Has environmentalism become more than just a good faith effort to protect the Earth? Is it now tantamount to a religion? And if it is, is that a good thing or a bad thing?
Prager U’s latest short documentary, hosted by Will Witt, explores the origins, agenda, and motives of today’s environmental movement.
What he finds raises some challenging questions for anyone who sincerely cares about the future of the planet.
via YouTube
As a young adult of the centre-left, many years ago I came across a wizened middle-aged hippy woman who wanted Australian forestry to cease forthwith.
The more she spoke the more it became obvious that her knowledge of the subject consisted of little more than the sacred feelings experienced while hugging trees.
Decades later, she effectively has her wish. Her cathedral is protected. Until, that is, the fire caused by the mismanagement by her ilk destroys it and almost all that live in it.
At that point she shall, if not yet gone to meet the great goddess Gaia, tell all and sundry the cause of the fiery catastrophe was anthropogenic climate change.
Meanwhile, she will potter about her house, no doubt, feeling the tactile nature of the Indonesian rainforest timber that is used here now that our forestry industry has been excommunicated, all the while castigating Australian capitalism for killing the orang utans.
Eco-puratinism is such a joy to behold.
If Gore was so concerned about Global Warming/Climate Change he would take up living in a hut with no hear and no windows or doors and walking to where he wants to go
Yes sir, it really is a religion
the HOTHOUSE EARTH is the evidence
https://tambonthongchai.com/2020/11/02/the-incredible-weirdness-of-climate-change/
Many are into that Gaia Earth Mother stuff many think this sort of Pagan stuff after watching stuff like Captain Planet and the Planeteers or reading books written by James Lovelock