This entry was posted on Wednesday, November 25th, 2009 at 9:40 am and is filed under Ned's Blogs. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.
Ned Ryun:
A former presidential writer for George W. Bush and son of former
U.S. Congressman Jim Ryun, Ned Ryun is currently the head of American
Majority (www.americanmajority.org), a national organization committed to identifying and
training liberty‐minded leaders. Ned was the co‐founder and former director of the Generation Joshua
program. Ned earned degrees in English and History from the University of Kansas and has co‐authored
Heroes Among Us and The Courage to Run with his father and
his twin brother, Drew. Ned and his wife, Becca, reside in Northern
Virginia with their sons, Nathaniel and James. The views expressed on this blog are solely those held by Ned Ryun and do not necessarily represent the views of his current or previous employers.
Climategate: the Last Days of the Global Warming Religion?
If you’ve read previous blog entries, I’ve been a skeptic of the entire “anthropogenic global warming” idea from day one. Now we find that with Climategate, proponents of the anthropogenic myth appear to have been systematically engaged in manipulating data and hiding facts that didn’t support their views. It’s all very interesting how just a short while ago this was all settled science, a done deal, no more debate, we must move quickly to save the planet. Now, it’s becoming clear that some of these scientists were hiding data that proved there is global cooling. Senator Inhofe (R-OK) is now calling for a Senate investigation into Climategate. The reason I think this timing couldn’t have been better? The cap-and-trade bill, passed by the House and coming before the Senate, which would be devastating to the American economy if passed, is in many ways based on the myth of anthropogenic global warming. Though I had my doubts that bill would pass the Senate, I think now it’s nearly an impossibility.
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