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Global Warming Fiction Vs. Facts
by Alan Caruba
19 January 2005
Michael Crichton's new novel, State of Fear, is based on widely ignored data that global warming is a hoax.
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The famed novelist,
Michael Crichton, may achieve what mountains of scientific data produced
by meteorologists and others have not. He may get the public to understand
that the UN Kyoto Climate Control Protocol is, itself, a work of fiction.
His novel, State of Fear,
is a technopolitical thriller based on the widely ignored data that global
warming is a hoax, but worse than that, it is a hoax specifically designed
to harm the lives and the economy of people living in industrialized nations.
It may well be the first novel to come complete with a section devoted to
the data that demonstrates not only how false global warming is, but the
impact it would have if the UN Protocol was strictly enforced.
When first proposed, the US Senate unanimously rejected the global warming
treaty and, in his first term, President George W. Bush withdrew the Kyoto
Protocol from consideration in 2001. If this action had not been taken and
the treaty applied to the US, the country would have been required to reducing
its greenhouse gas emissions by 7% below its 1990 level. The only way to
achieve this would have been to impose strict energy use limits.
Take away energy or greatly reduce it and you create the conditions for an
economic disaster and impact the lives and health of Americans from coast
to coast. You invite draconian “solutions” such as limiting the use of air
conditioning, gas rationing, and how many hours factories can operate.
State of Fear begins with the murder of an American graduate
student studying ocean-wave dynamics. Other murders follow, but the UN Kyoto
Protocol is tantamount to murder, too. Recall the deaths of Frenchmen when
a heat wave hit that nation a few years ago. The lack of air conditioning
literally killed countless elderly and others. Consider how the East Coast
of the United States shut down when a massive electrical blackout occurred.
Only the backup generators in hospitals prevented the deaths of seriously
ill patients.
The novel references the same bogus computer models that are cited by global-warming
proponents such as Carl Pope of the Sierra Club, Kevin Knobloch of the Union
of Concerned Scientists, and John Passacantando of Greenpeace, USA. They
predict melting glaciers, rising sea levels, and other catastrophes. They
are as reliable as a deck of Tarot cards. Here again, scientific data amply
demonstrates that, though the temperatures in Greenland and Iceland have
been falling at 2.2 degrees Celsius since 1987, there has been no effect
on the ice in those nations that has actually been accumulating, not melting.
The same is happening in Antarctica.
After the Russian Federation approved its participation in the UN Kyoto Protocol,
the treaty comes into effect on February 16, 2005. Its requirements for the
reduction of energy use exempts Red China, India, both home to a billion
people, and some 130 Third World nations. Happily, the US will not participate,
but UN treaties have saddled us with laws such as the Endangered Species
Act that have proven a great hindrance to economic growth. Most certainly,
the US Constitution does not authorize such laws, although it does bind us
to honor idiotic treaties conjured up by the UN.
There are, however, those in the Congress and in various States who would
impose these harmful restrictions on Americans. Chief among them in Congress
is Senator John McCain and Senator Joseph Lieberman, who introduced “The
Climate Stewardship Act” (S. 139) that would cap CO2 emissions at 2000 levels
by 2010. It is estimated this would cost the American economy $106 billion.
Nine northeastern states are colluding for the same goal (Connecticut, Delaware,
Maine, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, New Jersey, New York, Rhode Island,
and Vermont.) Other States attorneys general are using a public nuisance
lawsuit against five utilities to achieve the same goal. All this is more
than curious given the Senate resolution that rejected the UN Kyoto Protocol.
And, of course, they based their action on the same bogus data put forth
by the UN and the many NGOs behind the global warming hoax. The end result
would be a significant slowdown in economic growth combined with a rise in
the cost of energy.
I hope Michael Crichton’s novel (which is soundly rooted in documented science)
becomes yet another big bestseller. I hope lots of people who remain susceptible
to the lies of the Greens will read it and discover what those of us who
have fulminated against the UN Kyoto Treaty since the Greens first conjured
it in the early 1990s. Our speeches, our articles, our books, based on real
science and real economics have not slowed or stopped its ratification or
implementation. Perhaps a work of fiction will achieve what we could not?
Alan Caruba is the author of Warning Signs, published by Merril Press. His weekly commentaries are posted on the Internet site of The National Anxiety Center.
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