Here we sit in the comfort of Washington and we read of the discomfort in Florida. There a massive storm moved from the Caribbean north through South Florida, displacing as many as 5 million people.
It marched up the west coast, displacing many more. The eye of the storm settled on Naples and Fort Myers, but it terrified pretty much the whole state, including the largest population of retired Americans gathered anywhere.
It was the largest hurricane ever to threaten the United States, and it came on the heels of the death and destruction that Mother Nature visited upon Texas, prompting one cynic to say, “We’ve got to get Mother Nature before she gets us.”
Florida’s governor, Rick Scott, was tireless in issuing warnings to the apprehensive citizenry of his state and in monitoring the activities of his state’s National Guard and first responders. He was on the nation’s television screens non-stop. He declared at one press conference, “This is a catastrophic storm our state has ever seen.”
He expressed similar sentiments continually. He also said, “Pray, pray for everybody in Florida.” The citizenry responded responsibly. State and local government responded responsibly, but what was the response of the national media, or as we say the Mainstream Media?
The Washington Post neatly summed up the Mainstream’s general response when it headlined an article “Florida Governor Has Refused to Recognize Climate-Change Risks, Critics Say.”
In the body of this preposterous article appeared this telling line: “Scott’s office did not respond to a request for comment for this article.” Did it occur to anyone at The Post that the governor’s office might be underwater or that the governor might be otherwise preoccupied?
This is how poisonous left-wing politics has become in America. Even at the height of a historic crisis, the Mainstream Media has time to advance a political point, a point that is, incidentally, highly debatable.
Not that there is ever any time for debate with the left. It blabs on about how the consensus of the scientific community all believes that global warming is behind such events as Hurricane Irma. It quotes political critics of Mr. Scott at length. It never could find a person who sided with him. It only quoted his opponents. It never lets up on advancing its point of view. Nonetheless, its point of view is not in the ascendancy.
…snip…
There is no proof that Hurricane Irma or Hurricane Harvey were caused by global warming or intensified by global warming, but global warming can in time be dealt with by technological development.
As for the poisonous rhetoric of the left, I have no cure. Do you remember a few years ago when the left was actually boasting of its anger? It was as if anger were a political virtue. At the time I marveled that the descendants of Eleanor Roosevelt would consider anger a noble political value.
I rather thought there might be a rebellion within the left’s ranks. Suddenly a “reform” movement would spread through leftist ranks, and they would favor sweetness and light over anger. Obviously, I was wrong. Anger among the left has endured. In fact, it has gotten more intense.
Is there anything like it on the right? Actually, there is if you go far enough on the political spectrum. Consider the Ku Klux Klan — there may even be a few thousand of them.
Read more at Washington Times
I think the Governor did the safe thing, scaring Floridians into evacuation. The Weather Channel huffed and puffed about the worst hurricane ever. Irma may have disappointed, but people will not forget the fear they felt. The climate fear mongerers regained some mojo.
I think the Governor did the safe thing, scaring Floridians into evacuation. The Weather Channel huffed and puffed about the worst hurricane ever. Irma may have disappointed, but people will not forget the fear they felt. The climate fear mongering regained some mojo.
The Govenor of Florida did the right thing way better then our own idiot govenor Moonbeam Brown the Washington Compost should be sued for their lies and that gose for all the lying news agencies and reporters