In the last year, people around the world have suffered huge rises in the cost of energy.
Petrol, diesel, domestic electricity, and natural gas prices are now past the point that many people can afford. [bold, links added]
The problem is affecting all businesses, with consequences for the wider economy, jobs, and the cost of living.
In poorer and developing economies, these problems are intensified and are having deeper and tragic consequences.
There is a growing risk that the progress the world has seen in dealing with poverty, hunger, and communicable diseases since the 1990s will be reversed.
So what is behind these problems, what caused them, what are governments doing about it, and when can we look forward to a return to normality?
Since the mid-2000s, politicians have been driven by the idea that people’s well-being depended on eliminating CO2 emissions, and NOT on the energy that powered society and the economy.
Now we’re paying for those choices. WATCH:
Learn more at Climate Resistance
Providing to the fact that back in the 1970’s it was Global Cooling and New Ice aage the very same liberal rags Time and Newsweek were giving it top coverage in their liberal rags as much as They(Time)was giving their Global Warming/Climate Change lie back in the 199o’s
Always remember that we must act as soon as
possible regardless that if we don’t act now
we’ll be faced with the same stupid ass threat
a week later if we don’t.
Nearly ALL climate alarmist idiocy
is based in this idiotic argumentation
Make us all surrender our Freedom and Liberty over a fake crisis
Yes, Freedom, Liberty, and……… our HARD-EARNED MONEY (as scarce as that is)
It has been clear for a long time that the climate change activists could care less about the poor. I find it amazing how the traditional concern of the liberals for the poor and the environment has given way to action on climate change. Cutting down entire forests for biofuel is one example.
The White House has stated that the cost of fossil fuels needs to be higher to make wind and solar more competitive. The pain of the higher cost is just part of the transition to energy that is supposed to have less carbon dioxide emissions.