Wednesday, July 18, 2007

Love the Earth, Eat the Endangered Inhabitants

Al Gore may (and I do mean may) sincerely care about the earth and that of it's future, unless he's using 20 per cent more energy than everybody else, or eating endangered species as further proof of his hypocrisy. Folks, do you need any more proof that this guy just doesn't get it? Or maybe it's his mindless drones that don't have a clue. Either way, with the lack of interest in "Live Earth" and his reluctance to take an oath to "change the way he lives" while all the rest of us are expected to do just that, added with this juicy little tidbit, his little crusade may be losing steam and allies.

But, somehow, someway, he'll get his revenge:


But more and more people are making it harder for him.

Check out this interesting little bit of info by a commenter named "Kenner" Emphasis mine.

In John Crichton’s book State of Fear the plot revolves around an extremist environmental group trying to cause extreme weather anomolies in order to support an upcoming conference on global warming. They try to create a major tsunami and also a major hurricane to demonstrate how out of control the weather is. The interesting thing is that the book was written before either the Indian Ocean tsunami or Katrina happened. Both events were, in fact, subsequently used by environmentalists to attack Bush and his not signing the Kyoto treaty and to gin up support for their overall agenda on global warming. Truth in fiction, indeed.

Matt Groening (The Simpsons creator) is apparently on board with the Goracle. Yes, it is from "A Covienient Lie" No wonder the Simpsons sucks now.


I can totally see Gore snapping like that, seeing that how he's starting to fall behind in the race for our collective "global awareness".
Then again, people are starting to snooze about it anyway.

And I think somebody has finally has the answer on the REAL cause of global warming. Why didn't we see this sooner?


Dig it.

UPDATE: Goracle isn't guilty (sort of) because he has a real good (hypocritical) excuse.




I guess it's okay then. And as a quote from Townhall.com says: "Now, as long as he can get that power bill under 10 times the average American consumption, he might just be a believable spokesperson for environmental issues."

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