When I embarked on the writing of this second essay, my target
was to pull together, all in one place, the full back-story to these
accusations. I started to document, in some detail, how the United Nations,
governments, mainstream media and others have joined together in a project,
whose objective appears to be no less than the destruction of our human
industrial civilization. But the tale grew in the telling. After several weeks
of work, I realized I had far too much material to be able to tell the story
all in one go. I therefore determined to split the back-story into more
digestible chunks. That in itself was quite a task!
I am presenting this back-story with a particular focus on
climate policies in the UK. In my researches, I have made some amazing,
and unsettling, discoveries about how dishonestly the UK government has treated
us. But I’m sure that those in other countries will be able to find parallels
from their own experiences.
I ended up with a revised plan, which required splitting
the back-story into four parts. So, there will now be five essays in the set,
not two as I originally planned. In this, the second, I’ll give you a feel for
how badly the UK government has been treating us on this issue over the last few
years. In the third, I will trace the back-story up to the Rio “Earth Summit”
of 1992. The fourth will cover the back-story from 1992 onwards, with the
exception of the thorny issue of cost-benefit analysis, which I will discuss in
the fifth and final essay.
2019: a year of madness
To summarize the UK government’s handling of the “climate
change” issue in recent years, I chose to pick a relevant date in the recent
past, and to begin my account from that date.
The date I chose was April 30th, 2019. That day
marked the start of a huge wave of UK government activity, all directed towards
killing the mobility, freedoms and prosperity of ordinary people in the name of
some claimed (but, in reality, non-existent) climate crisis.
Extinction Rebellion
On that day, April 30th, 2019, minister Michael
Gove met with Extinction Rebellion (XR). There is a video of the meeting, here:
[[2]].
I only watched a small part of it. But, particularly in the light of subsequent
destructive actions by XR, the chumminess of this meeting is very concerning.
And they got to see Labour politicians, and the mayor of London, on the same
visit! The Guardian commented on the meeting here: [[3]].
Later in the year, south-east England’s anti-terrorist
police included Extinction Rebellion in a list of “extremist” organizations. Though
they were eventually forced to withdraw this.
“Climate emergency”
On May 1st, the day following that meeting, the
parliament declared a “climate emergency.” Without any hard evidence that any such
emergency existed, and without even taking a vote.
This is typical of how today’s political classes operate.
They bring up some problem, which may or may not be real. They blow it up until
they have made it look like a really big issue, that needs to be “fixed.” They
then “fix” it by making bad laws, which seriously infringe on basic human
rights. Climate is not the only case in point; just recently, the UK political
class has done exactly the same thing on the issue of asylum seekers arriving
by boat across the English Channel.
In any case, as I showed in the first essay of this set,
there is no “climate crisis” or “climate emergency” in the real world. The
“emergency” or “crisis” of May 1st, 2019 only existed in the minds
of those seeking to use climate as an excuse to make bad laws and hurt people.
Interestingly, on May 2nd, Sky News published the
results of a poll [[4]]
of a random sample of their subscribers. 56% said they would be unwilling to
drive significantly less to protect the environment. And 53% said they would be
unwilling even in principle to significantly reduce the amount they fly.
Clearly, the politicians had lost the plot, and were completely out of touch
with the people they were supposed to be serving.
“Net zero”
In June 2019, the government put forward, and the parliament
passed, a bill to set “a target for at least a 100% reduction of greenhouse gas
emissions (compared to 1990 levels) in the UK by 2050.” (At least 100%?
Maybe more? Crazy).
This target, called “net zero,” replaced an earlier target
of an 80% cut from 1990 levels. An official government web page describes this,
indeed, all but crows about it: [[5]].
This was at least the fourth time since 1992 that the UK government had moved
the emissions goalposts. Always in the direction of greater reductions, of
course.
The CCC Net Zero report
The report which supposedly “justified” this, called “Net
Zero: The UK’s contribution to stopping global warming,” came from the
Committee on Climate Change (CCC). This committee was chaired by John Selwyn
Gummer, also known as Lord Deben. The CCC is supposed to be an independent and
impartial advisory body. But in my view, it’s about as impartial as Extinction
Rebellion.
You can find the report at [[6]].
But I don’t advise you to read it, unless you’re a masochist. I tried to read
several different bits, and on each occasion had to give up in less than a
page. It reads like nothing more than a gigantic exercise in virtue signalling,
and I can’t understand why any sane person could believe anything in it.
All I gleaned from it is that they reckoned the cost of “net
zero” measures might be 1-2% of UK GDP in 2050. But, as we know, government
projects always cost more and take longer. So, I think one to two pinches of
salt are in order.
UK Climate Assembly
Parliamentary select committees also initiated a scheme of
“citizens’ climate assemblies,” one of the demands put forward by Extinction
Rebellion. It’s amazing, and very concerning, that in a so-called “democracy,”
those who are supposed to serve the people kow-towed to disruptive extremists,
but never even bothered to ask us the people what we thought.
The result was a “UK Climate Assembly,” which eventually
produced a report in 2020. I’ll discuss that report in the next section.
Absolute Zero
In November 2019, a joint report called “Absolute Zero” was
published by five UK universities, using the collective moniker “UK FIRES.” For
a summary, see [[7]].
The purpose of this report seems to have been to soften people up for the
de-carbonization of Western economies, which national and international political
élites want to force on us all.
After just a single pass through the diagram summarizing
the proposals, I could see that the whole idea was a dystopian nightmare. The
proposals read like the edicts of a crazed, ultra-conservative dictator. And
they made Soviet five-year plans look like a cake-walk.
The general election of 2019
In a sense, the UK general election of December 2019
didn’t change anything, because it kept the Tories in power. One issue
completely dominated that election: Brexit.
Myself, I was well aware that an awful lot was wrong with
what the Tories had been doing to us. But I regarded Brexit, and in particular
getting away from the European Court of Justice (ECJ), as a sine qua non
for any kind of improvement. I had gone so far as to become a member of the
Brexit party. I had been agitating as hard as I could for the party to commit
to getting “net zero” and the rest of the green agenda reviewed by outside,
independent auditors; but they weren’t yet ready to do that. Despite this, and
despite having been a conscientious non-voter in UK elections for 32 years, I
was ready to vote for my local Brexit candidate. But when Nigel Farage withdrew
all the candidates in Tory held seats, he was one of them.
The Tory manifesto proposed “the most ambitious
environmental programme of any country on earth.” “We will lead the global
fight against climate change.” And a lot more crap like that. Even if their
candidate had not been Jeremy Hunt, I could never have voted for the party. So,
I returned to my conscientious non-voting. But many people, who just wanted
Brexit done and didn’t care a damn about the green agenda, were fooled into
voting for that agenda by the Tories’ promise to “get Brexit done.” The Tories
had offered people a carrot with a huge turd on it. And far too many people
took the bait.
2020-21: no let-up in the madness
You might have thought that, with COVID-19 exploding on to
the world scene, and people being all but confined to their homes for weeks or
months at a time, there might have been some let-up in the mad rush towards the
green cliff. But not so.
Extinction Rebellion dig up a lawn
If anyone still needed to be reminded that Extinction
Rebellion are destructive and extremist, an event in February 2020 provided
such a reminder. XR dug up a famous lawn at Trinity College, Cambridge: [[8]].
The lawn is famous, because it backs on to the staircase where Isaac Newton
used to live, and has an apple tree (but not the one that prompted him to think
about gravity). Oh, and Trinity was my college.
The UK Climate Assembly report
The UK Climate Assembly produced a report in September 2020.
A summary is here: [[9]].
The assembly “asked citizens to listen to advice from
climate experts,” before setting them to make “a list of recommendations for
how the country should reach net-zero emissions by 2050.” The first “expert lead”
was Chris Stark, chief executive of the Committee on Climate Change, which has
been driving the “climate change” agenda in the UK since 2008. A second was
Professor Jim Watson, the chair of the “UK Net Zero Advisory Group.” And a
third was the director of the “Centre for Climate Change and Social
Transformations”: [[10]].
Not exactly independent or unbiased experts, then.
The assembly’s final report “recommends changes across a
broad range of sectors, from meat-and-dairy consumption and air travel through to
zero-carbon heating and electricity generation. Measures receiving high levels
of support from the assembly include: a levy for frequent fliers; a ban on the
sale of petrol, diesel and hybrid cars by 2030-35; and a switch to a more
biodiversity-focused farming system.”
What a travesty of “democracy” and “consulting the people!”
Obviously, with such biased “experts,” there was no possibility of the assembly
members ever being told the truth, or allowed to express their reservations.
And anyone who thought “net zero” was unnecessary or counter-productive must
surely have been purged from the assembly even before it began.
The Ten Point Plan
In November 2020, the government published their Ten
Point Plan for a Green Industrial Revolution [[11]].
The phrase “green industrial revolution” was lifted by the Tories straight out
of Labour’s 2019 manifesto! I set out my own views on these matters here: [[12]].
I suppose this plan was a little less extreme than “Absolute
Zero.” But of the ten points, only one (expansion of nuclear power) seems to me
to be clearly a sensible path to take. Some parts of another (better flood
defences, and planting more trees) would likely produce some benefits.
The rest, I find highly dubious. (Much) more off-shore wind
power? It didn’t succeed last time it was tried, and the costs look to be far
greater than has ever been admitted. Low carbon hydrogen? A costly and
dangerous pipe-dream. Electric vehicles replacing fossil-fuelled ones?
Impractical for many; unaffordable for most; and the scale of the electricity grid
expansion needed was grossly under-estimated.
Public transport, cycling and walking? Impractical for very many
journeys. In particular, you can’t use public transport that isn’t there at
all, or doesn’t run when you need it. You can’t cycle easily in hilly areas.
And you can’t walk on a journey if you have a big load to carry.
“Jet zero” and green ships? Another pipe-dream. Greener
buildings? Very expensive, and extremely disruptive (though they have since
walked back the proposal to ban new gas boilers in pre-existing homes). Carbon
capture? Unproven, and horribly expensive. Green finance? The only
beneficiaries will be politicians, financiers and big-company bosses.
In summary, these “net zero” proposals were and are, in no
particular order: Not properly costed. Not properly thought through. The
benefits are unsure. Pie in the sky. Very expensive. Seriously reducing, or
even destroying, freedom and mobility for many ordinary people. Disruptive and
potentially dangerous. Likely to raise the costs of travel and of trade.
Requiring huge investments of money that people don’t have, in order to bring
about a lower standard of living than we have now. Already been tried and
failed in one country or another. Requiring huge tax rises. All but certain to
tank.
And the costs will fall on, guess who? Ordinary people. What
will we get in return? We will suffer unnecessary disruptions. We will lose freedom
and convenience. We’ll be poorer. Our lives will be worse, not better. And we
will get little, if anything, of any positive utility to us.
Besides which, where are the feasibility studies for each of
these proposals? And where are the objective cost versus benefit analyses? I’m
willing to bet they haven’t been done at all.
CoP 26
Then there was the UN “Conference of the Parties” meeting
in Glasgow in November 2021. Its stated purpose was: “to accelerate action
towards the goals of the Paris Agreement and the UN Framework Convention on
Climate Change.” And its theme statement was: “uniting the world to tackle
climate change.”
As I wrote at the time: “Like bidders at an auction at
which they are spending other people’s money, politicians fall over each other
to make commitment after commitment on behalf of the people they are supposed
to (but fail to) represent. These commitments, they must know, if carried out
will cause severe pain and inconvenience to very many ordinary people. And
those people have never even been consulted on the matter. But drunk with their
sense of power, they plan to go on regardless; for it’s our money they
are spending, not their own. And we are the ones who are and will be
suffering the pain and inconvenience, not them.”
As an example of some of the crap spouted by the UK
government in Glasgow, consider a commitment made by then education secretary
Nadhim Zahawi. “Young people will be empowered to take action on the
environment as part of new measures designed to put climate change at the heart
of education.” This is on an official government web page: [[13]].
If that isn’t indoctrinating young children with propaganda, I don’t know what
is.
But the results from Glasgow were not entirely
catastrophic for those of us who are implacably opposed to the green agenda in
all its forms. There were some high-profile non-appearances. Putin stayed at
home in Russia. Xi, likewise, stayed home in China. Modi went home to India,
having announced plans that will surely disappoint the extremist agitators. And
remember, China and India between them account for 36% of the world’s
population. There did seem to be a sense that the green leviathan had, at last,
encountered a certain degree of resistance from a few countries that had worked
out that it isn’t in their interests to stay on that bandwagon much longer.
That’s encouraging, but not nearly enough yet.
The war on our cars
But the great bulk of the actions that UK governments, both national
and local, have been taking on the green agenda in recent years, have been
those directed towards their long-planned objective of forcing ordinary people
out of our cars.
Sham “consultation”
In July 2021, the UK government held a “consultation” on “bringing
forward the end to the sale of new petrol and diesel cars and vans from 2040 to
2035, or earlier if a faster transition appears feasible.” I myself submitted a
58-page, detailed response. My response, and the responses of others like me,
to that “consultation” were totally ignored. And the ban was moved forward to
2030. The whole “consultation” was a sham.
Recently, this subject has been in the news again, as the
EU, pressured by the Germans, have started to back away from their own similar
commitment, which was only due to come into force in 2035 anyway. I expect the
pig-headed UK government to bury their snouts in the sand on this one, and stay
on their course to civilizational suicide. Indeed, prime minister Rishi Sunak announced,
just recently, that car makers will have to ensure that 22 per cent of the vehicles
they sell in the UK are all-electric by 2024: [[14]].
That’s next year!
C40
One of the organizations which has been driving the green
agenda, particularly in London, is C40: [[15]].
C40 is an international organization, which describes itself as “A global
network of mayors taking urgent action to confront the climate crisis and
create a future where everyone can thrive.” C40’s mission, so they say, “is to
halve the emissions of its member cities within a decade, while improving
equity, building resilience, and creating the conditions for everyone,
everywhere to thrive.” Moreover: “C40 member cities earn their membership
through action. C40’s most distinguishing feature is that it operates on
performance-based requirements, not membership fees.”
And every year, they hold a world mayors’ summit, at which
they gather and gab about forcing us to reduce our emissions, for example by
making us walk or cycle instead of driving our cars. But not many of them
actually walk or cycle from their homes to and from the mayors’ summit, do
they? What a bunch of hypocrites.
C40 has, so its website says, been in existence since 2005.
I retched when I found out the name of its founder: “Red Ken” Livingstone,
former mayor of London. But in retrospect, I found it hardly surprising, since
I already knew the identity of its chair, the current mayor of London, Sadiq
Khan. Put Boris Johnson in between them, and you have three extremist green
stooges in a row as mayors of London.
The London ULEZ expansion
Which brings me to the London Ultra Low Emissions Zone
(ULEZ). This was originally planned by Boris Johnson, but introduced by Sadiq
Khan in April 2019. More proof that the two main UK political parties are both hives
of green zealotry.
I can’t resist a bit of a plug for my own work, even in a
different field (air pollution). In 2017, I published some social cost
calculations on air pollution from cars in the UK, together with a lot of
background and back-story on the issue. You can find that paper here: [[16]].
My conclusion was: “There is no case, on social cost grounds, for such charges
on Euro 5 diesels (2010 to 2014) or on any petrol cars. For all these cars, the
excess of the social cost of the pollution they emit, compared to a new (Euro
6) car of the same type, is £25 a year or less. Two entry fees to the London
ULEZ would cover the social cost of this pollution for a whole year. To levy
such outrageous charges on drivers of these cars is unreasonable.”
The ULEZ was, from the start, a money-grubber for Sadiq Khan
and Transport for London. As well as being a way to impose what are in effect
fines on car drivers. An independent 2021 study showed
that any improvement it might have made in air quality was only marginal: [[17]]. More recently, even the “science”
that, allegedly, shows that significant damage is caused to Londoners’ health
by air pollution from cars, is being increasingly questioned. Yet, Sadiq Khan
has planned to extend the ULEZ throughout all the London boroughs from August
2023. We hear he has already bought cameras to enforce it: [[18]].
And it looks as if the police will have access to those cameras, too: [[19]].
But this time, Khan isn’t having things all his own way.
Four outer London local councils, together with Surrey County Council, are
challenging the ULEZ expansion in court: [[20]]. We shall see what the High Court
will have to say. Khan himself has started to get more than a little rattled
and emotional, as this video shows: [[21]]. And Gareth Bacon, MP for Orpington
in outer London, has highlighted that the ULEZ extension isn’t about improving
air quality, but about raking in money. If Khan is not stopped, we will be
seeing gilets jaunes, or worse, on the streets of outer London. In fact,
the movement is already starting: [[22]].
“Smart Road User Charging”
But harassed London drivers – and, in time, the rest of us –
will soon be under further attack from a slightly different angle. There’s been
a recent “consultation” on “smart road user charging” in London: [[23]].
According to the consultation document, this is meant to “address the triple
challenges of toxic air pollution, the climate emergency and traffic
congestion.” The consultation period in this case was remarkably short, only
just over a month. Suspicious? This does appear to be still in the relatively
early stages of discussion, and I won’t say more until I see the detailed
proposals. But given how fast our enemies like to move, it could be with us
sooner rather than later.
UK national road charging
Then there is the matter of a national road charging system.
A report from 2022 is here: [[24]].
One proposed option, which seems to be favoured by many of those involved, is
“a road pricing mechanism that uses telematic technology to charge drivers
according to distance driven, factoring in vehicle type and congestion.” Does
this mean, as the word “telematic” would seem to imply, tracking in detail every
single car journey made anywhere in the UK? And does it mean charging so much
for journeys made by petrol and diesel cars, that those who can’t afford to buy
electric cars won’t be able to afford private mobility at all?
The latest I have been able to find on this is at [[25]].
It includes a copy of a letter from Jeremy Hunt, chancellor of the exchequer – “Chief
Thief,” in my parlance. Hunt states “the government does not currently have
plans to consider road pricing.” But I know Hunt. He is, after all, “my” MP,
and far worse than useless as a “representative,” because he is hostile to
virtually everything I stand for, including honesty. So, I read that statement as
“we aren’t considering it, because we decided long ago to make it happen, and
we’ve already started implementing it.” Expect this issue to rear its head
again, sooner rather than later.
Oxford traffic filters and “15-minute cities”
But right now, “ground zero” in the fight for our rights and
freedoms against draconian green policies is the city of Oxford. In November
2022, Oxfordshire County Council decided on a plan to install traffic filters
in six key locations around Oxford. There is a description of the proposals
here: [[26]].
The filters “are intended to reduce traffic levels in Oxford by targeting
unnecessary journeys by cars.” Who are these arrogant sods, that they claim a
right to decide that someone else’s journey is “unnecessary?” Or a right to
“target” anyone?
Residents in Oxford will be able to get a permit to go through
the filters on 100 days a year, and residents in Oxfordshire but outside Oxford
city on 25 days a year. The web page says nothing at all about how much these
permits will cost, or how the rules might be changed in the future. Those
snapped going through the filters without a permit will be fined £70. Like
Sadiq Khan, I think, those favouring the filters have their eyes on the money,
as well as on hurting people they don’t approve of.
There was a “consultation” period in September and October
2022. Local people have told me that the vote was over 90 per cent against the
introduction of the filters. But Oxfordshire County Council and Oxford City
Council dispute this figure: [[27]]. What the councils say there suggests
that there was no question in the questionnaire, to enable respondents to say how
strongly they agreed or disagreed with the scheme! If so, that’s bad
questionnaire design. Or, perhaps, the questionnaire was designed to avoid a
result the councils didn’t want.
In any case, the data they give implies that, of the 6,190
comments they counted from 4,814 respondents, 4,213 (68%) were against the
scheme, 656 (11%) were for it, and 1,321 (21%) were against it unless and until
public transport was significantly improved. That looks like between 68% and
89% against the scheme. Still a very significant majority against.
Yet Oxford residents were told, just after the consultation
ended, that the scheme will be going ahead anyway: [[28]].
So much for any pretence of “democracy!” Moreover, when a public debate was
held on the issue in early March, the councillors responsible for the scheme
were invited to attend and speak, but did not bother to do so. Only one
Oxfordshire councillor turned up. And he was from Witney, 12 miles away from Oxford.
Closely related to the traffic filters is the “15-minute
city” project, which seems to be a project of Oxford City Council rather than
the county council. It’s hard to find an unbiased view of what this is all
about – google “Oxford 15-minute city” and virtually all the links you get will
be views from extreme greens, accusing those opposing the idea of being
“right-wing conspiracy theorists,” “flat earthers” or spreaders of “fake news.”
The question this raises in my mind, though, is why the hell
councils are making “local plans” for us, without us having ever had the chance
to scrutinize them or object to them? I don’t want my life planned by some
bunch of bureaucrats. The only person entitled to plan my life is me.
UK 100
“UK 100” is an organization, about which I only found out a
few months ago. It describes itself as “a network of local leaders who have
pledged to lead a rapid transition to Net Zero with Clean Air in their
communities ahead of the government’s legal target.” This looks like the UK
equivalent of the C40 global network of city mayors.
Their membership page [[29]]
begins: “As local leaders across the UK, we recognize our responsibility to
tackle the climate emergency and take bold action toward Net Zero.” The About
page says: “UK100’s primary purpose is to support a local-led rapid transition
to Net Zero and Clean Air. We do this through collaboration. To accelerate
action, we believe in bringing together the most influential leaders across the
country to learn together and agree on priorities for legislative and
regulatory change while empowering them to engage with national
decision-makers. We provide our network with the knowledge, tools and
connections to make this happen.”
From the list of members (I counted 108), it seems that this
is not an organization of mayors, or of individual politicians, but of
councils. It includes councils at both the county and district levels,
sometimes overlapping. Many of the expected suspects, that have been taken over
by green extremists, are there: Bath and North East Somerset, Birmingham,
Brighton, Cambridge (and Cambridgeshire, too), Edinburgh, Exeter, Glasgow, 11
London boroughs plus Westminster, Oxford (and Oxfordshire).
That Oxford and Oxfordshire are both in the list, suggests
that UK 100 may well be the force behind the goings-on over the proposed Oxford
“15-minute city” and traffic filters.
There are 13 county councils in the list, including the
county in which I live (Surrey). That there are this many, suggests that the
extremists do not intend to stop when they have reduced all the UK’s cities to
the status of unfit for human beings to live in. It looks as if they plan to
carry on extending their mad, bad schemes to towns, to suburbs, to villages,
and eventually out into the countryside.
Cebr report
Now, a small piece of good news. In October 2022, a report
by the Centre for Economics and Business Research (Cebr) analysed the costs and
benefits of the 2030 ban on sale of new petrol and diesel vehicles on the UK.
You can down-load this report via [[30]].
As far as I am aware, it was the first attempt by professional economists in
the UK to do an unbiased, objective cost-benefit analysis on any part of the
green agenda.
The take-home message of the Cebr report is that “the
benefits to UK households of implementing the fossil fuel vehicle sale bans are
far outweighed by the costs.” The costs of the bans to ordinary people in the
UK, as calculated using the government’s own cost-benefit methodology, will be
more than five times the “benefits” from the savings in carbon dioxide
emissions and pollution.
Beyond this, they revealed that the number the UK
government uses to calculate the benefits of reducing CO2 emissions by
a tonne (£255.40) is more than five times the sterling equivalent of the US
government’s published value of the “social cost of carbon” per tonne (£48.54).
I repeated Cebr’s calculation of the costs versus benefits, using the US
government number rather than the UK. My conclusion was that the costs exceeded
the “benefits” by a factor of more than 15.
To their credit, the Sun did report this at the time:
[[31]].
But it made no difference whatsoever to the government’s position. The final
report of their “review of net zero” [[32]]
merely says: “It is not a cost-benefit analysis but a first step in
understanding trade-offs over a 30-year economic transition.” In other words,
they’re going to do the “net zero” crap to us anyway, and stuff how much it
costs or hurts the plebs. How much more dishonest can you get?
Rampant hypocrisy
Throughout this saga, on top of their thinly veiled
arrogance and pervasive dishonesty, you can see the astonishing hypocrisy of
many “net zero” promoters. They want to force draconian and damaging restrictions
on how ordinary people live, while themselves enjoying their jet-setting,
limo-riding lifestyles, many of them at taxpayer expense!
In 2020, for example, the then Prince Charles, a major
promoter of the World Economic Forum’s “Great Reset,” travelled to Cambridge to
give a speech about cutting aircraft emissions. He made the journey by
helicopter! [[33]].
He could be the king of bloody England for all I care. But this incident shows
him up for what he is: a prat and a hypocrite, unable or unwilling to practise
what he preaches. Charlie Chump, as I call him, should have walked or cycled on
that journey, as he wants to force us to.
And the politicians are just as bad. In the middle of the
CoP 26 gabfest in 2021, prime minister Boris Johnson flew from Glasgow to
London by private plane, for no better reason than a dinner engagement: [[34]].
Alok Sharma, minister responsible for hosting the CoP 26 conference, at the
time ran two diesel SUVs: [[35]].
And more recently, prime minister Rishi Sunak has made a habit of using Royal Air
Force planes to get to his engagements: [[36]].
If you really want people to believe any of your “nett zero”
nonsense, you wallies, you must live nett zero, and be seen to do so.
Hypocrisy in government, or indeed any dishonesty towards the people
government is supposed to be serving, ought to be a dismissal offence.
To sum up
In the last four years alone, the UK government has been,
again and again, tyrannical and dishonest on the “climate change” issue towards
the people it is supposed to serve.
It has fraternized with extremists like Extinction
Rebellion. It has declared a “climate emergency,” without any hard evidence of such
an emergency, and without the parliament even taking a vote. It has mandated emissions
reductions that, if informed in advance of their likely consequences, we would have
rebelled against. It has moved the emissions goalposts, always in the direction
of greater reductions. It has erected a supposedly democratic “assembly,” and
made it nothing more than a rubber stamp for a pre-determined agenda. It is seeking
to make it all but impossible for those, who cannot afford to buy electric
cars, to retain their personal mobility.
It has laid down, and is implementing, policies which go very
seriously against the interests of the people it is supposed to be serving. The
effects will be disruptive, and will severely and negatively impact our
freedoms and our prosperity. And it is doing these things to us without proper
feasibility study, or proper analysis of the costs and benefits or of the
risks.
On the occasions where it has allowed us an apparent say in
the matter, it has ignored our views. It has conspired – yes, I do mean that
word – with international parties to develop and promote an agenda hostile to
us, the human beings it is supposed to serve; something that no democracy
should ever do. It has encouraged extremists to force that agenda on to us at
the local level as well as the national. It is indoctrinating young children
with lies and scares. And in all these things, it has behaved with arrogance, dishonesty
and hypocrisy.
We, the people, want all this climate crap stopped. Now. And we want our money back!
[[1]]
https://wattsupwiththat.com/2023/03/15/climate-crisis-what-climate-crisis-part-one-the-evidence/
[[3]]
https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2019/apr/30/extinction-rebellion-tells-politicians-to-declare-emergency
[[4]]
https://news.sky.com/story/majority-of-brits-unwilling-to-cut-back-to-fight-climate-change-poll-finds-11709486
[[5]]
https://www.gov.uk/government/news/uk-becomes-first-major-economy-to-pass-net-zero-emissions-law
[[6]]
https://www.theccc.org.uk/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/Net-Zero-The-UKs-contribution-to-stopping-global-warming.pdf
[[10]]
https://cast.ac.uk/
[[11]]
https://www.gov.uk/government/publications/the-ten-point-plan-for-a-green-industrial-revolution
[[13]]
https://www.gov.uk/government/news/education-secretary-puts-climate-change-at-the-heart-of-education--2
[[14]]
https://www.thisismoney.co.uk/money/cars/article-11923751/So-switch-electric-car-need-know.html
[[15]]
https://www.c40.org/
[[16]]
https://wattsupwiththat.com/2017/08/11/the-social-costs-of-air-pollution-from-cars-in-the-uk/
[[17]]
https://news.sky.com/story/londons-ultra-low-emission-zone-resulting-in-only-marginal-air-quality-improvements-12469903
[[18]]
https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-11849453/Sadiq-Khans-plans-London-cars-crackdown-blocked-legal-challenge.html
[[19]]
https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/2023/03/19/sadiq-khans-new-ulez-cameras-could-used-met-police/
[[20]]
https://www.hillingdon.gov.uk/article/10672/Councils-challenge-ULEZ-expansion-decision-in-the-courts
[[23]]
https://www.london.gov.uk/sites/default/files/2023-02/Road%20User%20Charging%20-%20Call%20for%20Evidence%20_0.pdf
[[26]]
https://www.oxfordshire.gov.uk/residents/roads-and-transport/connecting-oxfordshire/traffic-filters
[[27]]
https://news.oxfordshire.gov.uk/joint-statement-from-oxfordshire-county-council-and-oxford-city-council-on-oxfords-traffic-filters/
[[28]]
https://www.oxfordmail.co.uk/news/23079671.anger-travel-chief-announces-traffic-filters-going-happen-definitely-ahead-decision/
[[32]]
https://assets.publishing.service.gov.uk/government/uploads/system/uploads/attachment_data/file/1026725/NZR_-_Final_Report_-_Published_version.pdf
[[34]]
https://www.theguardian.com/politics/2021/nov/03/johnson-takes-private-jet-from-cop26-to-london-to-attend-dinner
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