WhatFinger

Peter C. Glover

Peter C. Glover is an English writer & freelance journalist specializing in political, media and energy analysis (and is currently European Associate Editor for the US magazine Energy Tribune. He has been published extensively and is also the author of a number of books including The Politics of Faith: Essays on the Morality of Key Current Affairs which set out the moral case for the invasion of Iraq and a Judeo-Christian defence of the death penalty.

Most Recent Articles by Peter C. Glover:

Iran and the Oil Scarcity Myth

UN-style diplomacy and sanctions aren't working. In truth, they never had a chance. Tehran's breakneck pace toward nuclear development--a program which, as the IAEA confirms, goes way beyond what is necessary for domestic use--has set the agenda. The Israelis are realists. They know the nuclear end game with Iran is fast approaching.
- Wednesday, March 21, 2012

The Great Evangelical Disaster Revisited

imageJust a quick note to let you know about a couple of e-books I have just had published. "The Great Evangelical Disaster Revisited" and "Power Politics: The Inside Track on Energy (the world's most important resource)" are both available - at ridiculously low prices!! - from all e-bookstores. And here's a link to the Amazon Kindle page. The first book is my chief reason for writing this note as it takes Schaeffer's concern about 'super-spirituality' and point out what issues actually kick-started the Protestant Reformation (and its not what you may think!) - indeed every church revival in history! Here's the PR description that appears at the stores.
- Wednesday, March 21, 2012

POWER POLITICS: The Inside Track on Energy

imageAlways wanted to be clued up on the geo-political shenanigans behind the world's most important resource - and the implications for us all? Well now's your chance - and at a ludicrously low price in a new e-book co-written by me and just made available from Amazon Kindle (other book reader formats shortly). And here's what just a sample of what to expect as per the PR blurb... Power Politics delivers the inside track on energy in a series of hard-hitting, fact-filled, insightful articles. Power Politics reveals that pretty much everything we have been told about energy just isn’t true. The book shows:
- Friday, March 2, 2012

Fuelling the Rise of the Anglosphere

James C. Bennett's The Anglosphere Challenge claimed that 'the English-speaking nations will lead the way in the twenty-first century'. Bennett's contention was that the cultural values endemic across what he termed the 'Anglosphere' economies would, via the influence of the Internet's information highway, prove to be the Next Big Idea.
- Tuesday, February 28, 2012

Greek Debt Crisis Exposes Green Subsidies Scam

If the debt crisis is a tragedy for the people of Greece, the EUs bailout attempts look increasingly comedic. A second bailout, worth ‚€130 billion ($171 billion), is currently under negotiation to enable Greece to stump up €14.5 billion ($19.1 billion) by the March 20 deadline to avoid defaulting on its bond repayments.
- Friday, February 10, 2012

Time, Newsweek Bury Keystone

Energy has become a hot button election issue. President Obama's State of the Union address and his decision to reject TransCanada's application to build the Keystone pipeline crystallized the fact. The language of the GOP presidential candidates post-Keystone was suitably pithy. Gingrich intoned it "a stunningly stupid thing to do"; Romney cited the move as "shocking" and "revealing". But just as the GOP candidate race is turning into a drawn out war of attrition, the mainstream media mood music has changed.
- Thursday, January 26, 2012

Super-Fracking and the Next Shale Gale

The shale gas and oil production is the energy story of the last decades; the technological advances of hydraulic fracturing (fracking in the recent vernacular) its chief sub-text. But, as when you‚'ve read the first part of Stieg Larsson‚'s 'The Girl With...‚' trilogy, or any good thriller series, you are left wondering what drama is coming next. Well the technological ingenuity of the American 'authors‚' of fracking does not disappoint. Part II--Super-fracking--already has the markets abuzz with anticipation.
- Tuesday, January 24, 2012

The Covert ‘War’ In Iran

The assassination of another Iranian nuclear scientist on the streets of Tehran immediately cast suspicion on the obvious and usual suspects, the Israelis and America's CIA. But Israeli writer Caroline Glick posits a third equally credible suspect: Iran's internal opposition party, the Green Movement (no connection with an eco-movement). And when the facts are more closely examined the assertion that a campaign of sabotage, in which the Green Movement is at least complicit, has traction.
- Tuesday, January 17, 2012

Europe’s Doomed Flight of Decarbonizing Fancy

Green taxes are soaring. To be precise, to 30,000 feet as the EU’s new carbon tax on airlines for all flights to or from Europe kicked in on January 1. While the levies involved will push profit margins to the limit for some, with ETS carbon permits trading at pathetically low levels and expected to stay that way through 2012, the pain in the first year for airlines may not be as much as the €1.1 billion initially projected. Even so, letting the plane take the carbon strain represents seriously poor long-term strategic planning for Europe given the looming global trade war it is about to ignite.
- Tuesday, January 10, 2012

Lies, Damned Lies & Enviro-Fraud

"The greatest challenge facing mankind is the challenge of distinguishing reality from fantasy, truth from propaganda". The late science writer Michael Crichton certainly put his finger on the spirit of our age.
- Friday, December 16, 2011

The Twelve Days of Durban

The 12 days of the Durban climate bash proved to be the political damp squib widely predicted. Pre-summit statements from major economies--the United States, India, China and Brazil--all dumping on the Kyoto agenda saw to that. However, whilst will take political elites time to realise it, the climate alarmist goose has been clearly been stuffed and cooked.
- Monday, December 12, 2011

Occupy Durban: The Greatest Sham on Earth

If you have a phobia about high concentrations of carbon dioxide (CO2) then you should avoid Durban, South Africa between November 28 and December 9. That's where the world's political and celebrity elites, as well as miscellaneous thousands are flying in, mostly in private jets, to prognosticate and pontificate as to how the rest of us are duty bound to stop running up ... er...high concentrations of carbon dioxide.
- Tuesday, November 29, 2011

Emission Controls: The Exodus Begins

Rio Tinto Alcan is closing its Northumberland aluminium smelting plant in north-east England--a direct result of EU climate legislation. The closure of the decades old smelting plant is devastating for an area with already high unemployment. It is also a poignant closure for me personally.
- Wednesday, November 23, 2011

Fracking & Quakes: Not a Whole Lotta Shakin’ Goin’ On

There's not a whole lotta shakin' goin' on due to shale gas fracking--official. Except, that is, in the global energy markets. But the 'whatever-it-is-I'm-against-it' Marxist (Groucho, that is) eco-activists, together with the constant alarmists in the media, persist in attempting to send tremors through public opinion over shale gas extraction.
- Thursday, November 10, 2011

Israel-Iran: Reaching Critical Mass?

A report by the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) due on November 8 could well prove the decisive factor in triggering an Israeli strike on Iran's nuclear facilities--no matter whether the Obama administration gives its backing.
- Monday, November 7, 2011

Climategate II: Won’t Get Fooled Again?

"For the clueless or cynical diehards who deny global warming, it's getting awfully cold out there." So wrote Washington Post columnist Eugene Robinson on October 24. Unfortunately for Robinson, he was right about it "getting awfully cold out there", though not as he contended for climate sceptics.
- Tuesday, November 1, 2011

Carbon Jihad, iPads & the Jevons Paradox

It was John Lennon who famously remarked, “Life is what happens to you while you’re busy making other plans”. So too, market forces is “what happens” while bureaucrats are busy planning strategies. According to a new study, government anti-carbon emission initiatives are being undermined by the boom in sales of electronic gadgetry and devices.
- Friday, October 14, 2011

Spying Iran’s Nuclear End Game

As John le Carré's Cold War spy movie Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, Spy opens to rave reviews in London, so the story of Iran's nuclear program is taking on a dark le Carré-esque 'keep-em-guessing' undercurrent. Probably how Teheran's 'cloak and dagger' regime prefers it. The question is: whose intelligence (pun intended) would it fool?
- Thursday, September 15, 2011

Goodnight, Irene

There was something faintly amusing about the rash of media reporters roaming the empty wet and windy streets of New York and Long Island at the weekend. While directors back at base repeatedly ran the same shot of the wooden shed being tossed by waves off Long Island, for the frontline reporters, it must have felt like somebody had, quite literally, stolen their broadcasting thunder.
- Wednesday, August 31, 2011

The Green Subsidy-Job Loss Nexus

There comes a point when even how to save the planet boils down to hard economics--what can we afford? Bottom line: the green refrain "whatever it costs" won't do in the real world. Whichever side of the Atlantic we live on, the economic indicators are all registering in the red 'critical' zone when it comes to the destructive impact of diverting precious economic resources into green subsidies, particularly on real jobs.
- Thursday, August 18, 2011

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