Friday, 19 November 2010

Greater ‘Courage And Leadership’ From Politicians?

Yeah, good luck with that, ecoloons:
Politicians need to show greater courage and leadership if the world is to avoid dangerous climate change, a panel of eminent environmentalists said last night.
Translation: ‘Crikey, the peasants don’t fancy toiling in the fields before coming home to a mud hut and shivering round a fire eating turnips! Better see if their feudal rulers will force them into it…’

Sorry, chaps. We have elections now.
Consumers, however, must acknowledge they are not only the "victims" but the "villains" of global warming and work towards a dramatic shift in life style.
Oh, yeah? We must, eh?

Who will make us? Politicians, who have to be elected by us?

‘Vote for me, I’ll make your lives harder and more stressful, for the glory of Gaia!’. It’s not really a rousing election campaign strategy, is it?

Needless to say, the tiny handful of ecofreaks attending this shindig were all in favour of electing a new populace, since the old one shows no signs of bending to their will:
Tom Burke, of green think-tank E3G said: "We have no shortage of the technology we need to sort out this problem. This really comes down to politics. We are not getting anything like the political leadership we need."
The problem is, Burke, that the technology you’ve so far come up with turns out to be utterly useless. Wind power? Wave power? Solar power?

None of them do the job…
Julian Rush, environment correspondent for Channel 4 News said: "If you are going to try and change social attitudes to energy consumption, you are on a very, very long-term project.

"People in Africa, India and China living very poor, very difficult, very rough lives, see our lives and think: 'I want some of that'. It is going to be very, very hard to convince them they should have a different ambition."
Indeed. How ya gonna keep ‘em down on the farm, once they’ve seen gay Paree, eh, Julian?

Some home truths did emerge, however:
David Hone, Shell's senior climate change advisor, spoke about its controversial exploitation of the tar sands in Alberta, Canada. "The public questions why we go to oil sands, but it is also a public that demands more energy and lower energy prices," he said.
Quite! And the reaction of the ecoloons is to insist that the public need to change to suit their narrow vision, or Armageddon will surely be upon us.
Mr Burke added: "[The public] are both victims and villains. We have to come up with complicated answers to what is quite simply a question of why are we doing something as stupid as tar sands."
He’s just told you. Because the public needs to buy the oil to heat their homes, run their cars and businesses, etc.
Others simply whine that the only grown-ups at the affair shouldn’t be allowed to speak at all, because it spoils their fun:
Tom Jackson of the Manchester Climate Action group said: "It is pretty outrageous that Shell is involved in this discussion at all... given its environmental track record."
Newsflash, Tom: even Obama’s White House spinmeisters couldn’t sustain that particular fiction when it applied to BP for long.

So why should we believe you about Shell?

And why should we listen to you when it’s patently obvious that the leading lights of your organisation are the ultimate hypocrites, expecting us all to accept a lower standard of living in fear of a non-existent threat while they themselves do no such thing?

7 comments:

  1. What is an 'eminent environmentalist?'

    One who emanates perhaps?

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  2. "We are not getting anything like the political leadership we need."

    How true: we ordinary people have been saying that for years. But that is probably the only point the environuts and I agree on.

    I do understand that like all dictatorial groups (complete with the attendant closed minds and 'one-rule-for-us-elites-and-one-rule-for-the-peasants' attitude) they want a different boss in charge.

    In fact, they would like the different boss to be them. When you have so much to give, so much wisdom and so much compassion, then it's logical you should be doing the giving. Then you can give your caring ways on your terms and watch from afar how the ordinary people will shiver.

    Vote for me now because I care more about things that you.

    Vote for me now or else.

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  3. Elections are all very well, but in the UK (and throughout Euroland, too), you can vote for whoever you like, but it makes no difference because they all have the same policies.

    Maybe it's different in the US, but just now it is too early to tell.

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  4. Courage? Like politicians finally speaking up and being honest by saying all this global warming nonsense is, in fact, just so much hot air.

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  5. I can't understand why some of our overlords don't say "I was conned too but now I can see it was all a lie, let's bin all those new taxes and controls!"

    Oh. Sorry, bit thick of me there.

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  6. How do you 'do' tar sands?

    Is like doing the funky chicken?

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  7. "Elections are all very well, but in the UK (and throughout Euroland, too), you can vote for whoever you like, but it makes no difference because they all have the same policies."

    Sadly true...

    ReplyDelete