Critiquing Florida’s Public Policy of “Shared Adversity”
Florida's government promotes a "shared adversity" plan in which individuals and organizations have distant environmental problems imposed upon them.
Florida's government promotes a "shared adversity" plan in which individuals and organizations have distant environmental problems imposed upon them.
Researchers that are skeptical of many current climate change narratives are derisively called "deniers." However, because skepticism itself is a foundation of scientific analysis, skeptics tend to be rational-analytic thinkers and less likely to embrace false theories.
Virtue-signaling politicians in New Jersey have banned single-use plastic bags, claiming to "help the environment." They need to read Hazlitt's Economics in One Lesson instead.
In his remarkable book, Epstein has changed the terms of the debate about the danger of “global warming” and the alleged need to take drastic action. And, the book is written in plain English.
Energy from fossil fuels, Epstein explains, is part of human civilization and our entire material existence. He shows how the growing movement to restrict or even ban the use of oil, natural gas, and coal is not only delusional but also profoundly antihuman.
Daniel McAdams joins Jeff and Bob to discuss the economic and political ramifications of the Nord Stream 2 pipeline sabotage.
Who frames the "climate" debate or any political debate? The Left frames the debate with phony issues. Fossil Future is a brilliant attempt to reframe the climate change and global warming narrative. This is a must-read book relevant to our civilization and way of life.
Not long ago, Germany's politicians were proudly phasing out nuclear power. Facing a harsh winter without Russian natural gas, the atom suddenly seems like a good alternative.
We are regularly being told that we are in a "climate crisis." But what if that isn't true? What if CO2 actually is good for the greening of the planet?
Not long ago, Germany's politicians were proudly phasing out nuclear power. Facing a harsh winter without Russian natural gas, the atom suddenly seems like a good alternative.