The Climate Wars, Intensify, By James Reed

At last, some sanity from a nation regarding climate change policy, with Trump back to throw a major spanner in the works of the climate change regime. At present the big thing for these fanatical globalists is climate change mass migration, where up to a billion people will come to the West because Western technology and civilisation, which allowed the Third World to reach is present population levels, is responsible. Or so they say. The UN sees millions of people becoming climate migrants, and the likes of climate change guru Al gore, speaking at Davos, predicts up to a billion people coming to the West. We have already seen what such a racial swamping can do to communities at the local level, as in the case studies of the Great Replacement by mass migration in towns such as Springfield Ohio, in the US.

One of the great virtues of a Trump presidency is that he will severely damage in the short term the climate change alarmist narrative, giving more time to fight back.

https://www.infowars.com/posts/climate-control

"The Trump policy on climate change is already taking shape, and it's more or less what you'd expect. That's a good thing, of course.

Most notably, Trump is going to withdraw the US from the Paris Climate Accords. The US will no longer be bound by their absurd emissions targets and the general commitment to reduce the burning of "fossil fuels" and prevent the world from boiling over like a tin of soup carelessly left on the stove when the phone rings.

This will be an enormous blow to the climate cult, just as it was in 2017 when Trump withdrew for the first time. The global media and climate alarmists are already breathing deeply and preparing themselves. There will be a mass freakout all the same. Greta will puff her cheeks and stick out her bottom lip and cross her arms,—"HOW DARE YOU!"—but it won't matter.

According to The New York Times, Trump will scrap Biden's "environmental justice" policies that have focused on providing green energy to underserved communities, as part of a broader agenda to "dismantle what Mr. Trump's allies view as the 'woke' agenda and any programs that do not help improve the economy."

The new president will also move to end the Biden administration's pause on the construction of new export terminals for natural gas, re-designate National Monuments to allow more drilling and extraction, and revoke a waiver that allows California and other states to set more stringent pollution standards than the federal government.

Trump also plans to appoint an "energy czar" to coordinate policies across government agencies and make it easier to increase production of oil, gas and coal.

In short, Trump is going to unleash the nation's industry and ensure the American people have cheap, plentiful energy. Lots of it. Trump will fill the engine of prosperity right to the top and start the motors turning again. At last.

So far, so America first.

But Trump can and should go further when it comes to the climate, and here's why.

Trump's refusal of the climate-change agenda—his refusal to deindustrialise and destroy the competitiveness, the prosperity and the well-being of the American people—will of course inspire and embolden other nations to follow suit.

That's how American leadership works. There's direct power and there's indirect power. If America does something, other nations feel they can too. This is one of the great hopes with Trump's mass-deportation policy: that if he does it and it works, right-wing politicians across the Western world will realise they can do it too. Trump's ally Nigel Farage has already, disappointingly, said he doesn't think mass deportation is feasible in the UK. A dose of American can-do attitude is just what Mr Farage, and the long-suffering British people, need. Demographics is not destiny.

But back to the climate. There's no area of the climate-change agenda that poses more of a threat to the West today—not even the emissions reductions themselves—than so-called "climate migration."

Now, you may not have heard of climate migration, but the climate-migration advocates have certainly heard of you, and they're planning for a future in which the world and the country you live in are transformed beyond recognition by a movement of people without precedent in human history.

I've long puzzled about how the "Great Reset" would actually come about, and I think climate migration is the answer.

Here's what these people want to do. They believe that runaway climate change is now unavoidable. The world is now going to heat dangerously, even if we meet the climate goals set out by the Paris Accords (but that's no excuse not to meet those goals, they hasten to add). What this means is that the equatorial regions of the planet, which also happen to be the most populous, are going to become uninhabitable, and soon. Within maybe 20 years, billions of people are going to be forced by extreme heat, drought, crop failure and extreme weather events to flee those regions and make for parts of the world that are less affected by global warming. That's the West: parts of North America, northern Europe and Russia, New Zealand and parts of Australia.

So what do we do? Since all of this is predictable—crystal clear, they say—and since we, in the West, are the ones responsible for global warming, we need to get as many future climate refugees moving now, before they're forced to. That way we can minimise the harm and make the movement as orderly as possible.

Tens of millions. Hundreds of millions. Billions. It doesn't matter. We have a duty to these people since we've screwed up the world. This is our cross to bear.

And besides, welcoming all these newcomers will do us good. Traditional political, social and economic structures will be totally incapable of dealing with immigration on this scale, so we'll have to create a totally new, more equitable way of living together. What we'll need is a Great Reset.

This might all sound bonkers to you. It should. Perhaps it puts you in mind of a CGI-heavy Hollywood blockbuster. In fact, it's pretty much an inversion of the story told in the Roland Emmerich film The Day After Tomorrow. It's bonkers—but it's very real.

There's even a book that lays out the full scenario. It's called Nomad Century, by the aptly named Gaia Vince—read it.

This isn't a fringe view, either. You'll hear Al Gore talking about it at Davos, about the coming wave of "over one billion climate refugees" which will make Western nations "lose our capacity for self-governance." The hard left elements of the new French coalition government have sought to make climate change a blank-cheque reason for seeking asylum in France. And just a week or so ago, Ed Miliband, the UK's Secretary of State for Energy Security and Net Zero, warned that hundreds of millions of people will soon be on the move because of climate change. These are just a few examples.

The case for climate migration is already being made in international law. In a landmark judgment in 2020, the UN Human Rights Committee ruled that a state cannot send migrants home if they are deemed to be at risk from the effects of climate change there. This is a clear precedent. There will be other judgments, and soon the legal trap will be closed.

We ignore these warnings at our peril. Only the US under Donald Trump can offer the Western world a reprieve from this insanity. Donald Trump's rejection of the climate-change agenda should take on an even more recognisably nationalist flavour, and he should actively support other nations that reject the cult and its prophecies of doom for the same reasons.

Not only is the climate-change agenda a threat to the economic prospects of America and all developed nations, but in the hands of in the hands of the kooks and fruitcakes and true believers who want climate migration, it is a threat to national identity too. No, it's more than that: it's the end of national identity altogether." 

 

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Friday, 27 December 2024

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