Tag Archives: environment

Emails Refute James Cameron’s Reason for Cancelling Global Warming Debate

E-mail messages obtained by NewsBusters refute claims that multi-millionaire filmmaker James Cameron cancelled a debate with prominent global warming skeptics because they weren’t as famous as he is. As NewsBusters reported Monday, a debate had been scheduled and placed on the program for last weekend’s AREDay summit in Aspen, Colorado, featuring internet publisher Andrew Breitbart, Sen. James Inhofe’s (R-Okla.) former communications director Marc Morano, and documentarian Ann McElhinney.  Within the past 36 hours, event organizers have absurdly claimed that since Cameron wanted to match wits with either Glenn Beck, Sarah Palin, or Inhofe, he decided to pull out of the debate when this didn’t happen. E-mail messages between the prospective participants and Cameron’s representative paint an entirely different picture.  To begin our story, Richard Greene, the man that negotiated the particulars with the skeptics, sent the following regrets to the prospective participants some time Saturday (h/t Big Hollywood ): Dear Andrew, Larry, Marc and Anne [sic], Here is the final decision in what has been, without a doubt, a very challenging road. There will be no debate as originally envisioned and discussed . . . for now. Instead, AREDAY and I offer the three of you (or two or even just one) the FULL platform – 5:30 – 7:00 pm Paepke Auditorium on The Aspen Institute campus . . .with FULL video and audio rights – to share “the other side” of the climate change and energy debate with the assembled notable in the environmental community. James Cameron will not participate. Again, this is my fault and my responsibility. Way back in April James authorized me to set up a debate with either Glenn Beck or Senator Inhofe. As Matt Dempsey will tell you, we tried very hard to get something done for Earth Day and then continued to talk. I communicated that the “denier” team was representing and indirectly chosen by Sen. Inhofe’s office (as Matt had 100% endorsed Marc for that role) but it somehow, given James’ travel, literally to Siberia, was not clear that Sen. Inhofe or someone of his public stature would not be involved. As a result, despite James’ total willingness to engage, he has been universally advised to wait for the time that Senator Inhofe or Governor Palin or Glenn Beck are willing and able to engage in this important debate. Best, Richard Greene For those unable to read through the lines, this was a classic CYA letter, although the A being covered wasn’t necessarily apparent. For some background, the “Larry” in the greeting is Larry Solov, Breitbart’s business partner. As for Greene, according to his biography at the Huffington Post: Richard Greene is an attorney, political and communication strategist, author of the Prentice Hall coffee table book, “Words That Shook The World: 100 Years of Unforgettable Speeches and Events” and Host of “Hollywood CLOUT!” on Air America Radio (Monday – Friday at 6 – 8 pm Pacific/9 – 11 pm Eastern, www.AirAmerica.com and on the air in New York, Los Angeles, Chicago, Washington DC, Detroit, Seattle, Santa Fe and elsewhere). He is also the Founder of a 501(c)(3) corporation that runs high school competitions to find and cultivate the next generation of great speakers and leaders in America. (www.WordsThatShookTheWorld.com). Greene has recently been collaborating with Cameron on Words That Shook The World events as reported by Bing Community and pictured at DayLife.com. With that as pretext, the following e-mail correspondence chronicles recent negotiations concerning debate rules and particulars (e-mail addresses scrubbed for privacy): In a message dated 8/16/2010 11:32:52 A.M. Pacific Daylight Time, morano@xxxx.com writes: Hi Richard, Please give us your proposal for the format and rules of the proposed debate. The bios and press release are currently unacceptable as proposed. I have copied Andrew Breitbart’s business partner Larry Solov on this email to bring Breitbart directly into the loop. Let’s get this squared away. Thanks Marc Greene quickly responded: From: RHGreene@xxxx.com Sent: Monday, August 16, 2010 3:36 PM To: morano@xxxx.com; larry@xxxx.com; annmcelhinney@xxxx.com Cc: info@areday.net; sally.ranney@xxxx.com Subject: Aspen Debate – Important Details Dear Marc, Andrew/Larry and Anne, Very much looking forward to our Sunday debate. Here are the important details as of this moment. Richard 1. Press Release In order for us to have press we need to get this out asap. Please get me, by 4:30 pm Eastern, the following: a) Any changes you need to YOUR bios. We will include everyone in the final release. b) A written sign off on the press release title and copy. See below for the current iteration that has attempted to incorporate Marc’s feedback. Notice the urgency: “In order for us to have press we need to get this out asap.” Sounds like a done deal, doesn’t it? As such, on Monday, August 16, this debate was all a go with some particulars left to be ironed out. Greene included the format of the encounter: Introductory 5:30 – 5:31 Welcome by Moderator 5:31 – 5:40 Introduction of “James Cameron Team” members and a 2 minute per member “Opening Statement” 6:40 – 5:49 Introduction of “Andrew Breitbart Team” members and a 2 minute per member “Opening Statement” B. The 10 Issues 5:49 – 6:34 Moderator will raise, one by one, a total of 10 issues and will toss each issue to one team for a 2 minute response, and then the other team for a 2 minute rebuttal. Each team will decide, on their own, the member or members that will use the 2 minute timeT slot. Time: :30 second intro of the issue, 4 minute debate time per issue x 10 = 45 minutes, total. C. Questions from the Audience 6:34 – 6: 54 Questions from the Audience. Each side will choose the people to ask questions in alternating fashion. The moderator will not make these choices. D. Closing Statements 6:54 – 7:00 Each side will get 3 minutes, total, for closing statements, to be distributed as one minute per member or 3 minutes for one member or however the side decides. Next, he added a press release: James Cameron vs. Andrew Breitbart “The Great Climate Debate” at AREDAY Conference in Aspen Looming man-made crisis or a manufactured crisis? Sunday, August 22 Aspen, COLO… AVATAR Director and Producer James Cameron will face conservative pundit Andrew Breitbart in what is being called “The Great Climate Debate,” on Sunday, August 22, at 5:30 – 7:00 pm in Aspen, Colorado, as the culmination of the American Renewable Energy Day (AREDAY) Summit. Cameron and Breitbart will each be joined by climate and energy experts and advocates and will address questions of whether climate change is real, a horrific threat to humanity and, more specifically, whether human caused carbon emissions are responsible for extreme weather around the world, acidification of the oceans, the melting of the polar ice caps and glaciers and other environmental phenomena. The panelists for the debate will be: (please edit your blurb) 1. James Cameron, Underwater explorer, having spent over 3,000 hours, in submersibles and scuba diving, observing the devastation of the oceans first hand. Writer and Director of the environmentally themed film, AVATAR. 2. Dr. Julienne Stroeve, Research Scientist for The National Snow and Ice Data Center, specializing in remote sensing of snow and ice in the visible, infrared, and microwave wavelengths. Personally conducted research on Kangerlussuaq Glacier in Greenland and presented her findings and research at the UNESCO international experts meeting in Monaco and many other forums and featured on The Discovery Channel and the History Channel documentary “Underwater Universe” Dr. Graciela Chichilnisky is a world renown economist and mathematician and the author of the carbon market of the Kyoto Protocol that became international law in 2005. She also created the concept of Basic Needs voted by 153 nations at the 1993 Earth Summit to be the cornerstone of Sustainable Development, and in 1996 created the formal theory of Sustainable Development that is used worldwide. The “Climate Change is Not Real and/or Not Significantly Man Made and and/or Not A Significant Threat to Humanity” Side: 1. Marc Merano [sic], Former Communications Director for Senator James Inhofe, Executive Editor, “Climate Depot”, a website dedicated to challenging the “Climate Con”. 2. Ann McElhinney, Irish Journalist, Writer, Producer of Documentary Film attacking Al Gore’s “Inconvenient Truth”, “Not Evil – Just Wrong”. Most popular speaker (after Limbaugh and Ann Coulter) during 2010 CPAC Convention where she told James Cameron to grow-up, accusing the film Avatar of being an “anti-American, anti-capitalist, anti-mining celebrity guest. 3. Andrew Breitbart – Climate Change denier, Conservative blogger (www.Breitbart.com), Columnist for The Washington Times, author, “Hollywood, Interrupted: Insanity Chic in Babylon”, frequent Fox News Channel commentator and recipient of the Reed Irvine Accuracy in Media Award during the 2010 CPAC conference in Washington, D.C., Keynote speaker at the First National Tea Party Convention in 2010 and the journalist who released the edited videotape of Shirley Sherrod’s allegedly racist speech. Notice some of the wording in the bios was less than flattering. For instance, Morano’s name was misspelled, McElhinney was quoted as bashing one of the featured guests, and Breitbart was credited for releasing the Shirley Sherrod tape. Not very gracious, wouldn’t you agree?   On the other hand, both “captains” had clearly chosen their teams, and submitted bios to Greene. As he forwarded this proposed press release to Breitbart et al, isn’t it safe to assume Cameron and his participants were also kept in the loop? Greene was, after all, acting as the coordinator for this event. Wouldn’t it have been in keeping for him to apprise Cameron and Company of how this was going, and get their acceptance of the proposed press release? In fact, Greene later commented about how he was waiting on Cameron to approve the wording. As such, how is it possible that Breitbart, Sovol, Morano, and McElhinney knew on Monday who they’d be facing in this debate, but Cameron – who was having this set up by one of his representatives – didn’t? Regardless, Morano quickly responded: In a message dated 8/16/2010 2:27:53 P.M. Pacific Daylight Time, morano@xxxx.com writes: For the title, let’s delete “looming.” How about: Global Warming: A man-made crisis or a manufactured crisis? My bio as follows: 1.Marc Morano, Senior Aide to Senator James Inhofe and Climate Researcher for Senate Environment & Public Works Committee. Currently Executive Editor, For “Climate Depot”, a website dedicated to exposing the manufactured “Climate Con”. We would also like to have our own film crew present to tape the proceedings. As for debate rules, my only further suggestion would be not to be held to 10 points. If a topic is getting hot and showing great energy, let’s stick with it for another round instead of changing the subject. This of course would be at your discretion. Even if we only get to 7 or 8 questions, we would end up having better back and forth. I am not ready to sign off on press release yet. Greene responded the next day: From: RHGreene@xxxx.com Sent: Tuesday, August 17, 2010 8:51 AM To: morano@xxxx.com Cc: info@areday.net; RHGreene@xxxx.com Subject: Re: Aspen Debate – Important Details Hi Marc, I agree about keeping things more open ended. A light went off when I received Ann’s revisions relative to the scope of the debate. Would like to suggest that, to make the debate even more relevant to the media and the country . . . and to keep it even further away from wonky, statistical, boring banter . . . that we focus mainly on the economic issues that are relevant to the Mid Term Elections, i.e., whether adopting “alarmist” climate change legislation will destroy jobs and the economy, the recent Harry Reid Senate energy bill, the $20 Billion Fund from BP and whether we should raise the cap on oil company liability (the Menedez Bill), and, also, a solution oriented discussion on how we deal with energy in the future. I’m going to assume that this is also right up your alley. Please submit some questions/issues on these areas that I can pose to the James Cameron side. Thanks. Pretty strange, don’t you think? This was supposed to be a debate about global warming, and suddenly the coordinator wanted to talk about the midterm elections, Reid’s energy bill, BP, and raising the cap on oil company liability. Apparently confused by this change in subject matter, Morano promptly responded: From: Marc Morano-ClimateDepot.com [mailto:Morano@xxxx.com] Sent: Tuesday, August 17, 2010 9:27 AM To: ‘RHGreene@xxxx.com’ Cc: ‘info@areday.net’ Subject: RE: Aspen Debate – Important Details Hi Richard, NOOOO!!!! Please not a wonky energy debate. The core of the debate should be about climate science, and the impacts of warming on the world’s poor and the impacts of alleged solutions to world’s poor. Please no gulf oil spill or energy bill. BORING! Let’s keep this to global warming with 25% or less devoted to energy, BP, etc! No policy debate! Let’s debate the state of global warming science in 2010!!! Thanks Marc After a phone discussion with Greene, Morano sent the following: In a message dated 8/17/2010 8:36:29 A.M. Pacific Daylight Time, Morano@xxxx.com writes: Hi Richard, After our phone call, my team is fine with this change in debate format. Let’s go ahead and finalize this and as the energy debate you suggest. Can we get out press release announcing this asap? We are confirmed for the changes you suggest. Thanks Marc The following day, Greene responded with an updated press release not much different than the prior one: From: RHGreene@xxxx.com Date: Wed, Aug 18, 2010 at 5:45 PM Subject: Hi Marc – Current Press Release To: Morano@xxxx.com Cc: info@areday.net, annmcelhinney@xxxx.com Hi. We’re just waiting for James to land from Siberia to approve the language. Here’s the current press release. Richard So, on Wednesday, Greene was just waiting for Cameron to approve the language in the press release. Nothing at all about him approving the participants. Yet, on Friday, after phone discussions with Solov the previous evening and despite the two sides appearing close to finalizing the deal, Greene again changed course: On Aug 20, 2010, at 4:56 AM, RHGreene@xxxx.com wrote: Hi Larry, Nice to talk with you last night. James has rejected the idea of NOT having video. He wants video. We are discussing another idea that I’d like to have you vet with Andrew which I think may even be better for everyone’s reputation, including Andrew’s, than the debate we have planned. What do you two think of an intelligent “Roundtable” where all 6 sit around with a glass of wine or coffee and have a serious conversation in order to try to find some common , ground. Instead of spinning around and around in an adversarial way with both parties claiming “victory”, what about honoring all the participants as “Thought Leaders”, fully listening to their perspectives and showing the American people that both Andrew Breitbart and James Cameron, in their own way and from an authentic perspective, really care about their country. It would even allow Marc Merano [sic] to be more understood and to be considered as such. It’s an easy adjustment. We all sit around and everyone gets their 2 minutes to share their perspective but the goal is to try to come to some joint way to move forward on these issues rather than a Gladiator approach trying to kill the other side. Thoughts? Richard A keen eye should detect mischief afoot. First of all, roughly 60 hours before showtime, the coordinator proposed completely changing the format.  Suddenly, reputations are of a concern “including Andrew’s.”  Greene wants to “[honor] all the participants as ‘Thought Leaders'” and “[show] the American people that both Andrew Breitbart and James Cameron, in their own way and from an authentic perspective, really care about their country.” So much for debate. Would this end with the participants singing “Kumbaya?” And what about this insult to Morano, “It would even allow Marc Merano [sic] to be more understood and to be considered as such.” For those that have seen Morano speak either in person or on video – I’ve witnessed both – he’s quite a commanding and effective orator that always makes his positions both interesting and understandable. Surpised by this correspondence, Solov replied three times in the next hour: On Aug 20, 2010, at 7:33 AM, Laurence Solov wrote: Richard – I have asked our “team” and will get back to you ASAP. I assume from your response/proposal that we can film it, too, but please correct me if that is not a correct assumption. Larry Solov On Aug 20, 2010, at 7:54 AM, Laurence Solov wrote: Also, is it moderated? By whom? Is there Q&A from audience? Is it each person gets 2 minutes to speak, then talk back and forth more free form, or questions asked by a moderator? How long? Larry Solov From: Laurence Solov Date: August 20, 2010 8:29:42 AM PDT To: RHGreene@xxxx.com Cc: Breitbart Andrew Subject: Re: James Cameron and Video/Roundtable Richard – I’ve talked to our “team.” Please call me ASAP. This is workable if we just nail down a few specifics – see my questions below. But, to make it happen, we need to “finalize” this by, say, noon PST. People have planes to catch, videographers to arrange, and the press release needs to incorporate the language changes we gave you and to get out, Chardonnay or Pinot or maybe a nice Bordeaux, etc. I do not have a phone for you in Aspen. So, please call as soon as you get this. Thanks. Larry Solov The “see my questions below” referred to Solov’s previous message wherein he asked: Also, is it moderated? By whom? Is there Q&A from audience? Is it each person gets 2 minutes to speak, then talk back and forth more free form, or questions asked by a moderator? How long? Readers should bear in mind that it was now late Friday morning on the East Coast, and folks scheduled to get on airplanes in less than 24 hours still didn’t know whether this event was going to take place. Sensing the growing urgency, Solov had several telephone conversations with Greene to finalize the particulars so that he could instruct the participants to head to Aspen. By late Friday evening his time – Solov is based in the Los Angeles area – he had ironed out the final details with Greene, and sent the following e-mail message to confirm everything: From: Laurence Solov Date: Fri, Aug 20, 2010 at 10:08 PM Subject: Aspen Debate To: RHGreene@xxxx.com Cc: Breitbart Andrew , Ann Mcelhinney , phelim mcaleer , Marc Morano Richard: You have revised your proposal to the following: 1. A private debate – no video or audio, no press, not open to the public (not even the conference organizers would be allowed tape it); A. Introductory 5:30 – 5:31 Welcome by Moderator 5:31 – 5:40 Introduction of “James Cameron Team” members and a 2 minute per member “Opening Statement” 6:40 – 5:49 Introduction of “Andrew Breitbart Team” members and a 2 minute per member “Opening Statement” B. The 10 Issues 5:49 – 6:34 Moderator will raise, one by one, a total of 10 issues and will toss each issue to one team for a 2 minute response, and then the other team for a 2 minute rebuttal. Each team will decide, on their own, the member or members that will use the 2 minute timeT slot. Time: :30 second intro of the issue, 4 minute debate time per issue x 10 = 45 minutes, total. (Richard – I will add, based on our previous conversation, that you told me you intend to provide the questions before the debate, no later than, say, 5:00 pm Saturday the 21st – Aspen time) C. Questions from the Audience 6:34 – 6: 54 Questions from the Audience. Each side will choose the people to ask questions in alternating fashion. The moderator will not make these choices. D. Closing Statements 6:54 – 7:00 Each side will get 3 minutes, total, for closing statements, to be distributed as one minute per member or 3 minutes for one member or however the side decides. (or, the more interactive format Marc suggested) 2. Romm to replace Stroeve; 3. A 20 – 30 minute exclusive interview by our side of Mr. Cameron that can be videotaped. Without rehashing the long history of trying to put this together, Andrew, Ann and Marc are disappointed that they were originally told they would be permitted to video a public debate, but are now being told that a condition of going forward is that the debate be private and that no video or audio will be permitted. Having said that, they will accept the invitation, and look forward to the event and the interview. Larry Solov At this point, Solov informed Morano and McElhinney that the debate was a go, and the former got on a plane heading to Colorado only to find out upon landing a few hours later the debate had been cancelled. On Monday evening, Environment & Energy News reported that someone involved in this event blamed the debate’s cancellation on the participants (subscription required): But Chip Comins, founder and executive producer of the event, said the details of the debate had never been confirmed and accused Morano of distorting the truth. Organizers had considered holding a climate debate pitting Cameron against high-profile foes like former Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin (R), conservative radio host Rush Limbaugh, and FOX News hosts Bill O’Reilly and Sean Hannity, Comins said. “Morano is not at James Cameron’s level to debate, and that’s why that didn’t happen,” Comins said. “Cameron should be debating someone who is similar to his stature in our society.” Imagine that. After weeks of negotiations, it was decided that Breitbart, Morano, and McElhinney were not up to Cameron’s stature. Then why did Greene go through this tedious process with the prospective participants – including numerous e-mail messages and phone calls – if this were the case? Shouldn’t that decision have been made quite some time ago? According to Morano, Greene had initially contacted Inhofe’s office hoping the Senator would be interested in debating Cameron. As this was not going to work, Greene was referred to Morano. At that point, Morano recommended Breitbart and McElhinney as his debate partners, and the negotiations began. In his view, there was never any pushback from Greene after this point about Cameron wanting to match wits with personalities other than those already on the table. Instead, as he has written at Climate Depot, Morano was told by event organizers that once Climate Progress’s Joe Romm got involved in the discussion, he convinced Greene that having Cameron debate Morano would be a big mistake.  As Romm got absolutely demolished by Morano in a debate last April, we can understand why he’d prefer nobody else on his side go up against him. With this in mind, Greene’s job appears to have first been to continually change the format of the debate while making more and more absurd demands hoping Breitbart et al would give up and quit. When this didn’t happen, the fallback was a preposterous cover story that the participants just weren’t up to Cameron’s high-standing in the society. What a crock! Of course, all of this points to the continued obfuscation concerning this issue by climate alarmists.  For years, folks like Nobel Laureate Al Gore, his minions James Hansen and Gavin Schmidt of the Goddard Institute for Space Studies, and Romm have been trying to convince the public the global warming debate is over. At the same time, climate realists nee skeptics have been arguing the debate hasn’t yet begun because those on the other side refuse to do so. This latest episode with Cameron et al acts to further prove this, for in the end there likely never was going to be a debate at AREDay in Aspen. As Romm demonstrated last April, his side looks foolish when their dogma is challenged by folks that aren’t members of the choir. The only possible victory for the alarmists in such encounters is for them simply not to happen.

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Emails Refute James Cameron’s Reason for Cancelling Global Warming Debate

The Perfect HuffPo Entry: Liberal Condescension and Anti-Reagan Revisionism

Believe it or not, the Huffington Post has actually performed a public service. In publishing author Mark Juddery’s “ The 8 Most Overrated People In History: You’ll Never Believe Who Made The List,” the official blog of liberal Hollywood reminds us in one brief web slideshow how the left is both condescending and intellectually dishonest. Condescending because in repeating some (by now) well known corrections to famous stories Juddery seems to think he’s bringing the iconoclastic truth to the blinkered public. Intellectually dishonest because in running down President Ronald Reagan with a list of failings that might have been culled from any 1988 edition of The New York Times, he reminds us where many liberals really stood during the latter part of the Cold War, and how they stoutly refused to accept (Soviet) defeat. Juddery’s list of overrated people comes from his book, “The 50 Most Overrated Things in History.” It must be a real page-turner if it these shocking revelations are typical: there was no real King Arthur; in landing on Hispaniola, Columbus thought he’d reached India; there’s no record that Lady Godiva ever rode naked through Coventry. Anyone with a decent education and a minimal amount of common sense can only shrug and wonder who paid Juddery to write this. And anyone who has a nodding relationship with the History Channel probably knows that Thomas Edison was a sharp businessman (“classic Dickensian employer,” in Juddery’s words) who employed hundreds of researchers and scientists working in his name. Saving the best for last, Juddery dismisses the legacy of Ronald Reagan with nasty disdain. To call Reagan great, Juddery contends, is to “ignore the Iran-Contra scandal, the huge budget deficits, his environment ignorance, his do-nothing reaction to the looming AIDS epidemic, his courting of Saddam Hussein, and numerous other blunders.” As for ending the Cold War, Juddery rehashes the leftist caricatures of Reagan the dangerous war-monger. “[O]thers have suggested that Reagan’s arms build-up was a cunning ploy to bankrupt the USSR, which is a relief, because I always thought it was a cunning ploy to risk everyone’s life.” Reagan used embarrassing rhetoric like “evil empire” and “was very uncooperative in peace talks” with “the reformer Mikhail Gorbachev,” until “facing scandal and low approval ratings, he was willing to do anything – even something crazy like helping to save the world.” Luckily, Juddery’s Reagan shares more than hype with King Arthur, since neither of them were real.

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The Perfect HuffPo Entry: Liberal Condescension and Anti-Reagan Revisionism

Media Use Crazy Weather to Hype Global Warming, Despite Admissions Weather Isn’t Climate

Last winter, as blizzard snowfalls piled up into several feet in the nation’s capital, conservatives mocked global warming alarmists for trying to link weather incidents to global warming. But as summer heat waves, volcanoes and sinkholes have appeared recently, climate alarmists proved they missed the point . A top Obama administration scientist attacked global warming skeptics during the winter by pointing out that “weather is not the same thing as climate.” ABC’s Bill Blakemore argued the same thing in order to defend the existence of manmade global warming on Jan. 8, 2010. But Associated Press, USA Today , The New York Times and The Washington Post have all promoted a connection between the extreme heat and weather around the world this summer and global warming. One CNN host asked if the events were the “apocalypse” or global warming. The Huffington Post proposed naming hurricanes and other disasters after climate change “deniers.” “Floods, fires, melting ice and feverish heat: From smoke-choked Moscow to water-soaked Iowa and the High Arctic, the planet seems to be having a midsummer breakdown. It’s not just a portent of things to come, scientists say, but a sign of troubling climate change already under way,” the AP wrote, sounding more like Al Gore than an objective news agency. AP cited the World Meteorological Organization, NASA and the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) saying that “extremes” were expected in a warming scenario. But its report didn’t include any other viewpoints or propose other possible reasons for the weather events. And it failed to point out the scandals connected to IPCC, NASA and the warming movement as a whole. The 2009 ClimateGate scandal and subsequent scandals undermined the very credibility of the climate alarmist movement , but were underreported by the network news media. AP left out meteorologists who explained some of those events based on jet stream activity. According to New Scientist magazine, the jet stream is being blocked right now and has consequently slowed down. Meteorologists say that the jet stream’s slower movements are responsible for the deadly fires in Russia, the floods in Pakistan and other rare weather events. “The unusual weather in the US and Canada last month also has a similar case,” New Scientist wrote. Discover Magazine expounded on the New Scientist article saying “this happens from time to time, and it sets the stage for extreme conditions when weather systems hover over the same area.” Despite other explanations and viewpoints, The New York Times also linked weather to climate saying, “the collective answer of the scientific community [whether global warming is causing more weather extremes]” is “probably.” Like the Times, many news outlets promoted the connection between warming and weather, but were careful to briefly note that individual weather events cannot be proven to have been caused by global warming. Out of the Times’ 1,302 word article, only 113 words were used to offer a caveat saying it is difficult to link “specific weather events” to climate change and to quote a NASA scientist who admitted he hasn’t “proved it” yet. Semantics aside, those mainstream stories were nearly as biased in their coverage as blatantly left-wing websites like the Huffington Post. Huffington Post argued that ” global weirding ” incidents such as landslides, sinkholes and volcanoes are “consistent” with global warming. The site interviewed David Orr, a professor of environmental studies and politics at Oberlin College, who said, “you ask is this evidence of climate destabilization, the only scientific answer you can give is: It is consistent with what we can expect.” The complete list of “weird” stuff was heat waves, floods, landslides, wildfires, ice islands, sinkholes, volcanoes, dead fish and oyster herpes. Dead fish and oyster herpes? Huffington Post said, “These are certainly stories to be filed under weird: Although climate change can’t necessarily be held responsible, some scientists are suggesting it as the instigator of strange ocean occurrences.” The fact is that the alarmists and the news media will find someone to support claims that just about everything is correlated to man-made global warming. MSNBC host Dylan Ratigan even claimed that Snowpocalypse (the nickname for the blizzard activity on parts of the East Coast) was consistent with global warming. Media Says Warming Predictions ‘Supported’ by Weather Events, Push Government Action It has been a summer of wild weather and related disasters from fires in Russia, to giant sinkholes, to floods in Pakistan and Europe. All of this has sparked the news media’s desire to reignite the climate alarmist movement after a scandal-filled winter. The headlines said it all: “In Weather Chaos, a Case for Global Warming,” proclaimed one Times header. The USA Today warned, “Think this summer is hot? Get used to it.” The AP story hyping weather disasters’ correlation to warming was called, “Climate Change Predictions Supported By Summer of Fires, Floods And Heat Waves: IPCC.” “The weather-related cataclysms of July and August fit patterns predicted by climate scientists,” AP declared. The story criticized the U.S. unwillingness to cap carbon emissions. “The U.S. remains the only major industrialized nation not to have legislated caps on carbon emissions, after Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid last week withdrew climate legislation in the face of resistance from Republicans and some Democrats,” AP said. A bit later, they quoted a UN “specialist” who argued “much more needs to be done.” Perhaps under the strain of working at CNN, meteorologist Chad Myers actually switched views since 2008, when he said “to think that we could affect weather all that much is pretty arrogant.” But on Aug. 10, Myers said “Yes,” when asked if the weather phenomena were manmade. Myers, however, offered this qualification: “Is it 100 percent caused by man? No. There are other things involved. We are now in the sunspot cycle. We are now in a very hot sun cycle. We are, we are – many other things going on …” CNN host Fareed Zakaria also used the crazy weather to promote legislative action on emissions – pushing Cato Institute’s senior fellow Pat Michaels to accept the idea of a carbon tax. After another guest warned of devastation if we fail to act on the issue of global warming, Zakaria turned to Michaels and said: “You hear all this. Doesn’t it worry you? I mean, I understand your position, which is, you know, we don’t have a substitute for fossil fuels right now. But surely that isn’t an argument for stand pattism?” MICHAELS: No. ZAKARIA: Don’t you want to do something about this? MICHAELS: What I worry about more is the concept of opportunity cost. We had legislation, again, that went through the House last summer which would have cost a lot and been futile. And when you, when you take that away, or when the government favors certain technologies and politicizes technologies, you’re doing worse than nothing. You’re actually impairing your ability to respond in the long run, and that’s my major concern along this issue. ZAKARIA: But if you were to have a carbon tax, if you were to have a gas tax – MICHAELS: YOU, can put in the carbon tax… Zakaria pushed Michaels further, arguing that it is a “simple” law of economics to tax a behavior if you want less of it. But Michaels stressed that the problem is how high the tax would have to be to reduce carbon dioxide enough to make a difference, and the “political acceptability” of such a tax.” The CNN host’s biased segment, which included three panelists (Michaels included), used the apocalyptic weather as a set up: “It has been a scorcher of a summer. Record high temperatures all over the United States, huge chunks of glacier the size of four Manhattan islands breaking off Greenland. One-third of Pakistan is now under water. Fires burning out of control in Russia. Floods in Europe,” Zakaria said on Aug. 15. “So is this just another summer on planet Earth? Or is it the apocalypse? Or is it global warming?” His panel of guests was stacked 2-to-1 (3-to-1 if Zakaria is counted) in favor of legislative action to stop global warming and failed to consider that weather is not climate. NASA’s Gavin Schmidt and Jeffrey Sachs , director of The Earth Institute at Columbia University, were on the panel with Michaels. Zakaria accepted Schmidt’s views unquestioningingly, but then challenged and argued with Michaels’ points, going so far as to ask about his research funding. Schmidt is a favorite climate change expert for many news outlets, including the Times. He told the paper, “If you ask me as a person, do I think the Russian heat wave has to do with climate change, the answer is yes. If you ask me as a scientist whether I have proved it, the answer is no – at least not yet.” Environmental studies professor Roger Pielke, Jr. responded to that on his blog saying: “This neatly sums up the first of two reasons why I think that the current debate over whether greenhouse gas emissions caused/exacerbated/influenced recent disasters around the world is a fruitless debate.  It is not a debate that can be resolved empirically, but rather depends upon hunches, speculation and beliefs. Debates that cannot be resolved empirically necessarily involve extra-scientific factors.” In another post, Pielke criticized the World Meteorological Organization (which was cited by AP) for issuing a statement saying that the severe weather events “matches IPCC projections.” ” The WMO statement is (yet) another example of scientifically unsupportable nonsense in the climate debate. Such nonsense is of course not going away anytime soon,” Pielke said, noting that the IPCC didn’t make any projections for 2010. MSNBC Snows Viewers, Along with the rest of the Media During the winter, Sen. James Inhofe, R-Okla., poked fun at alarmists when his grandchildren built an igloo on the National Mall and called it “Al Gore’s New Home.” Fox News host Glenn Beck sarcastically made fun of an Al Gore “disappearance” (implying that since the snow started falling Gore wasn’t publicly warning about climate change) and Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. Kennedy wrote in 2008 that global warming had resulted in “anemic winters” in Washington, D.C. The 2009-2010 winter and its multiple blizzards contradicted Kennedy’s claims, Beck noted. Despite media and lefty claims , conservatives weren’t trying to say that the snowy winter disproved global warming. Rather they were arguing that strange weather should not be used as evidence to support climate change (summer or winter). But that was exactly what the left and the news media had been doing, and it is what they are doing again this summer. Alarmists like Al Gore, Bill Nye “The Science Guy,” and MSNBC’s Dylan Ratigan had claimed the severe weather was “consistent” with global warming. Gore blamed three straight days of rain on warming saying, “Just look at what has been happening for the last three days,” Gore said. “The so-called skeptics haven’t noted it because it’s not snow. But the downpours and heavy winds are consistent with what the scientists have long warned about.” Ratigan claimed that “these ‘ snowpocalypses ‘ that have been going through DC and other extreme weather events are precisely what climate scientists have been predicting, fearing and anticipating because of global warming.” His rant continued: “Why is that? The thinking that warmer air temperatures on the earth – a higher air temperature – has a greater capacity to hold moisture at any temperature,” Ratigan said. “And then as winter comes in, that warm air cools full of water, and you get heavier precipitation on a more regular basis. In fact, you could argue these storms are not evidence of a lack of global warming, but are evidence of global warming – thus the 26 inches of snowfall in the DC area and the second giant storm this year.” [Emphasis added] Ratigan also criticized a TV spot by Virginia Republicans designed to ridicule proposed climate change policies that could hurt the state’s job situation. Global warming alarmists in the media and academia proved last winter that they want it both ways: weather can “support” their opinions about global warming, but weather cannot disprove or discredit those same opinions. So they continue to link everything, even seemingly contradictory weather events like droughts and floods, to the problem of climate change. UN Climate Conference May Have Trouble in Mexico The recent media hype over unusual weather events may be designed to counter declining public fears over global warming. After all, unless the public thinks global warming is a threat they are unlikely to support costly government intervention or make drastic changes in their lives. After the flop at Copenhagen, proponents of global warming alarmism wanted the next UN Climate Change Conference, coming up this November/December, to move forward toward curbing emissions. But recent news reports indicate the Mexico meeting may not be as successful as they’d hoped . According to The Christian Science Monitor, the Cancun meeting scheduled to begin Nov. 29 and run through Dec. 10 seems “to have been thrown into reverse – at least for now.” “Unfortunately, what we have seen over and over this week is that some countries are walking back from the progress made in Copenhagen and what was agreed there,” Jonathan Pershing, leader of the U.S. negotiating team, said according to the Monitor. Like this article? Then sign up for our newsletter, The Balance Sheet .

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Media Use Crazy Weather to Hype Global Warming, Despite Admissions Weather Isn’t Climate

ZBB BS: WSJ Editorial Scoops Beat Journalists on Financial Condition of Obama-Visited Company

Here’s yet another example illustrating why one must treat the editorials at the Wall Street Journal as a primary source of hard news during Democratic presidential administrations. On Monday, President Obama visited ZBB Energy Corp, a maker of high-tech batteries in Menominee, Wisconsin. Helene Cooper at the New York Times , where a larger version of the picture at the right appeared, reported that “The company received a $1.3 million federal stimulus loan, which officials said would triple its manufacturing capacity and could lead to 80 new jobs.” Note the word “could.” At least the Times mentioned the existence of ZBB’s stimulus loan. In three brief reports mentioning the company during the past week, the Associated Press didn’t even do that. The WSJ’s intrepid editorialists did everyone else’s work for them and peeked behind the curtain at ZBB. It is not pretty: Uncle Sam, Venture Capitalist Meet the battery company that Obama visited yesterday. President Obama kicked off a five-state campaign swing yesterday with a stop at a “clean energy” plant in Menomonee Falls, Wisconsin. As it happens, Mr. Obama couldn’t have chosen a better company to demonstrate the risks that taxpayers are taking with their billions in green stimulus investment. … Mr. Obama praised it for “pointing the country toward a brighter economic future,” but we’ll let readers decide if they’d write the same checks if they were investing their own money. ZBB has been around for more than a decade, developing batteries and equipment to store energy from wind turbines and solar cells. … last January, when the Department of Energy announced $2.3 billion in “clean energy manufacturing tax credits,” ZBB was one of 183 recipients—collecting $14 million. We wonder who in government looked at ZBB’s filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission. Since going public in June of 2007, ZBB has been hemorrhaging money. The firm lost $4.9 million in fiscal 2008 and $5.5 million in fiscal 2009. In its most recent filing, in May, it said it had lost $6.9 million for the first nine months of its current fiscal year. It explained it had a “cumulative deficit” of $44.1 million and informed shareholders that it “anticipates incurring continuing losses.” It acknowledged that its ability to continue as a “going concern” was predicated on its ability to drum up additional funds. … Meanwhile, a review by the company’s audit committee last fall discovered that ZBB’s former CEO had been wrongly compensated as both an employee and an independent contractor, and that the company had failed to withhold his proper taxes. He stepped down, and the management team was reshuffled. ZBB was also forced to restate its financial results after a separate audit committee review found the company had recognized revenue from a contract in the wrong quarter. The company also acknowledged in its May filing that the 72,000 square foot manufacturing facility it bought in 2006 is “currently producing at less than 10% of its expected capacity.” That means it can’t currently access the $14 million in federal tax credits, which were supposed to help with equipment for a new facility. Meanwhile, private investors have soured on some energy-storage companies. ZBB’s initial public offering was priced at $6 a share in 2007, and it closed yesterday at 70 cents. A visit to the company’s quarterly income statements at NASDAQ.com reveals that sales during the four quarters that ended on March 31 were less than $2 million; the revenue line during the most recently reported quarter was a whopping $189,000. During that time, the company lost over $8 million. During the four years ended June 30, 2009 , ZBB burned through well over $20 million. You have to wonder how badly stimulus efforts such as these are going if a company in ZBB’s condition is considered worthy of a campaign stop. How bad are the situations at the ones that didn’t make the cut? The Journal gives a partial excuse to the White House press corps for not doing its work: “It has been dragged to so many of these energy events that it has lost interest in looking at the companies it visits.” Sorry, I’m not as forgiving. Allowing yourself to get scooped by a bunch of guys sitting in New York offices demonstrates how inexcusably lazy establishment press beat reporters following the president have become. That laziness would also appear to be influenced by the likelihood that if they really did their job, they’d have to report unpleasant things about their guy in the White House and the mostly accomplishment-free results of “clean energy” efforts thus far. You’ll know that they don’t even care about being scooped if, as I expect, the WSJ’s editorial is the first and last you’ll see of ZBB’s BS in the establishment press. Cross-posted at BizzyBlog.com .

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ZBB BS: WSJ Editorial Scoops Beat Journalists on Financial Condition of Obama-Visited Company

Ex-Dem Aide Stephanopoulos and Ex-Dem Congressman Discuss Impact NY Mosque Will Have on Democrats

Rather than focus on the rightness of building a mosque near Ground Zero, or investigating the potential funding of the construction, Good Morning America’s George Stephanopoulos on Tuesday spent an entire interview with Harold Ford Jr. focusing on how it could damage the Democratic Party. Stephanopoulos began the segment by asserting, “They really hope this goes away at the White House. ” Talking to the former Democratic Congressman, the GMA co-host highlighted Barack Obama’s comments on the issue and speculated, “But, is this something that’s going to linger through November or go away with- once everyone’s back from Labor Day break?” Stephanopoulos zeroed in on the political ramifications, wondering, “And, Harold, I know you think that the President did the right thing on this issue, has the right position. But did he do it in the right way?” Highlighting the mosque and other potential problems for the Democrats, Stephanopoulos closed by quizzing, “Put the campaign hat back on. How do you run as a Democrat in this environment?” To recap, Stephanopoulos, a former Democratic operative, interviewed a former Democratic Congressman about the impact this issue could have on the Democratic Party. A transcript of the August 17 segment, which aired at 7:07am EDT, follows: GEORGE STEPHANOPOULOS: They really hope this goes away at the White House . Thank you, John. For more on this, we’re joined by former Congressman Harold Ford, now chairman of the Democratic Leadership Council and the author of a new book, More Davids Than Goliaths: A Political Education. Excellent title. Thanks for joining us this morning. HAROLD FORD JR.: Thanks for having me. STEPHANOPOULOS: And, Harold, I know you think that the President did the right thing on this issue, has the right position. But did he do it in the right way? FORD: He probably could have spoke more artfully the first day and more clearly. STEPHANOPOULOS: How so? FORD: I think that- Well, if he believed that there’s a right to build, but perhaps it should not build in that location, he probably should have just said that. I think the follow-up has created some confusion. And probably will create some consternation in political circles within the party. Harry Reid announcing his opposition to building the cultural center- it’s interesting. The terms of the debate has been defined by the other side- It’s not a mosque, but a cultural center that’s going to be built- has now said that he’s opposed to building it there. What looks like could happen, George, is a consensus could build around maybe building it a few blocks away- moving the construction of the cultural center or the locating of the locating of the center, a few blocks from where they have planned it now. It might be- STEPHANOPOULOS: You know, there was a rumor yesterday, that that came up. That the leaders of the Senate were thinking about that. It was first reported in Israeli press, but they came out and said no way. Would that take the issue off the table for Democrats now? FORD: Well, it might. If you take Reid at the core of what he’s saying. He saying, “I support it, but just not there.” So, you might be able to find some agreement around it. I think Mayor Bloomberg will obviously play a lead role in brokering this. He’s been such a staunch- and I think had the right position on this. Not only for New York, and for the country. If you can’t build this in Manhattan and New York City, if we can’t foster a center, build a center that fosters conversation about tolerance and understanding, here, where else can you do it? What better place to do it? But, it may be that the politics have gotten so intense, that you may have to consider moving this, just a few blocks away. Perhaps you can find Democrat, Republican, liberal support for this. STEPHANOPOULOS: How big a deal do you think this issue is? I mean, obviously, you saw the President’s opponents pounce hard over the weekend, which is part of the reason he seemed to backtrack on Saturday. You see Reid breaking away from it. But, is this something that’s going to linger through November or go away with- once everyone’s back from Labor Day break? FORD: Well, jobs and the economy are foremost in people’s minds. This is, in lot of ways, a distraction. Not that it’s not an important issue. But it’s a distraction in that regard. But, as you and I know in politics, these kind of distractions can define campaigns in the last eight weeks. New York City, we are approaching the anniversary of 9/11. Obviously, from what I hear, Newt Gingrich and others plan to speak that day at the sight, where the cultural center is planned to be built or plan to be located. It certainly will- Politics will certainly be around this until election day. I think Reid’s comments yesterday opened the door for all Senate candidates to be asked about this- STEPHANOPOULOS: And break with the President most likely. FORD: Exactly. Reid has given his colleagues and those running for office covert in saying that we sport the right to build. But this may not be the place to build. STEPHANOPOULOS: Put your old campaign hat back on. You ran for Senate back 2006 and write about it in More Davids Than Goliaths. This is a tough, tough environment for Democrats right now. You’ve got this job situation, high unemployment. You’ve got ethics problems. You’ve got the former chairman of the Ways and Means committee, Charlie Rangel, Maxine Waters facing trial in the House. Now you’ve got this issue. Put the campaign hat back on. How do you run as a Democrat in this environment? FORD: I think Democrats, when they return in the fall, and I talk about this in the book, when I ran for leader in 2002, about how the message has got to lead. I think the tax cuts should be extended. Make the middle-class ones permanent. Phase in the top level. I think, two, I think you- STEPHANOPOULOS: So, break with the President on that? FORD: Well, the President’s given some wiggle room there. He has indicated that he’d like to make these middle-class rates permanent. But, I do- I have some different opinions about some of the other rates, particularly the business rates.  I don’t think you out to add more uncertainty to the marketplace now, particularly for any size business. Two, take some of the unused stimulus and apply it to deficit reduction, to apply projects, infrastructure projects that are read to be moved on. And, finally, I think you have got to come out with some of the deficit reductions of that commission right away. If raising the retirement age is on the table, if there’s consensus with Simpson Bowles, you got to be willing to do that for people under 45, including myself STEPHANOPOULOS: So, get spending- Okay, Harold Ford. Thanks very much.

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Ex-Dem Aide Stephanopoulos and Ex-Dem Congressman Discuss Impact NY Mosque Will Have on Democrats

Federal Judge Bans Genetically Modified Sugar Beets

Photo via Wikipedia On Friday, U.S. District Judge Jeffrey S. White revoked a five-year-old approval of genetically altered sugar beets from the U.S. Department of Agriculture. Judge White cited the USDA’s insufficient testing of weedkiller-tolerant sugar beets and their possible effects to the environment. Genetical… Read the full story on TreeHugger

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Federal Judge Bans Genetically Modified Sugar Beets

Obama, Daughter Take a Dip in the Gulf

President Barack Obama and his daughter Sasha took a dip in the water on Saturday afternoon during their brief family vacation in Panama City Beach. White House officials said the two went for a swim at Alligator Point, behind their hotel, before eating lunch at Lime's, a waterfront restaurant at the Bay Point Marriott. Below are earlier versions of this report: 3:30 p.m.: PANAMA CITY BEACH — The first family indulged in a simple lunch by Grand Lagoon at Lime’s Bayside Bar and Grill at the Bay Point Marriott on Saturday afternoon. Early rain eased for the family, allowing them to dine outside on the dock under a partly cloudy sky, despite the heat and humidity. The first family’s menu included chicken tenders, fish tacos and a burger with an order of guacomole. White House officials said the family shared each of the items. Lunch was taken at a leisurely pace appropriate for the family vacation; President Barack Obama, first lady Michelle and their daughter Sasha spent a few hours at the hotel before departing for their next destination, which has not been announced. — 2:15 p.m.: PANAMA CITY BEACH — The oil has stopped flowing and the well has been capped, but the work is far from over in restoring the Gulf region to the pristine condition it enjoyed before the Deepwater Horizon oil spill. With a backdrop of U.S. Coast Guard ships at Navy Support Activity Panama City, President Barack Obama on Saturday vowed he and his administration will not slacken their efforts in the Gulf until the environment and economy are fully recovered. “Our job is not finished, and we are not going anywhere until it is,” he said. VIDEO: President speaks at Naval Support Activity Panama City

Swap Your Shop: Like House Swapping With Your Desk Thrown In

TreeHugger has noted before that swapping is good for your budget and for the environment . House-swapping and home exchanges are not new; one company facilitating swaps has been doing it since 1953. It was developed as a way of getting low-cost vacation accommodations, but who takes long vacations anymore? Everybody is too busy working. But the problem of the quick, short vacation is the carbon footprint of the travel, the inability to settle in and get to know a place and its people, and the high cost per day. That’s why

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Swap Your Shop: Like House Swapping With Your Desk Thrown In

AP White House Reporter Loven Jumps to Liberal Democratic Political PR/Lobbying Shop

Jennifer Loven, an 18-year AP veteran and the wire service’s chief White House correspondent, has decided to put her communications talents to work for The Glover Park Group , a “strategic communications firm” founded in 2001 by a bunch of Clinton and Gore staffers, most prominently Joe Lockhart, who found themselves unemployed after the 2000 election. She’ll be “Managing Director in its Public Affairs practice,” a Thursday press release from the Glover Park Group, plugged by Politico’s Mike Allen , announced. She’s the second President in a row of the White House Correspondents’ Association to leave journalism for a left-wing, or at least left-leaning, lobbying outfit. In June, Bloomberg’s White House reporter, Ed Chen, formerly of the Los Angeles Times, jumped to the Natural Resources Defense Council as Federal Communications Director. (My complete Obama-journalism revolving door list .) Loven held the WHCA position for 2008-2009 and was succeeded by Chen. Amongst the clients touted on the Glover Park Group’s Web site: American Civil Liberties Union, Alliance for Climate Protection, Campaign for Women’s Lives, Better World Campaign and the Center for Interfaith Action on Global Poverty. They also list some corporate clients, but no conservative activist groups. The firm’s leaders include a who’s who of ex-Clinton and Gore operatives, such as “Founding Partner and Managing Director” Joe Lockhart , “the former chief spokesman and senior adviser to President Bill Clinton from 1998-2000” who “served as Senior Advisor to Sen. John Kerry’s 2004 presidential bid.” Earlier, he toiled as “Deputy Press Secretary for the 1988 Dukakis-Bentsen campaign, and Assistant Press Secretary for the 1984 Mondale-Ferraro campaign.” In between all that, he put in stints as “Assignment Editor at ABC News and Deputy Assignment Manager for CNN in Washington.” Another “Founding Partner and Managing Director,” Carter Eskew , “was Chief Strategist for the Gore 2000 presidential campaign, leading the message and creative team that helped Vice President Gore win every primary and caucus, secure the nomination, then make up a 20 point deficit in the polls to a victory in the popular vote.” Susan Brophy , “Managing Director,” from 1993-1998 was “Deputy Assistant to the President and Deputy Director of Legislative Affairs, where she developed, implemented and directed legislative strategy with the White House, administration and Congress in support of President Clinton’s policy priorities.” Loven’s husband, by the way, is a liberal environmental activist. A 2009 National Review “Media Blog” post provided an excerpt from this bio for him: Roger Ballentine is the President of Green Strategies Inc., where he advises and represents businesses, associations, government agencies and non-profit entities on domestic and international public policy issues and business strategies, focusing on energy, conservation and environmental matters. Roger is also a Senior Fellow at the Progressive Policy Institute in Washington D.C. where he works to develop cutting edge, third way approaches to public policy challenges in the areas of energy and the environment. He also served as Senior Advisor to the Kerry-Edwards Campaign on energy and environmental matters. Roger previously was a senior member of the White House staff, serving President Bill Clinton as Chairman of the White House Climate Change Task Force and Deputy Assistant to the President for Environmental Initiatives. Prior to being named Deputy Assistant to the President, Mr. Ballentine was Special Assistant to the President for Legislative Affairs, where he focused on energy and environment issues. … He and his wife, journalist Jennifer Loven, reside in Chevy Chase, Maryland.

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AP White House Reporter Loven Jumps to Liberal Democratic Political PR/Lobbying Shop

Can ‘Environmentalism’ Ever Really Hope to Tackle Climate Change?

Photo from 1st Earth Day via National Geographic The environmental movement, as most people long understood it, was a broad coalition of individuals, advocacy groups, activists, and others who continually work to address conservation issues and to preserve natural resources; to make sure the environment was given due consideration in business and policy discussions. Inspired by oil spills and out-of-control pollution, the environmental movement was the catalyst for creating the Clean Air and Clean Water Ac… Read the full story on TreeHugger

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Can ‘Environmentalism’ Ever Really Hope to Tackle Climate Change?