Written by Laurie Higgins
This week is ending with some very good news for the Trump campaign and for every true-red Republican running for office. An explosive book was just released on June 30 by a “climate scare” leader in which he confesses to and apologizes for the deception environmentalists have perpetrated against the entire civilized world.
In the book Apocalypse Never by bona fide far-left environmentalist Michael Shellenberger, he exposes and apologizes for the mountain of climate activist lies that a handful of scientists have been trying to expose for years.… Continue Reading
Tags: Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, Apocalypse Neve, Bill McKibben, Carbon emissions, Climate Change, CNBC, DDT, Donald Trump, Environmental Protection Agenc, fossil fuels, Greenpeace, Jim Geraghty, Joe Biden, Michael Shellenberger, National Review, Paul Ehrlich, Pesticide Commission, Rachel Carson, renewables, Roger Pielke, Silent Spring, The Population Bomb, Thomas D. Williams, Vegetarianism, “Free-range” beef
Climate Change | David E. Smith | July 3, 2020 4:00 AM | Comments Off on Bad News for Dems: The Nail in the Coffin of the Newest Environmental Scare Hoax
Written by Vjay Jayara
The U.S. sailed into an era of energy abundance following the natural gas boom. But the replication of the American energy story in other countries is facing a stern challenge from radical environmental groups.
Why is hydraulic fracturing important for developing countries and why should they be wary of radical environmental groups?
The shale gas boom in the U.S. has led to the American Energy Renaissance—a period of energy abundance from diverse sources such as shale gas, nuclear, coal, hydroelectric, renewables, petroleum, and others.… Continue Reading
Tags: affordable energy, Coal, fracking, hydraulic fracturing, hydro-fracking, hydroelectric, natural gas, Natural Resources Defense Council, nuclear, petroleum, reliable energy, renewables, Russia, shale gas
Climate Change | David E. Smith | January 17, 2019 4:00 AM | Comments Off on Fracking, Energy Renaissance, and the Russian Resistance: Why does it Matter for Developing Countries?