The Repairman: I’m here to fix your climate

by John on June 10, 2011
in Climate scam

This is a skit by a bloke called Speedy. He satirises the satirists, John Clarke and Bryan Dawe. Read more..

The Carbon Tax That Ate Australia

by John on April 22, 2011
in Climate scam

Written by Anthony Cox and David Stockwell | The Climate Sceptics | April 21, 2011

The carbon tax has inflamed the old conflicts between progressives and conservatives – between those who favour government-imposed solutions, and the free-market capitalists or those who simply mistrust big government. Read more..

We need to talk about wind farms…

by John on July 29, 2010
in Climate scam

Written by James Delingpole, Telegraph (UK) 28 July 2010

“Energy prices may rise by a third,” says our disastrous secretary of state of energy and climate change Chris Huhne. Rubbish. They’re going to rise by a hell of a lot more than that before he is finished. Alternative energy, let us never forget, is just that: an alternative to energy. Wind power and solar power are so risibly inefficient that the only way they can ever be economically viable is with lashings and lashings of taxpayer subsidy. Read more..

1969 Climate Predictions Miss by a Mile

by John on July 26, 2010
in Climate scam

Authored by Donna Laframboise, the creator of NOconsensus.org (Toronto, Canada)

Czech physicist Lubos Motl reports on an important memo just released by the Richard Nixon library. Written by presidential advisor Daniel Moynihan in 1969 it reveals that the “carbon dioxide problem” was viewed as an environmental concern by some highly placed US government officials way back when. Read more..

Copenhagen climate charade

by John on December 12, 2009
in Climate scam

A climate of hypocrisy and elitist excesses abound at the Copenhagen summit on climate change. One TV viewer watching the fiasco on Sky News says it’s like Nimbin in suits. Read more..

Global warming nonsense

by John on September 2, 2009
in Climate scam

The Nonsense That Is Global Warming

Some years ago a British newspaper arranged a square-off between a meteorologist, an astrologer and a woman with corns, to see who could best predict the weather. The woman with corns won. Read more..