Energy transition a “dangerous delusion. From: Epoch Times. “The lessons of the recent decade make it clear that [solar, wind, and battery] SWB technologies cannot be surged in times of need, are neither inherently ‘clean’ nor even independent of hydrocarbons, and are not cheap.”
👉 Millions of Californians like me are told there's no energy left to charge the electric cars that could speed us away from wildfires — is this the most idiotic example of a climate cult gone mad, asks STEVE HILTON. From: The Daily Mail. There is zero evidence that California's self-sacrifice will amount to any meaningful reduction in global warning.
Up to 50 Trump supporters have homes raided by DOJ-FBI across the US. From: Gateway Pundit. On Friday afternoon Steve Bannon told Charlie Kirk that 35 Trump allies had their homes raided by the FBI on Thursday. On Friday night attorney Harmeet Dhillon Tucker Carlson that up to 50 Trump supporters may be involved in these raids.
Antiwar criticism and the formation of collective opinion. From: Mises Institute. There are themes in the West that are difficult to question without running the risk of receiving sharp criticism, such as: “Welfare State,” “climate policy,” “multicultural society,” or “covid-19 vaccination.”
Law-abiding gun owners ignored by media, maligned by politicians. From: Zero Hedge. Criminologists and economists agree: Stop school shootings by banning gun free zones and allowing teachers to conceal carry.
WEF: Preach compulsory climate change studies to alleviate youth anxiety. From: Watts Up With That. According to the World Economic Forum, if we teach young people the world is about to end and the adults are doing nothing, they will feel less climate anxiety.
Forced electric cars harm our planet and humanity. From Creators. Battery cars might well be the future. Premature, mandatory battery cars burden the environment, low-income domestic consumers and parched regions short of clean water. Far worse, they exploit child slaves.
Aristotle and the art of persuasion. From: History of Yesterday. Learn how to persuade people with Aristotle’s three-part method.