If All You See…

…is horrible off-season heat snow, you might just be a Warmist

The blog of the day is Moonbattery, with a post on police investigating a 7 year old’s toy gun.

Read: If All You See… »

Gutsy Kids Call Our Florida’s Government Or Something

I especially enjoy how the oldster writing this spent a lifetime of fossil fueled travel but now wants to restrict Other People

These gutsy kids called out Florida officials on climate change | Column

My name is Dick Jacobs. I’m 89 years old, mostly a retired business attorney. For the past four years I’ve been in the fight of my life battling stage IV melanoma cancer. But as tough as that fight is, there’s another life or death battle – one that is a far tougher, and more important than my bout with cancer – that’s inspired me to action.

It all started after more than four decades of venture travel, trekking over the seven continents and writing Wonderlust, which chronicled my treks and the lessons I learned about caring for our Earth, the only home we have. I became convinced that I had to devote myself to helping our Earth with its growing cancer.

Thus, I became involved with eight gutsy kids and their suit against Florida, its governor and its key officials. The kids’ lawsuit isn’t about money. Their lawsuit is about protecting the kids’ constitutional, and fundamental rights, sourced in ancient laws over 1,500 years old, to a stable climate, which is essential to life, liberty, property, and the pursuit of happiness.

There is no constitutional right to a specific climate, to a so-called stable climate, which Mankind has never had.

These young people—and young people across the globe—know that their future depends on the actions we take right now. They understand there is a short window to avoid the worst impacts of climate change by transitioning to clean energy solutions. They know Florida needs a plan to end the fossil fuel energy system the state has perpetuated.

These kids are role models for us all…..

…I’ve heard comments shaming their parents for using their kids as pawns, putting them up to the litigation. Nothing could be further from the truth. As we met with the kids, it became clear that the kids were genuinely worried about the impacts of climate change on their future and they weren’t being pushed into this by parents. An amazingly sharp group, the youngest was Levi, then 8 years old. Levi’s been on 60 Minutes. Delaney Reynolds, now a University of Miami student, has been a speaker on climate issues before the United Nations. Luxha Aliheligi Phillips, an articulate 14 year old when I met her, is now a climate refugee, having left Miami. She is not alone. And it’s predicted that 2.5 million more people will be leaving Miami in the not too distant future because of global warming and rising seas.

An 8 year old isn’t going to understand any of this. They’ve been indoctrinated.

The kids deserve our support. Won’t you stand with them before it’s too late?

Stand with them to do what, exactly? Let government tax me more, take more of my hard-earned money? Let them take away my freedom, liberty, and choice? Restrict how I live my life? Increase my cost of energy and cost of living? No thanks!

Read: Gutsy Kids Call Our Florida’s Government Or Something »

Bummer: Markets Not Paying Attention To Hotcoldwetdry

Perhaps because ‘climate change’ is fake, and in the wake of a real issue, the Coronavirus, the market will focus on real stuff

Markets not paying attention to climate crisis, IMF says

Equity markets have generally ignored the increasing number of natural disasters over the past 50 years and tougher rules are needed to make investors aware of the dangers posed by the climate crisis, the International Monetary Fund has said.

Companies should be forced to disclose their exposure to climate risk because a voluntary approach does not go far enough, the IMF said in a chapter from its latest global financial stability report (GFSR).

The Task Force on Climate Related Financial Disclosures, an initiative led by Mark Carney, the former Bank of England governor, outlines how companies should calculate and disclose their exposure to climate risk to investors.

In other words, companies and markets mostly aren’t interested in joining the Cult of Climastrology nor even wasting time on this stuff.

The IMF, however, said in a GFSR published on Friday that climate risk should ultimately be made part of international reporting standards.

“An increasing number of firms have begun to voluntarily disclose climate change risk information, in line with the recommendations set out by the taskforce on climate-related financial disclosures” it said.

“However, going further by developing global mandatory disclosures on material climate change risks would be an important step to sustain financial stability. In the short term, mandatory climate change risk disclosure could be based on globally agreed principles. In the longer term, climate change risk disclosure standards could be incorporated into financial statements compliant with international financial reporting standards.”

So, some companies have complied, but now the Cult wants even more. Go figure.

“While projections of climatic variables and their economic impact are subject to a high degree of uncertainty, aggregate equity valuations as of 2019 do not appear to reflect the predicted changes in physical risk under various climate change scenarios”, the IMF said. “This suggests that equity investors may not be paying sufficient attention to climate change risks.”

Weather has always happened, and always will. But it is now caused by witchcraft, you know.

Read: Bummer: Markets Not Paying Attention To Hotcoldwetdry »

Riots Spread Across The Country

Apparently, the murder, yes, murder, of George Floyd requires people do damage and destroy property, as well as steal and loot. Whenever I hear something about justice for George I wonder if he’d approve of this being done in his name. Also, let’s be clear, there are plenty of white and other non-black SJWs involved

Minnesota requests more help as riots continue there — and across US

The state of Minnesota is requesting 1,000 additional National Guard soldiers as rioting broke out once again Friday night following the death of George Floyd earlier in the week.

Gov. Tim Walz and Minnesota National Guard Adjutant Gen. Jon Jensen announced the request at a news conference early Saturday, FOX 9 of Minneapolis reported.

Guard personnel already deployed in addition to state and local police just haven’t been able to control the violence and unrest that the Minneapolis-St. Paul area has seen in recent days, Walz said.

“This is the largest civilian deployment in Minnesota history that we have out there today and quite candidly right now, we do not have the numbers,” Walz said. “We cannot arrest people when we are trying to hold ground because of the sheer size, the dynamics and the wanton violence.”

The police and National Guard pretty much disappeared Friday night, surrendering the 3rd Precinct and the surrounding area in the wake of violence.

Floyd’s death Monday – for which four Minneapolis police officers were fired Tuesday and one of them, Derek Gauvin, was arrested and charged with third-degree murder Friday – has sparked protests and rioting across the U.S., from New York City and Washington, D.C., to Chicago; Columbus, Ohio, Louisville, Ky., and Dallas, to San Jose, Calif.; Los Angeles and Portland, Ore.

That’s right, there was rioting in Floyd’s name across the country. They went after CNN’s headquarters in Atlanta for some reason, and yelled nasty things to the Atlanta police, which is interesting, since the APD is roughly 58% black. They went after the White House, which also had nothing to do with the death of Floyd. There were issues in Charlotte, NC. A police station was damaged, stores looted, and a Charlotte city council person (Braxton Winston) was arrested. Breitbart has a long, long list of tweets with video on all the riots. Can’t even call them protests anymore.

There’s a protest scheduled at 6pm in Raleigh downtown. We’ll see what happens, whether it stays peaceful, or becomes, as the media likes to call it, mostly peaceful. There are no Target’s or Walmarts or even supermarkets in the close area.

The main officer, Derek Chauvin, has been charged with 3rd Degree Murder. Many want him charged with 1st Degree. If that happened, he’d get off, because there is no evidence for premeditated murder. Remember how officers in Baltimore were over-charged and got off? This is not a TV show or movie where prosecutors charge a suspect with a much higher crime than they committed to get them to plea bargain down to what they really did. Because defense lawyers would just fight it in court. Now, if you charge a suspect with what they actually did, they might plea bargain down.

BTW, why aren’t the media complaining about the failure to wear face masks and the poor social distancing?

Read: Riots Spread Across The Country »

Hawaiian Shirts Are A Symbol Of The Alt-Right Or Something

Deep investigative journalism, folks

How Hawaiian Shirts Became a Symbol for the Alt-Right

Fresh off of claims that Fred Perry and the OK hand gesture are now totems of the alt-right movement, another seemingly pure and good thing is in danger of being ruined: the Hawaiian shirt.

For certain parts of the alt-right, the appeal of the Hawaiian shirt does not stem from a love of floral prints or Don Ho records. Instead, aloha patterns are a signal that they are ready for a second Civil War, which fringe voices like Alex Jones swear is happening soon. Unsurprisingly, this affinity for colorful palm leaves and breathable fabric is a shibboleth amongst Very Online sects of the alt-right, stemming from a cult  ‘80s movie, spoonerisms and a cache of sad men who don’t have friends in real life.

In 1984, Breakin’ 2: Electric Boogaloo was inflicted upon movie goers across the country. Although the movie was a critical and commercial flop, it has gained a second life as a meme on account of the movie being beyond awful and “Boogaloo” being a funny word; It’s Always Sunny in Philadelphia had a 2016 episode called Chardee MacDennis 2: Electric Boogaloo, which is a direct reference to Breakin’ 2. Author Reece Jones broke down how the shirt became a symbol on Twitter:

In turn, users on alt-right, pro-gun message boards on Reddit, 4chan and 8chan labeled the upcoming Civil War as “Civil War 2: Electric Boogaloo,” which was then shortened to “the Boogaloo,” which then evolved into “the big Luau” (and “the big igloo”). As such, aloha shirts have made appearances at recent protests around the country. When paired with combat gear, guns and racism, the Hawaiian shirt is apparently symbol that the wearer is prepared to go to war against America.

We recommend proudly wearing your favorite Tommy Bahama or Reyn Spooner number with literally anything else to reclaim the shirt’s original intention: spreading good vibes.

Well, I’m totally convinced. How about you?

The article is based on a crazy, long post at bellingcat, because reasons.

Interestingly, for all the complaints about the alt-right, they aren’t the ones who are rioting and burning and looting. But, yes, some have some seriously wacked beliefs.

Read: Hawaiian Shirts Are A Symbol Of The Alt-Right Or Something »

If All You See…

…is an area flooded and dried out from too much carbon pollution, you might just be a Warmist

The blog of the day is Legal Insurrection, with a post on fact checks on fact checks.

Read: If All You See… »

Hotcold Take: ‘Climate Change’ Is Making Forests Younger And Smaller

Oh, wait, I’m sorry, the climate crisis is doing this

Climate crisis making world’s forests shorter and younger, study finds

Climate breakdown and the mass felling of trees has made the world’s forests significantly shorter and younger overall, an analysis shows.

The trend is expected to continue, scientists say, with worrying consequences for the ability of forests to store carbon and mitigate the climate emergency and for the endangered wildlife that depends on rich, ancient forests.

The analysis of more than 150 previous studies found the death rate of trees has increased, doubling in North America and significantly increasing in the Amazon, for example. The impact of forest destruction had cut the area of old growth forest by a third since 1900, the researchers said.

But rising temperatures caused by global heating also cuts growth and increases tree deaths by limiting photosynthesis and causing stress. Furthermore, high temperatures, drought, high storm winds and pests and disease affect older trees more and are all on the rise.

Because if there’s one thing trees hate it’s carbon dioxide and warmth.

Anyhow, it’s cute that they came up with this not by studying the actual trees and forests, but, by looking at other studies.

“They have been getting smaller and younger over the last century, primarily because of the effects of human land use change, and disturbances like wildfires and insect outbreaks and droughts. These are things that are increasing in frequency and severity.”

Wait, wait, that doesn’t actually sound like anthropogenic climate change from carbon pollution, does it?

Read: Hotcold Take: ‘Climate Change’ Is Making Forests Younger And Smaller »

Enviroweenies Sue Trump Administration For Reducing CAFE Standards

What Barack Obama increased Donald Trump can decrease. The level of CAFE standards that Obama raised them to was not mandated by law, but whim. Donald Trump had every legal privilege to reduce them

Trump Administration Sued for Gutting Clean Car Standards

Environmental advocates filed lawsuits today in federal court against the Trump administration for its illegal rollback of clean car and fuel economy standards. The administration’s rule is based on massive technical and economic errors – and fails to meet core legal requirements.

The vehicle-emission and fuel-economy standards issued under the Obama administration slashed climate-changing air pollution and cut America’s oil dependence while saving drivers $90 billion at the pump. It’s the single largest action the federal government has taken to address climate change.

The 12 groups (listed below) sued the Environmental Protection Agency and National Highway Traffic Safety Administration in separate lawsuits in the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit.

“These illegal rollbacks mean more air pollution that harms our health and fuels the climate crisis, while sucking billions of dollars more out of Americans’ pockets at the pump,” said Ben Longstreth, senior attorney for NRDC (Natural Resources Defense Council).

There’s nothing illegal: government is allowed to roll back previous orders, and presidents can cancel executive orders of previous presidents. If auto makers want to keep using a higher standard, that is up to them. You know who pays for it, right?

“The Trump administration’s reckless reversal of the clean car standards is riddled with mathematical and logical errors, according to the administration’s own economists,” said Joanne Spalding, the Sierra Club’s Chief Climate Counsel. “This flawed rule will increase pollution, endanger public health, cut auto jobs, and further burden American families with higher fueling costs. The Sierra Club has fought for strong clean car standards for decades, and today’s filing is the latest in years of advocacy for climate action that protects people and the planet.”

What jobs were created by increasing CAFE standards? None. What jobs will be lost from decreasing them? None. Since people are buying more and more SUVs, I’m guessing they do not care that they do not get as good fuel economy, so do not mind paying more yearly for gas. You know what endangers public health? CAFE standards, which have made cars more likely to kill in accidents.

“The Trump administration’s rollback of the Clean Car Standards will hurt Americans, increase harmful pollution, cause more than 18,000 premature deaths, and cost consumers billions of dollars at the gas pump,” said EDF lead attorney Peter Zalzal. “The rollback is deeply and fundamentally flawed, it is inconsistent with the agencies’ legal duty to reduce harmful pollution and conserve fuel, and we look forward to vigorously challenging it in court.”

It’s always something with these nutters. Who still haven’t given up their own use of fossil fuels.

“COVID-19 has laid bare the tragic impact toxic emissions and air pollution can have on our health,” said Emily Green, senior attorney at CLF. “Rolling back rules designed to create cleaner air and reduce climate-damaging emissions defies reason – and the law. We must hold this administration accountable for its continued attacks on our health and our environment.”

Of course they had to drag Coronavirus into this, because that’s what cultists do.

Read: Enviroweenies Sue Trump Administration For Reducing CAFE Standards »

MSNBC Prefers To Call Burning Buildings And Looting “Protests, Not Riots”

We’ve all seen the video of the 30 buildings that were burned through Wednesday night, Target and other stores looted, stuff thrown at police officers, right?

MSNBC’s Ali Velshi says situation not ‘generally speaking unruly’ while standing outside burning building

An MSNBC journalist attempted to explain that the violence that erupted in Minneapolis on Thursday night was “mostly a protest” despite a building burning right behind him. 

Ali Velshi was reporting live from the Twin Cities amid the uproar following the death of 46-year-old George Floyd. Velshi attempted to explain that what he was witnessing was “calmer” than the night prior.

“For most of the day, today, it looked a lot calmer than yesterday looked,” Velshi began after showing his colleague Brian Williams some of the destruction that took place. “And that’s what happened yesterday. It picked up later in the evening. The crowds gathered here and the standoff with the police looked very different last night.”

Velshi then acknowledged that he could see “four fires” within his vicinity, including a liquor store that was burning behind him as well as the 3rd Precinct police department, which was earlier evacuated before the crowd set it on fire.

Velshi is correct that it was mostly peaceful during the day Thursday, except for the people attempting to pull pieces of the barrier surrounding the 3rd Precinct away, and getting sprayed for their trouble. But, once nightfall hit, well, everything changed.

“I want to be clear on how I characterize this. This is mostly a protest. It is not, generally speaking, unruly but fires have been started and this crowd is relishing that,” Velshi told Williams. “There is a deep sense of grievance and complaint here, and that is the thing. That when you discount people who are doing things to public property that they shouldn’t be doing, it does have to be understood that this city has got, for the last several years, an issue with police, and it’s got a real sense of the deep sense of grievance of inequality.”

Craig Melvin, an MSNBC host and co-anchor of “Today,” shed some light as to how his network is framing its reporting.

“This will guide our reporting in MN. ‘While the situation on the ground in Minneapolis is fluid, and there has been violence, it is most accurate at this time to describe what is happening there as ‘protests’ — not riots,'” Melvin tweeted Thursday morning.

What happened to George Floyd was criminal. I would personally deem it “murder.” And the officers should be put on trial. That doesn’t give people the right to do what they have been doing for multiple nights now, especially as, let’s face it, most of them did not know George Floyd. I also dare say that legitimate protesters have become fewer and fewer, at least during the nights, as they want nothing to do with the violence.

Read: MSNBC Prefers To Call Burning Buildings And Looting “Protests, Not Riots” »

We Now Need To Look At Art For ‘Climate Change’ Clues Or Something

No longer should we look at pieces of art for beauty, for enjoyment. Nope

The climate change clues hidden in art history

As the 1850s were drawing to a close, the artist Frederic Edwin Church was navigating off the Canadian coast of Newfoundland in preparation for his next painting. The search for the Northwest Passage had captured the public’s imagination for much of that decade and Church – America’s best-known landscape painter – was also lured. He chartered a schooner to approach the sea ice and spent weeks among the frozen blocks before returning to his studio in New York with about 100 sketches. (big snip)

As scientists, policy-makers and members of the public attempt to make sense of the climate crisis, art historians poring over artworks are finding all sorts of answers (and a handful of new questions) about how our relationship with nature has changed, about past and present societies’ ideas of climate and even about the physical changes of our planet.

One of the central conclusions art historians have made is that our conception of nature has been dramatically altered in the last century. If you visited the Princeton Art Museum for its 2018 exhibition Nature’s Nation: American Art and Environment, you might have caught glimpses of this transition (albeit one that’s messy, non-linear and far from finished) from immutable to frail nature. (snip)

“There’s a 180-degree switch from a world that we have no control over, to one in which we are actually controlling the fate of the planet, and recognising that we’re not doing a very good job on it,” says Kusserow.

He argues that a noticeable transition, at least in the US, occurred during the 1960s, propelled by the counterculture movement and books such as Rachel Carson’s Silent Spring – whose first chapter is also a speculative fiction short story. The following decades saw artists producing work that was self-conscious about environmental issues and moved beyond romantic representations of the natural world.

OK, once you’ve mentioned Silent Spring, which was a huge load of mule fritters, as being important you’ve proven this is all a joke.

She has noticed the transition even in the last couple of decades. As the impacts of climate change become more striking, so have artists’ approaches. Kathuria suggests air pollution as an example in which changes in the city are forcing artists to react. “Suddenly, we cannot survive without air purifiers,” she says. “We never needed air purifiers in Delhi. The problem is now coming face-to-face, so naturally the response of the artist has become much more direct.”

That’s interesting, because most of the big cities with pollution problems (which is a separate issue from ‘climate change’) are run by the same people who believe in Hotcoldwetdry. Let’s skip to the end

For instance, the best representation of our current emergency is not in temperature charts or in the upwards concentration of carbon in the atmosphere. The climate crisis, and what it means to us in 2020, is better explained with youth strikers’ signs, the debris left behind after a cyclone and the sketches over wildfire emergency maps. To fully understand a climate, even in a painting, we need the cultural artefacts; one must observe the shoes and the dogs.

How about all the debris left after a ‘climate change’ rally/protest? Anyhow, now the Cult of Climastrology is trying to take over art and just ruin it.

Read: We Now Need To Look At Art For ‘Climate Change’ Clues Or Something »

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