Net Zero is Part of the Permanent Emergency Where Nothing is Any Longer Truly Private

There follows a guest post by Lynne Sash, an expert in the engineering, defence and healthcare industries, who says Net Zero, like the response to Covid, is part of the Permanent Emergency propagated by elites, under which “the whole of one’s life must be a demonstration of fealty to the scientism of collective welfare in which there is no longer any behaviour that is truly private”.

I agree with John Fernley that renewable energy is not a stand-alone substitute for fossil fuels, and that nuclear energy must receive more serious consideration. I will not discuss the scientific arguments relating to anthropogenic (manmade) global warming (AGW), which are covered in depth elsewhere. But these arguments are only one aspect of the Net Zero philosophy. Proponents of Net Zero advocate not so much an energy policy as a way of reframing society without being transparent about what that entails.

A prime example of this was the Insulate Britain protests that disrupted traffic during 2021. I agree that promoting home insulation is a laudable cause. But instead of pointlessly gluing one’s face to the road, it might have made more sense to point to the Scottish Government programme providing free cavity wall insulation to qualifying households. My neighbours in Edinburgh benefited from this scheme, and it is reasonable to ask whether and how it could be extended to the rest of the country. But rational discourse and problem-solving have never been the point of Climate Crisis agitation, which is really aimed at generating anxiety that can be mobilised for large-scale, and largely unexamined, social change.

Net Zero is another example of a measure that Jennifer Roback Morse, a conservative economist, identifies as an elite-driven policy. Campaigns for no-fault divorce, abortion, gay marriage and transgenderism have never, in the first instance, been responses to a public outcry for change, but to a ruling-class determination that society should accept heavily revised social and cultural standards for reasons of ‘equality’ and ‘social justice’. Roback Morse also identifies another marker of elite policy promotion, which is that the individuals harmed by these policies are denied a public voice and given no opportunity to challenge them. Similarly, there has been no genuine public debate about the viability, desirability or otherwise of Net Zero. Instead, the public is manipulated by performative activism and emotional teenagers. It is noteworthy that Greta Thunberg actively advocates passivism; rather than encourage young people to, say, reduce their own consumption, she insists that governments should do something, and tell us what to do. I have difficulty seeing this as a genuine expression of youthful political idealism.

Observers on the American Right refer to the ‘Forever War’, the seemingly perpetual conflict encompassing Iraq, Libya, Afghanistan, Syria and now Ukraine, in which the U.S. pursues its supposed enemies into their various geographic lairs in order to make the world safe for democracy manifested as multinational corporations and pride parades. What we see now is the genesis of the Permanent Emergency, in which a looming catastrophe must be averted by engaging in collective action at the expense of civil liberties and personal autonomy.

Let us assume for a moment that the Climate Crisis is real and demands immediate action. In that case, the question should be, “Are the measures proposed to ameliorate and/or resolve Problem X proportionate in terms of a) overall expenditure and b) potential disruption to the social fabric?” This requires the Government to be very clear about what it wants to do and how that will affect society as a whole, enabling members of the electorate to make decisions about their own future and that of the country. The fact that there is little honest discussion about this within the mainstream suggests that no one really wants to make a detailed public argument in favour of climate constraint, most probably because that constraint will inevitably lead to a reduction in living standards.

If we have learned anything from Covid, it is surely that government bodies are in great danger of goal-driven myopia in which only one objective is deemed legitimate, and this must be pursued by any means necessary regardless of the collateral damage. This leads naturally to mission creep involving the justification of ever more intrusive practices and policies to control public behaviour. Smart meters do not just help you monitor usage. They can also limit your electricity consumption. Smart appliances can tell you that you’re out of milk, but they can also be accessed remotely and shut off. If vaccine passports can be used to restrict access to public goods, then it’s easy to imagine how Climate Passports could be deployed in a similar way if your carbon footprint is too large.

The emotional environment in which Climate Crisis advocates exist is uncongenial to constructive decision-making. ‘The earth is burning’ and ‘You’re killing grandma’ echo back and forth in a globalised panic room that can always make space for another iteration of civilisational catastrophe. At this point we end up in a nihilistic loop: the latest emergency will surely destroy us, but to prevent this we need to destroy our society and culture. Alarmists appear oblivious to this basic nihilism in their position, or else don’t care enough to address it rationally, being too taken up in their own heroic efforts to avert the projected catastrophe whatever the cost.

An underappreciated aspect of the Permanent Emergency is that it demands that everything be politicised, and therefore a legitimate object of public scrutiny. Our healthcare decisions, purchasing practices, holiday plans, the decision to take a shower at one time rather than another, all become demonstrations of our political, and therefore moral, orientation. Are we acting in such a way as to promote the collective welfare, or are we letting others down with our selfish behaviour? The proponents of the Permanent Emergency understand this perfectly well. The whole of one’s life must be a demonstration of fealty to the scientism of collective welfare in which there is no longer any behaviour that is truly private, and questions about this are prima facie evidence of ill-will.

Unsurprisingly, the rich have a get-out clause offering them immunity from constraint or criticism. It is noteworthy that the discussions relating to the appropriate Climate Crisis policies rarely mention the matter of carbon trading, which is absolutely central to any carbon amelioration scheme. The ‘net’ in Net Zero is expected to do a lot of work. This comes in two forms. Carbon credits are sold by governments to enterprises that cannot reduce their emissions sufficiently rapidly while remaining economically viable. Carbon offsets are the private end of the market. Individuals and organisations deemed to be engaging in carbon-sequestering activities can sell carbon credits to offset the CO2 emissions of carbon polluters, thereby ‘balancing’ emissions to some degree.

Of course, this offers wealthy individuals and organisations an immediate get-out clause to exculpate their own polluting behaviour. Critics really must stop referring to this as ‘hypocrisy’. Hypocrites are generally aware that social standards exist, but understand that they are incapable of, or unwilling, to meet them. What we see here are double standards: there is one rule for wealthy people with important things to do, and another for poorly-resourced plebs who are unlikely to merit a holiday in the south of France in any case.

As a component of the Permanent Emergency, Net Zero is another step in the process of transforming the Citizen into a Fungible Economic Unit. FEUs are social placeholders that can be moved around like game counters in the pursuit of an objective of which they may not even be aware, would be unlikely to countenance if they were aware of it, and which will bring them little or no benefit if it is realised. But the objective may never be realised, requiring the FEUs to engage in permanent sacrifice with no clear result or benefit. By accepting Net Zero as a fait accompli, we are enjoined to participate in our emasculation as citizens. We exist to be acted upon, or to be prompted to act, but not to take decisions on our own behalf. Beyond this, Net Zero functions as a collective incantation: we repeat it, and repeat it, because it demonstrates our good will and determination to propitiate the forces of nature at whatever cost. It is imperative that citizens not only question the very concept of Net Zero, but pursue policymakers with regard to its practical aspects in order to expose, for better or worse, what future is being sold to us.

Can the Government be deflected from its determination to pursue Net Zero? Surely not, just like the U.K. was never going to leave the EU, and Trump was never going to be elected president. Then again, the ability of progressive elites to predict the future – whether about politics or the environment – has always been a bit shaky.

After a degree in International Relations, Lynne Sash worked in the U.K. for 30 years providing international research and strategy consultancy services for the engineering, defence, and healthcare industries. In 2019 she returned to Iowa, USA, where she is assembling a library of ‘cancelled’ books.

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Mark
4 years ago

 “I agree that promoting home insulation is a laudable cause. But instead of pointlessly gluing one’s face to the road, it might have made more sense to point to the Scottish Government programme providing free cavity wall insulation to qualifying households. “

What’s wrong with letting the advocates of the policy try to persuade people in free and open discussion – without government taxpayer-funded subsidy to either side, and accepting the results?

Mark
4 years ago
Reply to  Mark

I mean, if you really believe it’s a worthwhile cause, surely it wouldn’t be hard to get some wealthy worried greenies to chip in to set up a genuinely charitable fund (as opposed to state pseudo-charity) to subsidise it? I mean, the Victorians achieved huge things by such methods, before we allowed ideologues to convince us that governments should do everything, and should steal money from people to use for the causes the powerful think are “worthy”.

RW
RW
4 years ago
Reply to  Mark

The victorians didn’t really achieve much society-wise: Their’s was a society were both mass poverty (in the sense of starving, not in the sense of not having Sky Sports) and mass crime existed and everyone except a fairly small upper class lived under pretty miserable conditions. The general idea behind The state ought to rebalance society was (and principally, still is) to avoid society rebalancing the state instead, IOW, Marxism. General poverty and miserable working conditions were still the norm in Germany in the so-called inter-war-years, with the situation only improving in the 1950s and 1960s. By that time – according to what I heard/ read – (certain) people in Britain where still living in bombed-out ruins in inner city slums.

The state is a powerful actor, not the least because it has superpersonal continuity (somewhat diminuished in so-called kick-the-can-down-the-road-o-cravys with their four or five year government cycles) and hence, it can accomplish things private actors generally can’t.

Star
4 years ago
Reply to  RW

It was often said by British people who went on holiday in West Germany in, say, the late 1950s – such as my mother for example – that Germany had won the war. A similar thing was said about Japan too.

BillRiceJr
BillRiceJr
4 years ago
Reply to  Star

A few contrarian historians in the future might conclude that Osama Bin Laden actually won his war with the “Great Satan.” His real goal was to defeat America in the sense that America would not be able to control what was happening in Muslim countries. America is going to be too broke in the future to continue its Empire building and “regime change” operations. Or: America is going to break apart into multiple countries and cease to exist.

Bin Laden must have known he couldn’t defeat America on the battlefield. But he really didn’t need to. America is well on the way to defeating itself.

enlighteneduk
4 years ago
Reply to  BillRiceJr

And taking the UK with it.

DevonBlueBoy
DevonBlueBoy
4 years ago
Reply to  Star

That view might have had something to do with the way the Germans used their Marshall Aid money; they invested in their infrastructure and economy. They used the longstanding financial principle of making an investment to generate a return
The UK used its Marshall Aid money (more than the Germans received) to keep sterling as a convertible currency, paying for our armed forces to play at being the world’s policemen around the globe and setting up social support services such as the NHS. The money was spent and gave no financial return.

tom171uk
4 years ago
Reply to  RW

The point is that it accomplishes things that it decides suits its agenda, not things we, taxpayers, actually want. It also spends our money in order to create divisions between us.

RW
RW
4 years ago
Reply to  tom171uk

The state itself has no agenda as it’s an abstract entity. The people controlling it at the political and administrative level do, however, and much of what we’re witnessing (or suffering) at the moment is the result of the wrong of people getting access to the levers of the state in sufficiently overwhelming numbers that they’re usually even able to work around so-called checks and balances to limit abuse of state power.

Dan Vesty
Dan Vesty
4 years ago
Reply to  RW

I’m not sure the state qualifies as a truly abstract entity – in the same way that philosophical or theological ‘entities’ can be said to be abstract. It has location in space – Parliament, all other government owned buildings etc, as well as physical existence in the form of the individuals who are directly employed by it, and therefore represent it. So it’s semi-abstract at best really.

janvanruth
janvanruth
4 years ago
Reply to  RW

all you have to do is to watch some episodes of “yes minister” to know that the state most certainly does have an agenda……

Dodgy Geezer
Dodgy Geezer
4 years ago
Reply to  RW

The state itself has no agenda as it’s an abstract entity. 

According to Northcote Parkinson, the first and primary aim of any bureaucracy is to survive.

sid fletcher
sid fletcher
4 years ago
Reply to  RW

Who shapes the supply of these worker ants?

The Enforcer
The Enforcer
4 years ago
Reply to  tom171uk

This is an excellent piece which I have not seen argued by others as well. The progressive meritocratic elite who think they know what is best for us are clearly behind the New Zero drive in the way they were with the Covid debacle. ‘Settled science ‘ and continuous unfloding of inaccurate facts (or downright lies) are fed into a media which, alongwith most of the public, have no understanding of statistics and only read the major and first line headlines. The continuous drip-feed of these inflammatory facts causes fear in many citizens and they require further reinforcement of these fears that there is a solution even when it is blatantly the wrong one. The author is right in that the use of examples like climate change, trans gender, anti racist and secular teachings are being continuously promulgated in order to spread discontent and bemusement so that control can be retained by these so called Progressives who are primarily in the Civil Service, teaching and major media services. Unless we start understanding this problem then we are heading for poverty in all aspects of our lives while these elitists carry on their comfortable lives. I could say that I do… Read more »

peyrole
peyrole
4 years ago
Reply to  RW

It certainly can, it can ‘accomplish’ the complete subservience of the populous by means of force. Very powerful actor, if you like that sort of thing.

Alter Ego
Alter Ego
4 years ago
Reply to  peyrole

Foucault wasn’t wrong about the insertion of the power to punish. Once that power has been inserted, we subdue ourselves.

But some resist insertion more than others; and an inserted power (at least of the psychological kind) can be rejected and ejected.

enlighteneduk
4 years ago
Reply to  Alter Ego

How do we motivate the obliterated minds of the fear ridden masses though? I still see probably 2/3rds of shoppers in the supermarket masked and stepping aside, maintaining the ‘social distance’ long after mandates were dropped. The deliberate mass formation psychosis has been so successful.

Nessimmersion
4 years ago
Reply to  RW

The Victorians didn’t achieve much?
Bwahaa – suggest you look at the increase in population due to the massive improvements in clean water, sewage , food supplies, libraries, education & transport.
Do you really think the quadrupling of population & simultaneous emigration to the colonies was achieved by magic?

Victorain existence may be miserable to our eyes, but to their eyes it was a massive improvement on what came before.

janvanruth
janvanruth
4 years ago
Reply to  Nessimmersion

quadrupling of population?
really?
you might want to get your numbers in order…
besides, the breeding of rabbits for consumption is a good thing then?
for the rabbits i mean….

andrewmawdsley
andrewmawdsley
4 years ago
Reply to  Mark

Absolutely correct. I live in an old Victorian home (as many people do) that isn’t suitable for cavity wall insulation. Consequently I pay the required price for the heating that is necessary. Why should I subsidise those that are able to insulate their homes but for whatever reason have elected not to?

Vaxtastic
4 years ago
Reply to  Mark

What’s wrong with people insulating their own homes? What’s next, the state buying your carpets?

Being a home owner comes with a long list of choices and a need to maintain the property. For those that can’t cope they can rent and leave it to the landlord.

RW
RW
4 years ago
Reply to  Vaxtastic

Being a home owner comes with a long list of choices and a need to maintain the property. For those that can’t cope they can rent and leave it to the landlord.

Interesting idea :-).The landlord is the guy whose mortage is being paid by the people responsible for maintaining the property (more than paid, usually). From June on, I’ll pay £950 per month. In exchange for that, I have to accept leaking taps, ubiquitous mould which needs to be managed and I also have to take care of adequate heating and generally do (or pay for) any other relatively minor things which need to be taken care of.

TheyLiveAndWeLockdown
4 years ago
Reply to  RW

LVT would at least sort out the super gains of the effectively subsidised landlord and afford to cut harmful taxes on incomes.

RW
RW
4 years ago

What’s LVT?

TheyLiveAndWeLockdown
4 years ago
Reply to  RW

Land Value Tax.

Lucan Grey
4 years ago
Reply to  RW

A fantasy that requires there to be a fixed amount of money in the system – which there isn’t and never will be.

Georgism falls into the near, plausible and wrong category

Nessimmersion
4 years ago
Reply to  RW

Land Value Tax is an idealistic state whereby everyone who owns land pays the state protection money annually or the state takes their property from them.
Its a favourite of the same mob who advocate the Minimum Basic Income, which LVT will magically pay for.
That Schwab is a fan is a bit of a giveaway.

janvanruth
janvanruth
4 years ago
Reply to  Nessimmersion

as is every tax or levy imposed by the state….
i take it you own a car?
i suggest you stop paying the road tax….
in fact you should be entitled to stop paying all taxes.
in return you should however not accept any service that is provided with the state paying for it in any form.
but that is a consequence i doubt you are willing to accept…

watersider
4 years ago
Reply to  janvanruth

Up here past the grim North, we own our own home long ago paid for.
Now our Poll Tax paid to Saint Nicola of De mask us, is over £1200 per month.
The only service I can see are water, sewage, and our dust bins emptied.
The potholed roads are of fourth world standard, the police are invisible – except when operating speed traps, school teachers spend more time at home than in work, these and more “services” we are billed for but are unused by us two pensioners. So yes sometimes I regret not being good at urinating up walls.

janvanruth
janvanruth
4 years ago
Reply to  watersider

a poll tax of over 1200 pounds a month?
really?

Vaxtastic
4 years ago
Reply to  RW

Then find somewhere else or buy your own place. What are you, ten years old?

Being an adult means you are responsible for your choices.

RW
RW
4 years ago
Reply to  Vaxtastic

I was replying to your incorrect assertion that renting a place to live would be equivalent to living in a hotel or a so-called managed appartment.

jingleballix
4 years ago
Reply to  RW

But he’s right……..you should respectfully) insist that the landlord fix the shortcomings or threaten to leave (and follow up on it).

pjar
4 years ago
Reply to  jingleballix

You might start with offering to do the plumbing job yourself, but ask him to confirm his insurance will be okay with an unqualified person doing the work, if things were to go wrong?

RW
RW
4 years ago
Reply to  pjar

There’s actually nothing I can (legally) do in this particular situation, save reporting it to the lettings agency. This (leaking tap) is going to be very unimportant issue to them and they’ll treat it as such. They’ll eventually send someone to assess if there’s actually a problem who’ll eventually come to some idea what it is (which may or may not be correct), will eventually produce a quote which will eventually be communicated to the landlord (living on the Arabian peninsula) who’ll eventually agree to having it fixed and then, it’ll eventually be done. This is probably going to take some months and simply not worth the effort for a minor issue like that. Anything beyond that is outside of The procedures we’re always following and thus, beyond consideration. I already tried that :-).

If this was my tap, I could just get it replaced by contacting a plumber myself which would be a lot less of a hassle.

tom171uk
4 years ago
Reply to  RW

Don’t whinge about it. Buy a bloody house yourself. It can’t be that bad a situation if you haven’t bothered getting out of it.

Alter Ego
Alter Ego
4 years ago
Reply to  tom171uk

Not sure of RW’s situation; but buying houses requires a deposit in many countries.

One of the traps for people who want to buy homes in Australia (which used to be filled with homeowners) is that rents are so high and jobs so insecure that saving for a deposit is very difficult.

An enormous number of jobs have been made casual. The public service is filled with people on three or six-month contracts.

People use the savings they can make to tide them over their periods of unemployment, because you simply cannot live on unemployment benefits.

John Dee
4 years ago
Reply to  Alter Ego

I feel nothing but sympathy for those trying to get onto the housing ladder nowadays. The various governments’ easing of the entry (esp London) of foreign dirty money has made much property unaffordable. ‘Golden visas’ haven’t helped either.

peyrole
peyrole
4 years ago
Reply to  RW

And a lot of landlords immediately get it fixed because they want happy tenants.

huxleypiggles
4 years ago
Reply to  peyrole

When we were landlords if a tenant reported a problem we fixed it – pronto.

Nessimmersion
4 years ago
Reply to  RW

Remember when any half way competent bloke could fix a dripping tap in half an hour, adjust door hinges or locks and perform basic flipping house maintenance as a matter of course.

Alter Ego
Alter Ego
4 years ago
Reply to  Nessimmersion

Hmm. My dad was a thoroughly competent bloke at many things. But mum was the person who could do the basic flipping house maintenance – and mend radios and watches.

Sorry, Nessimersion – just smiling at the memories of my father’s hopelessness at such things. We always suspected that it was deliberate.

RTSC
RTSC
4 years ago
Reply to  RW

If it’s that bad, go and live somewhere else. That’s what renting makes so easy ….. you serve notice to the Landlord (you can tell him why) and find somewhere you consider more suitable.

John Dee
4 years ago
Reply to  pjar

How many people actually ask to see a plumber’s qualifications?

RW
RW
4 years ago
Reply to  jingleballix

That you also insist on missing the point doesn’t make someone else missing the point any more correct: Rented properties are usually not managed and the person responsible for maintaining them is the person living there. The landlord just extracts rent. And sometimes, pays for some repairs. Being able to make design choices about a propery one happens to be living in is one of the privileges of owning it.

Lilacblue
Lilacblue
4 years ago
Reply to  RW

They have no idea.

tom171uk
4 years ago
Reply to  RW

So why not buy your own house and fix your own taps? And maybe a few more propertes and rent them out?

RW
RW
4 years ago
Reply to  tom171uk

I’m a programmer and not a property investor. And while I’m currently living in England, I don’t plan to stay here forever, but would eventually like to move back to Germany.

janvanruth
janvanruth
4 years ago
Reply to  RW

So wie es aussieht in Deutschland wuerde ich da nochmal drüber nachdenken.
Wenn die AFD die einzige Partei geworden ist die die freiheitlich demokratische Grundordnung würdigt, kann man erahnen was die Zukunft so bringen wird.
Und die Insulaner sind von dem weit weniger betroffen weil sie eben aus dem Verein der Internationalen Faschisten ausgestiegen sind.
Zum Glück gibt es die Ungarn und die Polen noch in dem Verein.
Die halten die Faschisten in Brüssel noch in Schach, wenigstens vorläufig….

caipirinha17
caipirinha17
4 years ago
Reply to  tom171uk

I’d love to become a homeowner. I’m just missing a large chunk of the £30k needed for the deposit and start up costs in my area… and as the cost of living keeps on going up the less I can afford to set aside. I’m not on a particularly low wage either, so who knows how those on even less manage it.

Alter Ego
Alter Ego
4 years ago
Reply to  tom171uk

Doesn’t that rather depend on your income? Surely you know that some people simply can’t afford this?

janvanruth
janvanruth
4 years ago
Reply to  Alter Ego

but surely that is nothing but a fault of their own?
i suggest they get a better paying job.
or wealthier parents….

Alter Ego
Alter Ego
4 years ago
Reply to  janvanruth

You’re quite right. I had and have great respect for my parents, but my life would have been a lot easier if they had been wealthy.

I spoke with them about this. They laughed – no bloody sympathy whatsoever.

John Dee
4 years ago
Reply to  RW

When I rented, I found that fixing leaking taps and ventilating a property so as to minimise mould was quicker (and more effective) than waiting for the landlord (or lady) to arrange it.

David Beaton
David Beaton
4 years ago
Reply to  Vaxtastic

Are you planning to snap up the Fire-sale properties then, or leaving it to the Billionaires, the Banks and Blackrock?

However, “owning nothing and being happy” does apply to all you know!

A Heretic
A Heretic
4 years ago
Reply to  Mark

why do people insist on claiming that what the government provides is “free”. Maybe I should just get my entire pay handed over to the government then everything will be “free”.

pjar
4 years ago
Reply to  Mark

The thing about the insulating of cavity walls is that it ignores the reason that the cavity is there in the first place. Not all cavity walls are born equal and some are not suited to being insulated; doing so can be the start of myriad problems apparently…

Jo
Jo
4 years ago
Reply to  pjar

Exactly. My partner (a plasterer) has had to work on numerous houses where damp and condensation have arisen after cavity wall insulation. I would never have it installed in my house, and there was a grant available a while ago. The other thing people don’t seem to understand is the need for ventilation.

peyrole
peyrole
4 years ago
Reply to  Jo

Pre-1920 houses in the UK ( and there are a lot of them) have solid walls. Not only can they not have cavity wall insulation but the damp problems from introducing insulation on either surface would be very detrimental, they are designed to breathe in the damp UK climate.
These brainless advocates of insulation are dangerous to health and the very homes we live in.

TheyLiveAndWeLockdown
4 years ago

I’ve posted it before but it’s still true.

comment image

BillRiceJr
BillRiceJr
4 years ago

What would thwart this “aim” is a watchdog press corp that would show that these “dangers” are indeed all “imaginary.” We need a lot more H.L. Mencken’s. If he were alive today, Mencken would be banned from social media and publishing his own “kook” Substack site.

Rogerborg
4 years ago

And all profoundly anti-joy. We may be graciously permitted to survive, but we will never again be allowed to live.

Moist Von Lipwig
4 years ago
Reply to  Rogerborg

Correct, their philosophy is one of hatred for man’s mind, his means of survival.

Alter Ego
Alter Ego
4 years ago
Reply to  Rogerborg

The self-righteous, interfering, smug, busy-bodyism seriously pisses me off. Having a good time has become something one has to justify. Being comfortable has to be justified.

People who don’t know how to have a good time love policing those who do.

Moist Von Lipwig
4 years ago

This is all irrelevant, XR and their offshoots want the energy policy of North Korea and all the policies of North Korea.

Environmentalism is opposed to human existence.

NickR
4 years ago

Mmmm, not sure about the North Korean energy policy, they seem mainly to want coal.

Moist Von Lipwig
4 years ago
Reply to  NickR

Have you seen an aerial photo of the Korean peninsula at night?

South Korea has abundant energy, North Korea has only trace amounts.

The Rule of Pricks
The Rule of Pricks
4 years ago

Things like this will always be politicised as at the extremes there will always be people who want to left alone to get on with their lives (within the confines of the law) and people who want every aspect of their lives (and everyone elses) controlled and dictated by the government, the ‘elite’ and the self-anointed ‘superiors’.

And that sadly tends to divide along political lines.

And the best way for the latter to win the day and ensure compliance, not just by those who want to comply, but also everyone else except the die hard ‘leave me alone’ type, is to keep as many people as possible terrified.

We saw this with Covid and we will see this with climate change.

The western world has developed to the point where far too many people are so insecure they are easily scared into compliance and wanting someone else to take responsibility for their everyday day life rather than standing on their own two feet.

Vaxtastic
4 years ago

Absolutely agree. The cure is hardship, which at this stage is virtually guaranteed. Power cuts in winter and food shortages will certainly mean transphobia might struggle to get an airing 😉

Matt Mounsey
Matt Mounsey
4 years ago

I don’t always agree with what Ayn Rand says, but I do agree with this quote:

“Civilization is the progress toward a society of privacy. The savage’s whole existence is public, ruled by the laws of his tribe. Civilization is the process of setting man free from men.”

NickR
4 years ago
Reply to  Matt Mounsey

Has anyone else noticed that the advertising hoardings around, is it Sunderland’s football ground, or it could be Middlesbrough, are for Rainham Steel, I’m sure that’s the name of the steel company in either Atlas Shrugged or The Fountainhead, must be The Fountainhead?
It seems unlikely but is Sunderland or Middlesbrough a hot bed of Ayn Randites?

Vaxtastic
4 years ago
Reply to  NickR

It was Rearden Steel. Although I do like the idea of Sunderland as a hotbed of secret Libertarian fanatics 🤠

Moist Von Lipwig
4 years ago
Reply to  NickR

Rearden Steel, Hank Rearden was a businessman who started from nothing and earned a fortune in Atlas Shrugged.

Moist Von Lipwig
4 years ago
Reply to  Matt Mounsey

An apt quote for this case.

I do recommend ‘Return of the Primitive’, by Ayn Rand, who saw the trends of her time. The uncontested absurdities of her day are today’s slogans.

Milo
Milo
4 years ago

I actually think this is one of the better recent DS articles. The author does a good job of encapsulating in just about a paragraph what the part the “Net Zero” fiction plays in the set up of the NWO and what our (pleb) place in the NWO will be – as compared to the wealthy elites. “What we see here are double standards: there is one rule for wealthy people with important things to do, and another for poorly-resourced plebs who are unlikely to merit a holiday in the south of France in any case. As a component of the Permanent Emergency, Net Zero is another step in the process of transforming the Citizen into a Fungible Economic Unit. FEUs are social placeholders that can be moved around like game counters in the pursuit of an objective of which they may not even be aware, would be unlikely to countenance if they were aware of it, and which will bring them little or no benefit if it is realised. But the objective may never be realised, requiring the FEUs to engage in permanent sacrifice with no clear result or benefit. By accepting Net Zero as a fait accompli, we are… Read more »

Vaxtastic
4 years ago
Reply to  Milo

Good luck. Just make sure to terrify them as that seems to be all that works with the masses 😉

BillRiceJr
BillRiceJr
4 years ago
Reply to  Vaxtastic

This has always worked in the past and I guess it will continue to work in the future. The “conventional wisdom” or “narrative” that terrifies the public is used to benefit politicians, bureaucrats and elites and advance their agendas (which are always more control and less liberty and freedom).

The answer is to nip the false narratives in the bud before they have become iron-clad, undebatable “truths.” Alas, this would require a skeptical “watchdog” presscorp, which maybe never fully existed but was certainly more skeptical of authority figures than it is today.

Also, the recent effort to make people afraid of alleged “disinformation” has given us more powerful censorship programs – which make it even harder to challenge false or dubious narratives.

Today, our elites are most afraid of the few skeptics that tell us “No, you shouldn’t be terrified of A, B or C … You should instead be afraid of the people who want to keep us afraid.”

TheyLiveAndWeLockdown
4 years ago
Reply to  Milo

Oddly they dismiss the idea that we might decide they are the ones who need to be acted upon and we make decisions on their behalf…

BJs Brain is Missing
4 years ago

Cancel the politicians and in whichever disguise they choose to wear e.g. lab coat, blue or red rosette. Far too much deference and credence is given to these egotistical cretins.

They are nothing but trouble and are muck spreaders of sorrow.

Vaxtastic
4 years ago

Someone votes for them though. Most elections have plenty of smaller parties with quite different policies.

NeilofWatford
4 years ago

Totally agree.
Electric cars too are part of the picture. The government will know where you are and – just as ‘smart’ meters do to your home – will control our ability to travel where and when we like.
They have absolutely nothing to do with climate.

Vaxtastic
4 years ago
Reply to  NeilofWatford

It is a direction of travel. The voting public annoy our masters. We have too much of a mind of our own. Can’t have the plebs deciding to visit Wales or go hiking in Scotland at the last minute. The transponders will be put to good use.

pjar
4 years ago
Reply to  NeilofWatford

They won’t know where I am, I cannot foresee any circumstances where I might afford an EV… looks as though I shall be stuck at home.

peyrole
peyrole
4 years ago
Reply to  NeilofWatford

EV’s are irrelevant. They are useless, they know they are. They just don’t want us to have cars, period.

JXB
JXB
4 years ago

Between 40% to 50% of able adults get paid to do jobs which generate no profit. They are in Government, bureaucracies, NGOs, charities, various advocate groups and lobby organisations, and in busy-work, non-jobs.

They are paid out of tax plunder or begging. It is from among these parasites that all the misanthropic campaigns and morally corrupt demand arise.

The solution is to reopen the coal mines, take away tractors and ploughs and give these folk meaningful, hard work underground or on the land.

Vaxtastic
4 years ago
Reply to  JXB

I think the article made a good case for the ideas being generated by the idle rich.

However, I have often been struck by how much the public sector workers are in tune with it all.

JXB
JXB
4 years ago
Reply to  Vaxtastic

The idle rich, as you put it, climbed on board an already moving band-wagon. Environmentalism and proto-wokism go back more than five decades and find their beginnings among the Hippy generation, trades Union activists, academics, and politicians.

Vaxtastic
4 years ago
Reply to  JXB

Yes but the billion dollar budgets and involvement of Blackrock et al don’t go back five decades.

pjar
4 years ago
Reply to  JXB

It mightn’t be quite so bad if they only didn’t generate profit and at least covered the costs. The truth is that they generate nothing, but are instead a drain on the money generated by others… though you might argue that those tasked with administering fines at least generate something, I suppose?

Mr10Percent
4 years ago

Sith Mind-Tricks do not work on me.

Vaxtastic
4 years ago
Reply to  Mr10Percent

But they do seem to work on most judging by the numbers getting their children jabbed.

Dodgy Geezer
Dodgy Geezer
4 years ago

Let us assume for a moment that the Climate Crisis is real and demands immediate action. In that case, the question should be, “Are the measures proposed to ameliorate and/or resolve Problem X proportionate in terms of a) overall expenditure and b) potential disruption to the social fabric?”

IF it was real, we would know what needed doing immediately, with no difficulty or disagreement.

The problem for the government and activists is that it is not real, so the proposed countermeasures have no hope of being justified.

Vaxtastic
4 years ago
Reply to  Dodgy Geezer

The measures are the point of all this, with the target state just being the justification, as I’m sure you are aware. 24/7 surveillance by any means necessary.

They all need a sharp reminder of who is the boss here.

JXB
JXB
4 years ago
Reply to  Dodgy Geezer

If it were real, we would be doing what our ancestors did tens of thousands of years ago, adapting to changing conditions, such change being incremental and over a number of generations, and therefore adaptation would also be incremental over a number of generations with accumulating knowledge.

It is incredible that Stone Age Man, poor and with just a few flint tools could survive and thrive through extreme shifts in climate whereas future Man, rich and scientifically & technologically advanced will be flummoxed by a bit of warm weather.

TheyLiveAndWeLockdown
4 years ago
Reply to  JXB

Well less cold nights…

As CO2 would merely stop it being so hot in the day and less cold at night.

The sun being the source CO2 being an Insulators and earth being the body heated.

Moderate Radical
4 years ago

YouTube plays an ad for Google where some pseudo bricklayers (1 male, 1 female) promote Google by saying it (Google) explains that the reason women’s strides/jeans have no pockets is to ‘keep them powerless’.

One’s immediate response is, Come again? So what do we do with the handbag, which has more pockets than two pairs of strides/jeans? Perhaps it is more feminine to hook a nice handbag over the shoulder than to reach into the back bin for a, what, wallet? Because a decent sized purse would not fit in a trouser/jean pocket.

Moreover, don’t women’s strides/jeans have pockets nowadays, rendering this stupid point moot?

Good heavens. This is what happens when you have a predetermined conclusion and try to make premises out of it. It ends in disaster.

Moral of the story: Net Zero is bollocks.

TheyLiveAndWeLockdown
4 years ago

the real moral is the adverts are not about what’s directly being advertised…

comment image

Vaxtastic
4 years ago

It is not just adverts 😉

FIqrZ2AWYAM4doE.png
Julian
4 years ago

Yup, a lot of ads are just propaganda under the cover of ads. Same as BBC “news and entertainment”.

Milo
Milo
4 years ago
Reply to  Julian

A lot of the ads are propaganda – and have been so almost from the hour that the PM locked us down in March 2020. That sort of mystified me – everyone knows how long it takes to put together an advertising campaign, all those talking head trendy types huddled around someone doing a presentation of how the ‘concept ‘is going to play out etc.

You don’t put one of those together overnight sat at your kitchen table. So, considering the lead in time how did the marketeers know to start flooding the airwaves with PC BLM suitable adverts, marketing their products at the terrified who would be obsessed with keeping every possible surface germ free etc

Were they let in on it in advance??

JXB
JXB
4 years ago

It’s Net Zero Sense.

The old bat
4 years ago

Power can be turned off, whether or not you’ve got a smart meter. I am thinking of the 70s and the four hours on, four hours off system that we had during that awful winter. (Although as a teenager I found it all quite exciting, canoodling and sneaking booze by candlelight. Don’t think today’s teenagers would be quite so enamoured).

Vaxtastic
4 years ago
Reply to  The old bat

They’d all have PTSD these days if they couldn’t charge their phones.

MrTea
MrTea
4 years ago
Reply to  The old bat

A good way to kill off lots of expensive pensioners.

MrTea
MrTea
4 years ago

The ruling classes have decided there are too many people, they are in the process of resolving this.
The covid shots will work their magic and energy poverty will kill lots of silver tops.

Milo
Milo
4 years ago
Reply to  MrTea

Nailed it Mr Tea. In a nutshell.

Hard to see otherwise.

BillRiceJr
BillRiceJr
4 years ago

None of these “narrative-control” operations are happening by coincidence. Yes, our rulers “behind the curtain” want to do everything they can to protect any given scandal from being exposed. But they also want to stay in power long enough to finish the jobs they really want to finish. Most significantly, the rulers behind the curtain know they can’t implement their real agendas in a world where free speech and a pursuit of the truth actually exists/occurs.  Even if just one scandal (pick your scandal or conspiracy … there are probably 10 just among COVID topics) was exposed, this would threaten the power structure and make it very likely other scandals were exposed. The exposure of any scandal might be enough to expel the conspirators from their positions of power. So two goals resonate with our rulers: A) They have to do whatever has to be done to prevent ANY scandal from being exposed and B) They have to do whatever has to be done to ensure the next components of the Orwellian project will not be blocked. That is, they have to be able to finish their program. “Alternative” thinkers (and the fringe sites that are managing to challenge all… Read more »

BillRiceJr
BillRiceJr
4 years ago
Reply to  BillRiceJr

… What do “they” really fear? They fear the truth being exposed or any serious organization – preferably with a large audience – that is at least searching for the truth.

To thwart these people and block their nefarious agendas, someone (or many someones) would have to produce that which scares them most.

CovidiousAlbion
4 years ago
Reply to  BillRiceJr

I believe it is a mistake to focus upon a battle for public opinion. Our overlords have tilted that particular playing field too steeply against us.

Rather, those who are aware of the problems should simply walk away from them. We are fully entitled to our opinion that we abhor all manner of the PTB’s crap, from coerced “experimental” injections to energy rationing. We do not need to persuade a majority to share it. It is enough to state our choice not to continue to belong to such a state, to tell the majority that we are agreeing to differ. We can then set upon upon our fair share of these islands, and live as WE choose.

Yes, there will be pain in the short term, but this is far preferable to fighting a losing battle as we are herded into dystopia. Remember that people survived the partition of India, and that others created the modern day state of Israel upon mostly undeveloped land, in only a few years.

https://ourdecisiontoo.com/Issue/there-s-nothing-left-to-do-but-go-our-separate-ways/320

J4mes
4 years ago

I see transport lorries carrying fresh meat are now blocked from entering the UK. The claim is that it’s due to the P&O Ferries fiasco. I say it’s due to Agenda 21-30, the Great Reset.

Won’t be long before the peasants are buying grubs and maggots for protein – all as planned.

Milo
Milo
4 years ago
Reply to  J4mes

My take exactly – espec when excuse for an Environment secretary says it isn’t possible to prioritise the lorries carrying fresh cargo which is going to be spoiled/wasted.

The logic/reasoning seems to boil down to “because I said so”.

if that isn’t the height of un-environmental (not to mention unsustainable) then I don’t know what is.

J4mes
4 years ago
Reply to  Milo

Indeed Milo. What I find particularly unpleasant here, is that when this meat is spoiled, all those animals died for no purpose other than to unwillingly play a part in psyops.

And the masses will begrudgingly accept that each of these manufactured crisis are just coincidentally happening at the same time.

Why would P&O suddenly decide now was a great time to sack their entire fleet of staff? Why have “Just Stop Oil” decided now is a great time to block oil depots? Why did the Ukraine war inexplicably kick off right at the end of the last chapter of the covid scam?

Everything that is happening channels us all towards the ambitions of the Great Reset. The next crisis will be Operation London Bridge. The proverbial will hit the fan.

Stuart
4 years ago

…it might have made more sense to point to the Scottish Government programme providing free cavity wall insulation…

Cavity wall insulation has ruined thousands of houses, causing damp, mildew and ill health

For a fist full of roubles
Reply to  Stuart

And to qualify for a grant (certainly in England a year or so ago) your house has to be brought up to current building regs standard at your own cost (the contractor surveys the house for compliance). In my case it meant fitting trickle vents to all windows and installing extractor fans where formerly an opening window would suffice in bathrooms and kitchens. Only then would you be eligible but with no guarantees until after you had forked out full price for the insulation.

JXB
JXB
4 years ago

And the grant comes out of taxpayers’ pockets, including those who live in rented accommodation, those who paid for their own insulation, those who live in poor accommodation and have little spare money.

Such grants should be funded out of the assets and earnings of all MPs and others who propagate this faux-calamity.

Jabby Mcstiff
Jabby Mcstiff
4 years ago

Look at it from a warrior point of view. Maybe you went along with it before but you won’t do so any longer. A time is coming when people won’t be so squeamish about where their energy came from; they will be lucky if they have any energy at all. If you have wisdom then you need to anticipate this tendency.

BillRiceJr
BillRiceJr
4 years ago

In the 25 months since our “New Normal” commenced, I’ve lost track of the news accounts I thought I’d never read or see. However, the video clip of the city of Shanghai that reveals thousands of locked-down citizen crying out in unison at their fates has to be the most chilling audio I’ve heard yet. If you missed it, go to the last item in today’s “News Roundup” to see and HEAR for yourself. Is THIS not the “end game” that occurs when totalitarians get almost total control over society? Or: the “end game” is even more horrific … and still to come. Anyway, what we see and hear with this surreal video is what can happen when false and dubious narratives are used by those who rule us …. to “protect” us. Before they kill or harm most of us, the masses apparently will produce a moan of anguish that can be heard throughout a giant city. And, if possible, such a cry will be largely concealed from the world. And many others who could and should be crying out will be afraid to do so. Also surreally, millions of our fellow men will applaud the actions that produced… Read more »

Jabby Mcstiff
Jabby Mcstiff
4 years ago

This reduction of us into fungible economic units is the essence of their plan.It would be better to be dead than to be an instrument of their machinations. The good news is that the joy is reawakening. Joy regardless of cost. We are witnessing the fragility of their plan and vision as it implodes and spontaneity is coming back into the world.

Milo
Milo
4 years ago
Reply to  Jabby Mcstiff

Can you share any evidence of that with us?

I for one could do with some hope.

MikeAustin
4 years ago

permanent emergency <-> emerging permanence
That is, total tyranny forever with no rights.

RedhotScot
4 years ago
Reply to  MikeAustin

We have no one else to blame but ourselves. With voter participation in the UK as low as it was/is, what do we expect?

One benefit of events over the last few years high profile political events (Scottish independence, Brexit, Covid, climate change, NetZero, mandating EV’s and Heat Pumps, Ukraine etc.) has stimulated a lot more political discourse amongst the working and middle class than for the preceding 30 or 40 years.

Whether it presents itself as voter participation remains to be seen, but if it doesn’t, we deserve everything we get.

We have lost the art of civil discourse (and sometimes not so civil) over the dinner table of political issues of our time. Our schools may be charged with the job of teaching the 3 R’s, but parents have largely abandoned their responsibility of teaching our children about politics, religion, finance, and the birds and the bees.

Alter Ego
Alter Ego
4 years ago
Reply to  RedhotScot

Voter participation in Australia is extremely high: voting is compulsory and enforced by fines.*

And look at what we’ve got!

*Strictly speaking, it’s participation in the electoral process that’s compulsory. You have to get a ballot paper. You can write your opinion of what’s on offer on the paper, rather than actually voting for any of them; then pop it in the box. Job done. Your vote will be recorded as “Informal”. Look for the name on every set of results: sometimes as high as 10%, but a lot of those are believed to be accidental.

Jabby Mcstiff
Jabby Mcstiff
4 years ago

Such a life is not worth living, within their system. What does that tell you – that if you are to have a future then it must be outside the system. This understanding is growing.

ebygum
4 years ago
Reply to  Jabby Mcstiff

Maybe that’s what countries ‘outside’ the system of the West think?….Could be wrong, but I genuinely think this is part of what is causing the West to try and totally demolish Russia. It’s a country full of cheap and plentiful fossil fuel, and many emerging countries, China, India, Brazil etc want to buy it and become as rich as ‘the west’…and ‘the west’ ain’t going to allow it, especially as they shoot themselves in the foot following the dodgy net zero agenda.

Jabby Mcstiff
Jabby Mcstiff
4 years ago
Reply to  ebygum

It is a worldwide self-conscious phenomenon. The last fifteen years these countries have been asking, why is the west suicidal? More recently they have discovered that the west is both suicidal and psychotic. And they don’t feel any joy about it but they have to acknowledge reality.

RedhotScot
4 years ago
Reply to  ebygum

I don’t think it’s a desire to become as rich as the west, it’ simply the natural human ambition to progress. People measure their standards by their direct associates, not by the standards of another country. Most people, I believe, appreciate that whilst the grass may seem greener in another country, it always comes at a cost.

An example. I had an ambition before covid hit to perhaps retire to Australia. I turned 65 early this year and have as much ambition to retire there now, as stick a pin in my eye.

By some strange quirk of fate, and however bad we suffered under covid restrictions in the UK, some countries were an awful lot worse. Invariably the ones we least expected.

Alter Ego
Alter Ego
4 years ago
Reply to  RedhotScot

Please reconsider, RedhotScot. We need you.

Back in 2019, it was still a great place. We laughed at our politicians; had never heard of social distancing; and scoffed at colds and “man flu”.

The irony of it all is that it hit us later – so we had even less excuse. It seems that our politicians looked at what overseas authoritarians had missed, and decided to fix the loopholes.

And we simply couldn’t believe what was happening.

jingleballix
4 years ago

Excellent piece – thank-you.

Jabby Mcstiff
Jabby Mcstiff
4 years ago

The west has entered a suicidal will towards death phase. If you want to put a halt to this tendency then you have to start by acknowledging it. Even Trump said a while back that the main pressing question of our times is, does the West have the will to survive or not. Look at yourself. Are you an expression of the west’s will to survive. More likely that you will be willing its demise one way or another.

Jabby Mcstiff
Jabby Mcstiff
4 years ago

I can tell you honestly given the measure of energy in the west and in other power domains that the west is about to be conquered. This is a rather melancholy reality but it is reality nonetheless. We will keep the wisdom alive in monasteries but the culture is about to go down.

RedhotScot
4 years ago
Reply to  Jabby Mcstiff

The objective is for a New World Order, not just a New Western World Order. Somehow I don’t think The Chinese, Russians and Indians will quite see Clause Schwab’s vision of his NWO in quite the same way they see their version of their NWO, if they have one. Indeed, I don’t actually believe either the Chinese or Russians have any ambition of a NWO. Quite honestly, I think they are simply taking full advantage of the west’s political stupidity to profit as much as they can from it. The UK and the US, at least, did the same for hundreds of years. Indeed, up until we had something more than a veneer of Democracy, the UK was pretty much a totalitarian state, with the Royal family puling the strings of those they endowed with wealth and position. Many other countries were much the same and Japan didn’t call a halt to it until after WW2. Today, Europe conducts totalitarianism by Brussels regulation, infecting even the countries not within the EU, because to trade with the bloc, they must conform to its standards. Most of the world doesn’t like that type of regime. The middle east certainly aren’t interested, nor… Read more »

zners
zners
4 years ago

love the picture but the guy’s missing “Orange Man Bad”. Or perhaps it takes up the entire other side of his brain

Jabby Mcstiff
Jabby Mcstiff
4 years ago

I love the avoidance of serious matters in favour of some bourgeois nicety, rather like whistling past the graveyard. Trust me they won’t be whistling past the graveyard for much longer.

Star
4 years ago

The cartoon is great. Love it!

Shame about the boring article, which contains hardly a single properly thought-out concept.

Fingerache Philip
Fingerache Philip
4 years ago
Reply to  Star

One picture is worth 5,000 words.
Or in this case, a cartoon.

TheBluePill
4 years ago
Reply to  Star

I’m a great admirer of Bob Moran’s work. He sells artwork prints, originals and t-shirts on his site. I’d love to get one of his original artworks but they have prices reflecting their demand.

Star
4 years ago

I can’t recall any British Tories criticising the “economic” role of the government in Singapore. Nor in Saudi Arabia or any other Gulf state for that matter.

What they dislike is high taxes for those with above-average incomes, and the redistribution of wealth in the direction of the exploited.

RedhotScot
4 years ago
Reply to  Star

I don’t actually believe that’s true as the very wealthy (the true elites as people describe them) have so much money they can afford not to pay taxes. I know one of the wealthiest men in the UK, he’s actually not that rich, in terms most people imagine, because his wealth is tied up in investments, many of them to avoid paying tax. Sure, he has a nice house, and trolls around in a Bentley, but an annual income of a million or two a year covers that. The remainder of his ‘obscene’ wealth is determined by how much he owns. He could, however, be broke tomorrow if certain markets crashed simultaneously. Elon Musk is equally candid about his wealth. In my opinion some do, however, become obsessed with things like eugenics and climate change because, frankly, they are so ‘clever’ they imagine their opinions matter more than anyone else’s. They want to shape the world to their utopian dream, which is where the trouble begins. All the uber rich of the WEF club have their own utopian dream, invariably with them sitting on top of the pile. The problem is, almost without exception, these people are ruthless backstabbers and… Read more »