter, foods, shelter and clothing.
And mobile phones.
All, now, dependent on fossil fuels, or nukes. Or both.

Sad, isn’t it.

Auto

Ron
Reply to  strativarius
May 25, 2024 1:19 pm

They don’t appear to be very effective…

For the sixth consecutive year, the United States has maintained its position as the world’s top oil producer, according to the Energy Information Administration (‘EIA’). In 2023, U.S. crude output reached a historic high, averaging 12.9 million barrels per day (‘bpd’), surpassing the previous record set in 2019.”

Reply to  Ron
May 25, 2024 2:52 pm

You are missing a critical point. The parasites are in the process of attempting to make major attachments to some large oil companies. This is not to kill their new host but to make its blood into one of their major food sources. If the petroleum industry faded away, so would all the money the parasites are hoping to acquire through their many state level lawsuits. How many benefiting states would be happy to see tobacco use fade away?

Reply to  Ron
May 25, 2024 3:06 pm

No doubt it could be a lot more if allowed. Same for my industry- forestry, which is severely repressed. Ticks me off.

Reply to  strativarius
May 26, 2024 4:16 am

The Green movement in Western Europe in the 1980’s was funded by the KGB as a way to destabilize NATO and the West. It has been the most ‘successful’ intelligence operation in history.

J Boles
May 25, 2024 6:38 am

And despite all that money to all those groups, they still can not refute the laws of thermodynamics and the fact that they themselves use FF every day and would perish without it. They throw rocks from glass houses for that is their vocation.

J Boles
Reply to  J Boles
May 25, 2024 6:40 am

One could cover the entire country with wind and solar and at the end of the day find that it just does not work as well as what we already have – fossil fuels and nuclear and hydro.

Reply to  J Boles
May 25, 2024 10:16 am

The cost is astronomical. Bloomberg’s green energy research team estimates $US200 Trillion to stop warming by 2050. That’s about $1 million per household in the developed world since the developing world doesn’t have much to spare.

Reply to  scvblwxq
May 25, 2024 3:07 pm

and it would certainly be much more- probably 10 times as much

John the Econ
May 25, 2024 6:45 am

Nothing is bigger threat to the environment than poor people. Environmentalism as a political force did not happen until the masses in the west had risen well up the Maslow Curve, and that was largely the result of reliable and inexpensive energy. Imposing “energy poverty” will have the opposite result. Poor people don’t care about their immediate impact upon the environment, much less their carbon footprints.

Reply to  John the Econ
May 25, 2024 8:33 am

“Nothing is bigger threat to the environment than poor people.”

Respectfully, I couldn’t disagree more. The “poor people” will go with the flow, as they always have because they simply have no other choice, being poor.

Here, IMHO, is the corrected version of your statement:
“Nothing is bigger threat to the environment than poor people that remain ignorant of scientific facts.” 

auto
Reply to  ToldYouSo
May 25, 2024 1:00 pm

“Nothing is bigger threat to the environment than poor people.”

Maybe –
“Nothing is bigger threat to the environment movement than poor people.”

But poor people will do what they must to stay alive, if not warm and well-fed.
They’ll cut down trees, kill wildlife, even revolt against laws to protect the environment. Didn’t Shakespeare – it was said – get convicted of poaching deer in about 1580 or so?

Auto

Reply to  ToldYouSo
May 25, 2024 2:56 pm

Poor people are not unresponsive to the idea of producing a better environment, most would surely dearly love to have it. However, their struggle to just survive overrides all other considerations. There is little to nothing left over for making improvements that don’t have an IMMEDIATE benefit.

Reply to  ToldYouSo
May 25, 2024 3:08 pm

I guess you don’t know about pitchforks.

Jim Masterson
Reply to  ToldYouSo
May 25, 2024 4:42 pm

“. . . people that remain ignorant of scientific facts.”

I see you’re projecting again.

Steve Lohr
May 25, 2024 7:01 am

I have always been intrigued by the use of words by these NGOs that have useful meanings for their organizations and are apparently accepted by the general public as powerful descriptors. It struck me when I read a sign at a frequently visited bird sanctuary. The sign said: “Keep off, critical habitat”. I looked at the patch of grass and thought, there is nothing critical about that patch of grass; the sign is BS. But it worked. If whomever can add the manipulative “critical habitat” to their communication, it controls people. Once you see the miss use of the words, you have an idea of the real motivation, i.e. control. Here are some examples: sustainable, sustainability, endangered, extinct (often used when extirpated is the correct use), renewable, and renewability also show up. There are many more words that excite the publics motives either self-loathing or generosity which extracts their money and reinforces compliance, which, if subjected to close scrutiny, have no real meaning.

Reply to  Steve Lohr
May 25, 2024 7:27 am

Language can be a strong weapon in the hands of the wrong people, and that is the case today where the language merchants are the wrong people, and many people are misled as to what is real and what is not real.

Marty
Reply to  Steve Lohr
May 25, 2024 9:53 am

The Leftists and academics have somehow managed to seize control of the language and this has given them a large advantage. Global warming became climate change. Illegal aliens became migrants. Tax increases became enhanced revenue. Communism became social justice. Racial discrimination became diversity and inclusion. Carbon dioxide became carbon.

Reply to  Marty
May 25, 2024 10:20 am

It is not just the leftists, two-thirds of Republicans under the age of 30 support the climate agenda.

Reply to  scvblwxq
May 25, 2024 3:11 pm

I kinda doubt that.

Reply to  Marty
May 25, 2024 3:10 pm

“Illegal aliens became migrants.”

That’s one that ticks me off- big problem here in Wokeachusetts. The governor loves them- is now spending a billion/year to keep them alive- feed them, house them, give them everything.

May 25, 2024 7:22 am

From the article: “They are also promoting the industrialization of our oceans, a move that could put hundreds of massive offshore wind turbines in the middle of some of our best fisheries and right atop known habitat of the critically endangered North Atlantic Right Whale.”

Maybe not. I think the troubles for windmills are mounting.

Story tip

https://www.eia.gov/todayinenergy/detail.php?id=61943

April 30, 2024
Wind generation declined in 2023 for the first time since the 1990s

“U.S. electricity generation from wind turbines decreased for the first time since the mid-1990s in 2023 despite the addition of 6.2 gigawatts (GW) of new wind capacity last year. Data from our Power Plant Operations Report show that U.S. wind generation in 2023 totaled 425,235 gigawatthours (GWh), 2.1% less than the 434,297 GWh generated in 2022.”

end excerpt

Scissor
Reply to  Tom Abbott
May 25, 2024 7:48 am

That’s significant, throwing more good money after bad.

Dave Andrews
Reply to  Tom Abbott
May 25, 2024 9:21 am

They also said

“Slower wind speeds than normal affected wind generation in 2023 especially during the first half of the year when wind generation dropped 14% compared to 2022”

That’s what happens when you try to rely on weather dependent generation.

David Wojick
Reply to  Dave Andrews
May 25, 2024 11:05 am

In weather “normal” means average which is rare not normal. Instances well below average are common. Planning on average is doomed to fail frequently but they still do it.

David Wojick
Reply to  Tom Abbott
May 25, 2024 11:02 am
Reply to  Tom Abbott
May 25, 2024 3:00 pm

That only says to them that they need a few more percent wind turbines.

Reply to  AndyHce
May 26, 2024 4:01 am

Yeah, the Climate Alarmists want to double down on stupid.

May 25, 2024 7:35 am

The left’s plan for any institution: Kill it, Gut it, Wear it like a skin suit while demanding respect.

Mr Ed
May 25, 2024 8:01 am

The NE off shore wind projects needs to stop. Give the Sierra Club and other enviros the same
treatment they are doing to the wildlife off shore.

Editor
May 25, 2024 8:35 am

Quite right — Environmentalism is Dead having been replaced by the weirder stranger mish-mash I call ENVIRO-CLIMATISM.

Enviro-Climatism is made up entirely of propaganda that blames all environmental problems (and there are some real ones) on Climate Change caused by Fossil Fuels. So, enviro-climatism can talk about plastic pollution being caused by Big Oil who, by the way, also causes climate change and bad weather.

Cities with Smog naturally are caused by conniving Big Oil oligarchs scheming in the back rooms of the national capital with congresspeople and senators (not inversion layers).

Medical journals are absolutely manically pushing enviro-climatism — nearly every health issue is now caused (or strongly associated with) climate change, plastic pollution, excessive heat (they mean Summer in the City) and or “Chemicals in our Food” (also brought to you by Big Oil via Big Food).

Proper scientific standards have been kicked to the curb in order to “prove” that Everything is a Crisis.

Richard Greene
May 25, 2024 9:44 am

Bryce articles are always good and i always recommend them.

The Carbon Reduction Atmospheric Project (CRAP), my name fr Nut Zero, is based on the unbelievable delusion that global warming is very dangerous.

Almost half of Americans believe saving the planet could save their lives (or their children’s lives). We are living in a lunatic asylum. This is far worse than El Nino Nutters or CO2 Does Nothing Nutters. Because these Lefist Nutters believe theor lives are in jeopardy.

Unfortunately, these leftist Nutters are not all below average IQ Americans

I read a stunning article today that made me nauseous and I had to stop working on my climate and energy blog for an hour to recover

The survey of 5,000 Americans, split evenly by state, revealed that 48% of all respondents believe they’ll live to see climate change destroy the planet.

Half of Americans think climate change will destroy planet in their lifetime: poll (nypost.com)

The poll was by Talker Research (formerly known as OnePoll U.S.). It is a legitimate market research firm but does online survery so the respondents are probably younger than average.

Reply to  Richard Greene
May 25, 2024 10:23 am

Forty percent of the Republicans also support the so-called “climate change” agenda. The media is playing to the masses.

David Wojick
Reply to  scvblwxq
May 25, 2024 11:13 am

Another poll recently found that 83% of Republicans did not think climate change was a serious problem.

Reply to  scvblwxq
May 25, 2024 1:24 pm

The media is indoctrinating the masses. You said up above that two-thirds of Republicans support “climate change”, but it’s 40 percent here.

Isn’t this poll you are using about a year old? Like September of 2023?

Reply to  scvblwxq
May 25, 2024 3:12 pm

because somebody said it- don’t believe it

David Wojick
Reply to  Richard Greene
May 25, 2024 11:16 am

Online surveys on political issues tend to attract self selecting extremists so are about as far from required random as one can get. I suspect this is pot boiling junk.

Richard Greene
Reply to  David Wojick
May 26, 2024 4:30 am

Junk because you do not like the results or junk because you have evidence the poll is a hoax or extremely biased?

Few polls these days are done by phone.
Do you reject all online polls?

May 25, 2024 10:04 am

If you are a large corporate with oil and gas or even renewable interests, or a hard left communist who wants to destroy capitalism, or a foreign oil and gas power concerned to divert environmental activism away from the support of nuclear power towards useless renewables, or simply a foreign power whose leaders see the success of democracy as an existential threat, why would you not spend billions subverting the environmental movement to benefit your own narrow interests?

Communism has long adopted the policy of ‘the long march through the institutions‘ with the express intention of subverting all and every public sector government and non government organisation towards its won ends, which are mainly concerned with the destruction of western society in order that a great revolution of the people will take over and make everything perfect.

Naturally those driving the process are not in the slightest bit interested in a peoples revolution that makes everything perfect, they just want to protect their privilege by smashing anything that threatens it.

Whether Greenpeace et al are wholly owned subsidiaries, possibly of Russia, Saudi Arabia, and definitely of some serious money interests. is moot – they behave as if they are.

Greg Goodman
May 25, 2024 11:19 am

Save the trees ! yeah.
Save the whales ! OK.
Save the planet ??? Is that supposed to satirical ? You’re joking , right?

Reply to  Greg Goodman
May 25, 2024 3:14 pm

yuh, the naked apes are gonna save the planet- I think George Carlin had something to say about that

May 25, 2024 1:13 pm

“Men, it has been well said, think in herds; it will be seen that they go mad in herds, while they only recover their senses slowly, one by one.” ― Charles MacKay, Extraordinary Popular Delusions and the Madness of Crowds

I think he was wrong. I think men simply exchange one form of madness for another, sometimes quickly in herds, and sometimes slowly one by one. You can lead a man to data but you can’t make him think.

Bob
May 25, 2024 2:37 pm

Very nice. Environmentalism ain’t what it used to be.

Edward Katz
May 25, 2024 2:40 pm

This is further proof that these professed environmental preservation promoters are like bipedal bloodhounds: wherever there’s money to be made they can smell it out. Whether their actions actually do anything to save the planet is at best secondary or much lower. Nor is that anywhere near their primary motivation.

May 25, 2024 2:56 pm

The ecological movement and organizations were infiltrated and hijacked just like our government and many other organizations were. Communist agents began using them for propaganda purposes because they had a huge number of members and there was a lot of money coming in worldwide to spend on various projects to gain political power to fundamentally change America from a government of & for the people to one OVER the people. I remember getting a letter from the Sierra Club PRIOR to Prescient Trumps inauguration about his Administration and its horrible ecological programs before any of it existed. They had those written, printed up, and mailed out BEFORE he took office. It was about politics, not ecology. They hijacked and ruined the movement just like they hijack and ruin everything they touch. They are Masters of Destruction but cannot create anything healthy and useful.

May 25, 2024 3:02 pm

Nice. Just sent the link to the story to the enviro/government/academic honchos in Wokeachusetts. Of course none will read it. I think they are forbidden to read anything critical/skeptical of the “climate emergency” since it’s official state policy that it exists.

Jim Masterson
May 25, 2024 4:48 pm

“America needs a new generation of activists who want to spare nature, wildlife, and marine mammals by utilizing high-density, low-emission energy sources like natural gas and nuclear energy.”

Why do our energy sources have to be low-emission? The author is apparently worried about CO2 emissions. I’m not. Why do people grant the climate-crazies nonsense about CO2?

Mike Shearn
May 29, 2024 6:23 am

Pretty much my own thoughts. My (constant) complain is that climate panic sucks all the air out of the room, when genuine problems like habitat destruction, aquifer depletion, and generally treating the planet like a trash dump are staved of attention and action.

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