Speakers at a conference
on climate change are making the case that the alarmism behind the global-warming
bandwagon is politically motivated, has nothing to do with science, and could
affect the sovereignty of the U.S.
The second annual
International Conference on Climate Change hosted by The Heartland
Institute was held
in New York City. More than 700 registrants gathered in the Big Apple to
hear more than 70 scientists
-- representing the views of tens of thousands of their colleagues -- make
the argument that media and environmental
advocacy groups have it all wrong, that global warming is not a crisis.
One of the headlining speakers to open the event Sunday evening was European
Union and Czech Republic President
Vaclav Klaus, who was welcomed with a standing ovation. Klaus, one of the
most outspoken critics of manmade global
warming in Europe, says those who propagate global-warming hysteria are like
the communists of old Europe.
Like global-warming alarmists, he stated, the communists did not listen
to opposing views.
"They didn't even try to argue back," said Klaus. "They considered you
a naïve, uninformed and confused person,
an eccentric complainer....It is very similar now."
Klaus believes that politicians who propagate global warming hysteria only
have one goal in mind: control of the public.
"It is evident that the environmentalists don't want to change the climate,"
he said. "They want to change our behavior...
to control and manipulate us."
And he warns that those same politicians wish to engage in energy rationing
-- all because of a problem that he believes
does not exist. Klaus concluded his speech with this remark.
"The environmentalists speak about saving the planet. We have to ask --
From what? And from whom?"
said the EU leader. "I think I know [those answers] for sure. We have to
save the planet, and us, from them."
Opposition
an 'uphill battle'
Dr. Richard Lindzen,
who has been Alfred P. Sloan Professor of Meteorology at MIT for over 25
years, was one of
the keynote speakers on the opening day. He said global warming hysteria
is more about a political agenda and has
nothing to do with science.
"I think [there is] one point you should notice as one discusses the science,
and that is that global warming alarm
-- as far as I can tell -- has always been a political movement, a highly
organized one," Lindzen observed.
"And although it took me a while to realize this, opposing it has always
been an uphill battle."
The MIT professor, one of the world's most respected atmospheric physicists,
said that many of his good friends
and colleagues have subscribed to global warming alarmism because they either
fear for their jobs or see it as a
way to get funding for scientific projects. He also discussed the use of
supposed "climate models," and quipped
that as scientists debate intelligent design, climate models are an example
of "unintelligent design."
Lindzen contends that climate models are being fed erroneous information
in order to get the results that
global-warming alarmists want.
Throwing money away
Dr. Michael Coffman is the CEO of Sovereignty International, a U.N. watchdog
organization. During an interview
at the conference with OneNewsNow, he explained that the basis of his skepticism
regarding global warming comes
from research he himself has conducted.
"During the 1980s and early 1990s, I lead a multimillion-dollar research
effort on global warming and found that the
data that was being collected just didn't support the hypothesis that man
was causing global warming," says Coffman.
Therefore he concludes that any money thrown at fixing the alleged problem
is a waste.
"Any amount of money that we spend on it is not going to change any temperatures
whatsoever," he observes,
arguing that every family in America will be affected. "Because depending
upon what legislation is passed, it will
actually cause every American family to spend at least two- to five-thousand
dollars more a year...
to try to support this effort to curb carbon-dioxide emissions."
Coffman warns that politicians are moving towards having an international
tribunal established which will regulate
carbon emissions.
"Which means basically since carbon dioxide is involved in all elements
of business in the United States,
...whoever does this controls the economy of the United States, and therefore
our sovereignty," he cautions.