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    Ten Lies About Global Warming – From Your Elected Officials

    By Mark Schauss | July 1, 2009

    People out there are ramping up the lies about human caused global warming. The industries that would be most affected by the recent legislation proposed by the Obama administration are trying to scare and deceive the American public and are actively funding anti-global warming nonsense. One of the leaders in the science-based truth bearers is the Environmental Defense Fund. Here is a list of the ten lies being told by Congress this past week.

    10 Outrageous Claims

    As the House debate heated up, so did the hyperbole.

    We already knew that climate action opponents were, shall we say, special.

    They’ve spent years denying the reality of global warming and doing everything possible to delay action. But, last week’s floor debate put their tortured reasoning in the Congressional Record.

    We’ve compiled 10 of the most outrageous comments from the floor last week.

    Yes, they’re bizarre. But, it’s important to keep in mind that we are very likely to see much more of this as the bill moves to the Senate.

    10 Outrageous Claims

    10) “Wake up, America. There hasn’t been any global warming, which is what we heard over and over and over again – there hasn’t been any global warming for 10 years.” – Rep. Dana Rohrabacker (R-CA)

    No warming for 10 years? Well, not exactly true. 1998 was the 2nd hottest year on record while 2008 was only the 8th hottest. So, if you only look at those two years, you might assume there hasn’t been any warming. But, 2005 was the hottest year on record and the warmest decade on record is 1998 through 2008. The trends are clear. The planet is warming. Period.

    9) “You want to talk about a massive new welfare program for energy? It’s in here too… It’s a whole new welfare program for energy.” – Rep. Greg Walden (R-OR)

    If you want to talk welfare, what about the hundreds of billions the oil, gas and coal industries have received in subsidies and tax breaks over the years?

    8) “God has put us on this Earth as responsible stewards of these resources, and we ought to use them responsibly. This bill does not do it. In fact, it does nothing good. The only meaningful thing that it might do is provide a relatively meaningless photo op for our President in December in Copenhagen as he stands to brag about what America has done while the leaders of India and China laugh at us behind his back.” – Rep. Mike Conaway (R-TX)

    We look forward to working with Rep. Conaway to strengthen this bill and to fight for the strongest possible international global warming treaty later this year.

    7) “Energy producing states like Oklahoma will be economically punished and devastated.” – Rep Tom Cole (R-OK)

    Rep. Cole should have a look at climate models showing that Oklahoma could spend nearly the entire summer with 100+ temperatures by the end of the century. Talk about devastating.

    6) “We should not be the first lemming to jump off the cliff.” – Rep. Doc Hasting (R-WA)

    That’s an interesting point given that the U.S. is the only industrial country in the world that never ratified the Kyoto global warming treaty and that much of Europe is operating under a carbon cap right now.

    5) “[For some, this bill is an] economic death sentence.” – Rep. Phil Gingrey (R-GA)

    As opposed to the current economy in which we are held hostage by our reliance on foreign oil and in which only last summer we saw gas prices exceed $4/gallon.

    4) “The whole point of cap-and-trade is to make fossil fuels, or 85 percent of the energy we consume, more expensive.” – Rep. Glenn Thompson (R-PA)

    No, the point of this bill is to cap global warming pollution, put Americans back to work building out our clean energy future, and free us from our dangerous dependence on foreign oil.

    3) “Do you want to throw away the economic prosperity for nothing, because that’s what this bill does. And for what, to satisfy the twisted desires of radical environmentalists.” – Rep. Devin Nunes (R-CA)

    With millions of Americans out of work and the economy in recession, it might not be the best time to talk about “throwing away our economic prosperity” or to support the status quo.

    2) “[This will bring us back to] hunting and gathering.” – Rep. Thaddeus McCotter (R-MI)

    Yeah, when we look at solar panels, hybrids and windmills, that’s exactly what comes to mind – hunting and gathering societies.

    1) “The idea of human induced global climate change is one of the greatest hoaxes perpetrated out of the scientific community. It is a hoax… We need to be good stewards of our environment, but this is not it, it’s a hoax!” – Rep. Paul Broun (R-GA)

    A global conspiracy involving thousands of scientists taking tens of thousands of measurements on everything ranging from ice core samples to the concentration of CO2 in the atmosphere to sea level rise, hundreds of governments around the world working to address global warming pollution, dozens of science academies that have endorsed the reality of global warming and urged action, as well as hundreds of millions of people around the world who have joined the movement to promote global warming action.

    And, we’re all coordinating our activities to push this hoax because…?

    Please support this organization so the truth can come out.

    Topics: Environment, Global Warming, Opinion, Our World, Politics, Toxicity, Websites | 1 Comment »

    One Response to “Ten Lies About Global Warming – From Your Elected Officials”

    1. Brian Fikes Says:
      July 24th, 2009 at 6:44 pm

      The Union of Concerned Scientists did a study that shows fighting global warming will stimulate the economy and that while it will cost us a little more for about the first three years, we will save a huge amount after that ($1.6 trillion cumulative from 2010 to 2030, so that is including the extra costs from the early years). By 2030 families will see an average savings of $900 per year. Now, this is only if we follow the comprehensive policy that UCS proposes, and the current bill being considered only go part of the way. So we need to improve what they are doing, but it is a start. To see the UCS report, go here: http://www.ucsusa.org/global_warming/solutions/big_picture_solutions/climate-2030-blueprint.html. There are links to the executive summary and the full report. Also, for an excellent report on the effects of global warming on the U.S. if we don’t stop it, go here and click on the PDF link on the right: http://www.climatescience.gov/Library/scientific-assessment/

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