Climategate 2.0: Read 20 ‘Juicy’ emails – ‘They validate EVERYTHING the skeptics have been saying’

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Junk Science
Wedneday, November 23, 2011

More devastating Climategate e-mails were released today. We’ve covered juicy ones in the posts listed below. More on the way. Read ‘em all. They validate EVERYTHING the skeptics have been saying. Viva les sceptiques!



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3 Responses to “Climategate 2.0: Read 20 ‘Juicy’ emails – ‘They validate EVERYTHING the skeptics have been saying’”

  1. Don’t you just love the fact that their own words condemn them.

    Now we need to make the people pushing the carbon tax become accountable for their actions.

  2. Original funny parody song video about Michael Mann and Climategate..
    h**p://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WMqc7PCJ-nc
    “Hide the decline”

  3. In 2009, We learned definitively the scientific theory of AGW was corrupted by politics, cronyism and fraud, led by 3rd rate mediocrities such as Phil Jones and Michael Mann. It is highly pleasurable re-exposing these mountebanks but they are already like the overcooked Thanksgiving Turkey’s, roasted and deep fried into an excrescent mess.

    We need now to unveil the villains behind the curtain of AGW, the parties responsible for this funding this fraud. I suggest we start with the Banksters, their dirty hands are all over this scam. They are the swine that paid hundreds of millions to lobbyists to foist this scam upon us.

    Read the following from Bloomberg and draw your own conclusions:

    Source: Google Bloomberg, Blythe Masters, Carbon Capitalists:

    Excerpted form Carbon Capitalists:

    Wall Street wants a leading role in the new carbon-trading market being designed in Washington. First, executives like JPMorgan’s Blythe Masters must convince skeptics this isn’t just a new trillion-dollar gamble on derivatives.

    Estimates of the potential size of the U.S. cap-and-trade market range from $300 billion to $2 trillion.

    Banks Moving In

    Banks intend to become the intermediaries in this fledgling market. Although U.S. carbon legislation may not pass for a year or more, Wall Street has already spent hundreds of millions of dollars hiring lobbyists and making deals with companies that can supply them with “carbon offsets” to sell to clients.

    JPMorgan, for instance, purchased ClimateCare in early 2008 for an undisclosed sum. This month, it paid $210 million for Eco-Securities Group Plc, the biggest developer of projects used to generate credits offsetting government-regulated carbon emissions. Financial institutions have also been investing in alternative energy, such as wind and solar power, and lending to clean-technology entrepreneurs.

    The banks are preparing to do with carbon what they’ve done before: design and market derivatives contracts that will help client companies hedge their price risk over the long term. They’re also ready to sell carbon-related financial products to outside investors.

    Masters says banks must be allowed to lead the way if a mandatory carbon-trading system is going to help save the planet at the lowest possible cost. And derivatives related to carbon must be part of the mix, she says. Derivatives are securities whose value is derived from the value of an underlying commodity — in this case, CO2 and other greenhouse gases.

    ‘Heavy Involvement’

    “This requires a massive redirection of capital,” Masters says. “You can’t have a successful climate policy without the heavy, heavy involvement of financial institutions.”

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