Why We Should Pity the Poor Eco-Zealots
As Net Zero collapses and its advocates double down on failed strategies of smearing critics as deniers, we should pity them, says Toby in his Spectator column this week. His friendly suggestion: “Stop smearing and demonising your opponents and start behaving like grown-ups.” Here’s an excerpt.
Itās a bit baffling that the Green Blobās response to this haemorrhaging of support is to keep up the drumbeat of doom. If running around screaming āThe end is nigh!ā is no longer scaring people, why double down on the hysteria? According to the organisers of next monthās [House of Lords] briefing, weāre facing a “multi-pronged emergency” that will affect every aspect of British life: “Experts will provide attendees with the latest assessments across all dimensions of the crisis, from food security to national security, and outline science-based pathways forward.”
You can bet Clarksonās farm that these “non-partisan”, “peer-reviewed” proposals ā thatās what theyāre calling them ā will involve transferring more and more control over energy policy to āexpertsā like them. Itās almost as if they donāt trust the electorate to make the right choices, so want to bypass the ballot box altogether. Thankfully, the Tories have committed to repealing the Climate Change Act, so thereāll be a chance ā a last chance, perhaps ā to stop this power grab at the next election.
The eco-loons have other āsolutionsā up their sleeves, all equally undemocratic. Last month, it was reported that the Australian Human Rights Commission has urged the federal government to pass a new law to stop the spread of “climate-related misinformation and disinformation”. But hang on a second, wannabe Torquemadas. Isnāt there a risk that might backfire? In the documentaryĀ An Inconvenient Truth, Al Gore predicted that within a decade there would be no snow left on Kilimanjaro. That was in 2006. Do I have permission to submit this photograph of Kilimanjaro into court, Your Honour? Case closed. Thatāll be two years of hard labour, Mr Vice-President.
Iām aware of Sun Tzuās maxim that you should never interrupt your enemy when heās making a mistake, but Iām beginning to feel sorry for the climate hysterics. Itās getting too easy for sceptics like me to win the public debate. So hereās a suggestion: instead of pretending your opponents are āclimate change deniersā or in the pay of the oil and gas industry, instead of continuing to lie about green energy bringing down household bills, why not try something new and engage in some honest, good-faith debate? Admit that all your alarmist claims ā extreme weather events are becoming more frequent, wildfires are caused by climate change, Arctic sea ice is shrinking, the polar bear population is declining, the Great Barrier Reef is evaporating, the Gulf Stream is collapsing etc., etc. ā are not incontestable facts, but areas of legitimate scientific debate.
Stop smearing and demonising your opponents and start behaving like grown-ups. Describing points of view you disagree with as mis- or disinformation is just a way of avoiding the hard intellectual work you need to do. Youāre not going to win this argument by screaming louder.
Worth reading in full.
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“Thankfully, the Tories have committed to repealing the Climate Change Act”
Really, Toby?
Of course, your statement is partly true, Kemi has made that commitment. But commitments are cheap. I guess you know this, and that you’re just trying to remind the “Tories” why they need to commit to their leader’s… commitment.
I’ve seen reports that a spokesman has said that they will still endeavour to reduce Carbon (Dioxide) emissions.
So they don’t understand the basics.
I don’t deny allowing Toby his political preference. I’m happy he’s attacking our common target.
Know your enemy. Even though our solutions may (or not) differ, I’m thankful for your vigilance. Keep it up TY, you have way more energy than I do.
If Con gets a credible conscience, in 3 years’ time, let’s see. I told them they’ve napalmed their credibility, but…
She made that “commitment” and was immediately contradicted by the Eco Nutters Group in the Not-a-Conservative-Party …. led by the Deputy Chairman.
Toby, the Tories are toast.
This is possible.
Polling at 4% in Caerphilly. Reform in the lead on 32%; Plaid second on 28%. Labour on 12%.
Rees-Mogg has begged the 4% of Conservative voters in the Constituency to vote for Reform.
The Tories ask us to judge them on what they promise. I prefer to look at what they did. Only five MPs voted against the CCA and at least one of them is now a member of Reform Party. The whole edifice of nonsense was built while they ran (sic) the government. The legislation was agreed with their approval. And not only in respect of Net Zero. The whole thing is elitist. They do not trust or much care for the oiks. Toby knows they will not stop. Miliband is close to ensuring a doom loop of electricity supply and he must know it. It is time a study was done outside government to describe what will happen here when a blackout occurs. I do not think the public appreciate how much of their life will be affected: gas central heating microwave cookers mobile phones much water supply and sewage disposal refrigeration shops traffic lights and street lights doctors surgeries, hospitals and pharmacies (no more pain killers!) public transport ATMs Burglar alarms PIR floodlights the sequence will vary but the time to reinstate supply is unknown. It has never been done in modern times. I anticipate that Whitehall has a… Read more Ā»
I don’t think enough people realise how possible the situation you describe actually is.
We need more expert insight here into how the interconnectors with the continent will function when there is no grid to power the conversion from DC back to AC.
As I understand it: before the power is sent on its way to the UK from the continent, along the undersea cables, it is converted from AC to DC. But the conversion back the other way happens in the UK (obviously) and this task becomes much more complicated if the UK grid has gone down.
So, it would be like what happened in Spain recently, only much worse, because (as I read it) it would take a lot longer to get the grid working again. Spain had steady AC available on tap via its land border with France. UK doesn’t have that.
How the Texas power-grid came perilously close to a āblack restartā in 2021:
https://www.kut.org/energy-environment/2021-08-05/if-the-texas-power-grid-had-gone-down-it-would-need-a-black-start-how-long-would-that-take
āI think itās safe to say it could be weeks, and depending on the conditions youāre operating under when you go into a black start condition, it could take longer than that.ā
How will the youngsters manage when they canāt charge their phones, tablets and laptops?
Most will be losing it within a day or two, no TV, no Sky, no Internet, no Social Media, no lights, no games consoles, no hope!
Failed mobile phones won’t just be no phone calls, it will be no Internet, and no Daily Sceptic!
12 hours of blackouts and our oh-so-enriched cities will riot … with mass looting.
“A blackout of more than a week means the country would be in chaos with death by starvation and violence would be widespread.”
If it comes to anarchy the best organised and cohesive groups will dominate.
Air traffic control. It might have stopgap generators but its staff will be affected or delayed.
It feels as though an economic shock is coming that will put the unproven/contestable fate of some far-off white bears into perspective for many people (although perhaps not the blob-dwellers Toby describes here). Unfortunately I don’t have a swooshy computer model to back up my suspicion.
But you probably can make a swooshy spreadsheet. Many of these swooshy models are built with Excel playing a central role! Yes, really.
I only seem to use free software these days…
“Wannabe Torquemadas”… Ha-ha! That really made me laugh, because it’s so true! š
As for the photo of “How very dare you!” Greta, she’s 22 years old now, so her parents must be asking “Aren’t you ever going to get a job?”
Greta’s parents and that Indian bloke are giggling all the way to the bank.
Speaking of Indian blokes, I was reading about how the one they bizarrely handed control of Google to has made a right pig’s ear of it, and is now going to spend $billions building a gigantic AI centre in his ancestral homeland of India, not far from his native Tamil Nadu.
[must. not. bite.]
š
Private joke. Kinda
I think it might be just a wee bit too early to start pitying these people.
I don’t even think we are any where near close to freeing ourselves from this tyranny.
I would say the most we have accomplished so far is to slow down their advance. But they’re still advancing on almost all fronts.
Agreed, it is far too soon to consider pity. I think I will never pity them, I despise them. These Marxists are wilfully throwing away everything this country has achieved culturally, industrially, and financially. Binning the whole lot, and they have no clue how bad things are going to get. I would like to hold them all personally responsible for all the destruction that is on its way.
PITY?
Donāt be silly. Look to power, legacy & ideology.
And a democracy that allowed this to emerge.
Do I have permission to submit this photograph of Kilimanjaro into court, Your Honour?
The answer, of course, will be no.
A major foreseeable āmulti-pronged emergencyā would be nothing to do with inherent climate variability and everything to do with collapse of the electricity grid.
Iām not sure I know what pity is. I feel very sad when my close family and friends are sad or suffering. I try to help people I come into contact with who are suffering, if I can. Iām not sure I feel any strong emotions for people I have never met, though I find it hard to sympathise with people who seem to get off on sticking their nose into my business.
Last week a friend invited me to go to an evening at the British Academy to attend their ‘Living with the Planet’ series on sustainability and climate change. One short presentation was given by a young climate activist fresh out of university who could easily pass for the British version of Greta Thunberg because of her ardent fervour for climate castastrophising. Her talk was basically attacking climate deniers. She seemed unable to tolerate a dissenting voice. For her the science was not to be questioned and this is the trouble with the proponents of the impending climate emergency, they won’t tolerate debate. The facts cannot be questioned. She seemed totally unaware of any contrary data that brings into question the scientific consensus.
Fresh out of university?
Any idea which one, or which faculty?
Manchester. She’s quite the rising star in the green blob universe.
Pity their blind, simplistic thinking more like. I pity them because I was given a decent education, leaving school with the skills to read, write an understanding of literature and art. I had the skills to work, to communicate and socialise. To build a family and a life.
These intellectually stunted individuals are doomed to spend a life, living off handouts or money given to them by Britainās enemies to grizzle, whinge and act as human cholesterol for our society.
They do deserve pity, they have made some pretty hideous life choices by there were agents of evil encouraging them to do it. The activists posing as educators in our schools and universities are utterly evil, destroying the lives of a generation.
In the NL Lidewij de Vos (Forum voor democratie, anti-NetZero) was supposed to debate a member of the Volt party about climate and energy. The Volt member pulled outā¦..on the basis that they felt the views of Lidewij were so far from Voltās views that a debate was not possible.
And there you have itā¦.
I thought it was Napoleon who said “Never interrrupt your enemy when he’s making a mistake”
You’re right!