When I read the news yesterday, I was so disgusted and angry
that I might have started drinking before 11AM, had I at that
moment had anything to drink in the house. But I didn’t.
I read:
[i]Journalists
at The Age yesterday condemned management for undermining
the Melbourne newspaper's editorial independence, claiming
reporters were pressured not to write negative stories about
Earth Hour.
Earth Hour was another one of those bone-headed, facile attempts
to create a feeling of importance about something by getting
people to partake in a superficial, meaningless ritual—you
know, like somebody sitting in a slovenly and tacky rendition
of a Native American sweat lodge for about a half hour, one
time in their lives, and going on thinking they hade some
deep spiritual experience.
This is only the latest in a long tail of the brain-dead
global warming cultists’ insanity, the plague that resists
all science that is spreading through the mass media like
some alien pathogen without a cure in some B sci-fi flick.
(Article continues below)
After the BBC featured a story on April 4th in which it faithfully
reported that United Nations meteorologists have declared
that 2008 is going to be colder than 2007 because of the La
Nina current activity in the Pacific Ocean, a climate change
alarmist activist named Jo Abbess of the United Kingdom’s
Campaign Against Climate Change was disturbed by the BBC’s
apparently too-balanced, too-fair reporting.
Abbess took issue with the BBC’s journalist Roger Harriban,
whose very factual reporting included summation:
This would mean global temperatures have not risen since
1998, prompting some to question climate change theory.
Full
article here.