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Oiling The Wheels, Or Just Greasing The Palms?

Healthy skepticism, it is said, is the prerequisite of an open mind. Ill-informed opinion can lead to premature and distorted viewpoints. Not only should we expect some scientists to disagree with the bulk of their fellows over the issue of global warming, but we must acknowledge that such disagreement is important to the final analysis.

However, when scientists start offering large sums of money to their colleagues, in exchange for finding flaws and loopholes in the work of others, we must view the cause with suspicion. It is hardly a scientific approach.

Take this gentleman, for example:

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His name is Kenneth Green.

He is presently listed as “a visiting scholar” at the American Enterprise Institute, an ExxonMobil-funded lobby group closely allied to the Bush administration.

According to the British Guardian newspaper, Kenneth Green has sent out letters to scientists and economists offering $10,000 to anyone undermining the latest IPCC report that was published last Friday.

Of course, as “a visiting scholar”, Kenneth Green may have no connection with the oil industry, or big business in general. A glimpse into his background says otherwise.

According to AEI’s own website, from 1994 – 2002, Green was Chief Scientist, Director of Environmental Program, at the Reason Foundation. That institution describes itself as “…….a 501(c)(3) nonprofit organization completely supported by voluntary contributions from individuals, foundations, corporations, and the sale of our publications.”

A major “voluntary contributer” to the Reason Foundation was ExxonMobil. While at the Reason Foundation, Green was a signatory to this letter written in 2002 to George W Bush, in which representatives of right-wing organizations praise Bush’s decision not to ratify the Kyoto agreement and note his “……principled opposition to Kyoto has come at considerable political cost, and we admire your resolution in the face of continuing environmental alarmism.”

After calling the Clinton-Gore Administration’s “Climate Action Report 2002” a “…….compilation and summary of junk science produced by the Clinton-Gore Administration in order to support their Kyoto agenda.” the letter finishes with the following request:

“……..pursuing your global warming and energy policies effectively will not be possible as long as key members of your administration do not fully support your policies. We therefore also urge you to dismiss or re-assign all administration employees who are not pursuing your agenda, just as you have done in several similar instances.”

After his stint at Reason, or at least, the establishment of that name, Green moved to a position as Director of the Centre for Studies in Risk, Regulation, and Environment, at the Fraser Institute, another “charitable” institution, this time in Canada.

The Fraser Institute is yet another right-wing establishment conveniently and of course “voluntarily” funded by big business. The drug mammoth, Pfizer, has a stake, as do the big oil and gas companies. No doubt the name ExxonMobil is not too far away.

Bringing us up-to-date on Mister Kenneth Green, we find that he left the Fraser Institute in 2005 to become Executive Director of the Environmental Literacy Council. The Council is, according to their website, “……dedicated to helping citizens, especially young people, participate wisely in this arena. An independent, non-profit organization, the Council gives teachers the tools to help students develop environmental literacy: a fundamental understanding of the systems of the world, both living and non-living, along with the analytical skills needed to weigh scientific evidence and policy choices”.

Well, what could be nicer! But, an “independent, non-profit organization”? Where have we heard that before?

According to “Media Transparency”, the ELC gets the bulk of its funding from the Sarah Scaife Foundation – a bi-product of the Mellon industrial, oil and banking fortune (The Gulf Oil Company, to be precise) and the Earhart Foundation, started by Harry B. Earhart in 1929 with the fortune he made with White Star Oil Company. White Star was eventually bought out, and much later became part of – would you believe? – ExxonMobil. It’s all HERE, if you care to thrash through it.

Oh, and surprise! Surprise! – the Earhart Foundation is a major contributer to none other than – the American Enterprise Institute.

The wheel spins full circle.

Interestingly, when researching all these so-called “think-tanks”, apart from their links to the oil industry, one other common denominator surfaces. They are the domains of rich, Libertarian right-wingers who have no time for government and worship their version of the “free market”. Except, there is little “free” about their markets. Price gouging and price fixing are the order of the day. People like Kenneth Green may be relatively small pawns in this powerful political machine, but the aggregation of wealth and its attendant power are their sole ambitions.

Their aim is the disillusion of government, or distilling it to such a degree it becomes a puppet to their demands. George W Bush’s illogical stand against global warming; his refusal to frame legislation to curb greenhouse gas emissions, is evidence of their success.

Kenneth Green and his like want to rule the planet, and it seems they won’t allow anything to stand in their way.

Not even the planet itself.

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Only A “Small Contributer”

“Even if we were successful in accomplishing some kind of debate and discussion about what caps might be here in the United States, we are a small contributor when you look at the rest of the world.” ~ Samuel Wright Bodman III, United States Secretary of Energy – February 2nd, 2007.

The above comment was made by the United States Secretary of Energy in response to the fourth, and most damning, report of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Control, published yesterday.

Samuel Bodman is either totally naive, or more likely, he thinks we are.

The United States is the world’s biggest polluter still, even though India and China are working hard to catch up. New economies battling their way through the equivalent of the West’s industrial revolution, both these nations can perhaps be forgiven for tardiness in controlling their emissions. The United States has no such excuse. America’s only reason for its global irresponsibility is avarice, the insatiable greed for wealth driving this nation ever onwards to its own implosion. It is likely to take the rest of the world with it.

From the Independent Newspaper, 19 April 2006:

” The United States emitted more greenhouse gases in 2004 than at any time in history, confirming its status as the world’s biggest polluter. Latest figures on the US contribution to global warming show that its carbon emissions have risen sharply despite international concerns over climate change.

The figures, which were quietly released on Easter Monday, reveal that net greenhouse gas emissions during 2004 increased by 1.7 per cent on the previous year, equivalent to a rise of 110 million tons of carbon dioxide.

This is the biggest annual increase since 2000 and means that in 2004 – the latest year that full data is available – the US released the equivalent of nearly 6,300 million tons of carbon dioxide into the atmosphere.”

A small contributer, Mister Bodman?

The Independent:

“Professor David Read, the vice-president of the Royal Society, said that the US and Britain needed to take urgent action to reduce greenhouse gas levels in order to honour their commitments to the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change.

“The figures published this week show not only that the US emissions are not decreasing, but that they are actually increasing on an annual basis,” Professor Read said. “And while the UK appears to be doing slightly better, its carbon dioxide emissions have been rising annually for the past three years,” he said. “The US and the UK are the two leading scientific nations in the world and are home to some of the best climate researchers.

“But in terms of fulfilling the commitment made by their signature to the UN convention to stabilize greenhouse gas levels in the atmosphere, neither country is demonstrating leadership by reducing their emissions to the levels required,” Professor Read said.”

The US produces about a quarter of total global emissions of greenhouse gases polluting our atmosphere – 25% of the world’s total!

Hardly a “small contributer”, Mister Bodman.

Prior to his post as the nation’s energy chief, Mister Bodman worked as Deputy Secretary of Commerce from 2001, and became Deputy Secretary of the Treasury in 2004. Prior to that, according to Wikipedia he was “…….President and Chief Operating Officer of Fidelity Investments and a Director of the Fidelity Group of Mutual Funds. In 1987, he joined Cabot Corporation, a Boston-based Fortune 300 company with global business activities in specialty chemicals and materials, where he served as Chairman, Chief Executive Officer, and a Director.”

Hardly a background suited to reining in the excesses of corporate America?

Samuel Bodman’s comment yesterday was absurd. It was so moronic we have to wonder how someone in his exalted position could make it. But then, he was chosen for the position by George W Bush, who has a long history of picking the most unsuitable people to fill high government positions.

In the light of Mister Bodman’s crassness, is it likely anyone is going to call for his resignation? After all, if the fourth report of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Control is to be believed, Bodman’s attitude could spell the end for humanity. The report states that temperature is likely to rise between 4 – 6 degrees by the end of the century. It doesn’t sound very much. Perhaps Bodman thinks it not worth bothering about. If that is the case, he couldn’t be more wrong.

But, you can read all about that – HERE.

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A Question Of Personal Privacy

According to an American Management Association survey, just over half of employers review and retain employees’ email messages. Three out of four employers monitor the internet usage of their workers.

Federal workers are now being told by their unions that every keystroke on their computers is being recorded and scrutinized. This is not just in departments such as Homeland Security, but in every Social Security office in the country.

This scrutiny is not simply of the computer’s hard-drive, but also covers private email accounts such as Hotmail and Gmail. If an employee accesses their private online email account from their work’s computer, the content can be intercepted and read by their employer.

There is something incredibly sinister, to my mind, in the manner employers and government consider this to be their justifiable right. Because they own the computers, does not give them any moral right to pry into an employees’ personal life, simply because it can be accessed online. If an employee accesses their bank account during lunch hour to check a balance, is that information then available to the employer?

Most likely, it is.

There are few laws relating to this subject, and there should be a damn sight more – protecting the employee. It’s not likely to happen though, unless we the public, demand such action of our political representatives.

After all, the government owns all the postal equipment used to deliver our mail, but that doesn’t give it the right to open and peruse anything it cares to.

At least, so we are led to believe.

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