WhatFinger

Paul Driessen

Paul Driessen is a senior fellow with the Committee For A Constructive Tomorrow and Center for the Defense of Free Enterprise, nonprofit public policy institutes that focus on energy, the environment, economic development and international affairs. Paul Driessen is author of Eco-Imperialism: Green power, Black death

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Callous CALAS activists against the poor

Not long ago, supposed "environmental justice" concerns at least involved risks to mine workers and their families. The risks may have been inflated, or ignored for decades, but they were a major focus.
- Monday, August 28, 2017

Fair trade for thee, but not for me

"Nobody wants to buy something that was made by exploiting someone else," Ben & Jerry's and Fair Trade co-founder Jerry Greenfield likes to tell us. Let's hope he doesn't drive an electric vehicle, doesn't use a laptop or cell phone, and doesn't rely on wind or solar power.
- Sunday, August 20, 2017

Life in fossil-fuel-free utopia

Al Gore’s new movie, a New York Times article on the final Obama Era “manmade climate disaster” report, and a piece saying wrathful people twelve years from now will hang hundreds of “climate deniers” are a tiny sample of Climate Hysteria and Anti-Trump Resistance rising to a crescendo. If we don’t end our evil fossil-fuel-burning lifestyles and go 100% renewable Right Now, we are doomed, they rail.
- Sunday, August 13, 2017

Shameless fear-mongering--versus reality

Before I could enjoy a movie last week, I was forced to endure five minutes of climate and weather fear-mongering, when the theater previewed Al Gore's "Inconvenient Sequel." His attempt to pin every weather disaster of the past decade on humanity's fossil fuel use felt like fifty minutes of water boarding.
- Monday, August 7, 2017

Biofuel justifications are illusory

The closest thing to earthly eternal life, President Ronald Reagan used to say, is a government program. Those who benefit from a program actively and vocally defend it, often giving millions in campaign cash to politicians who help perpetuate it, while those who oppose the program or are harmed by it are usually disorganized and distracted by daily life.
- Sunday, July 30, 2017

Tesla battery, subsidy and sustainability fantasies

The first justification was that internal combustion engines polluted too much. But emissions steadily declined, and today's cars emit about 3% of what their predecessors did. Then it was oil imports: electric vehicles (EVs) would reduce foreign dependency and balance of trade deficits. Bountiful oil and natural gas supplies from America's hydraulic fracturing revolution finally eliminated that as an argument.
- Sunday, July 23, 2017

Insanity and hypocrisy Down Under

The Wall Street Journal called it the energy shortage "no one saw coming." Actually, a lot of people did see it coming. But intent on pursuing their "dangerous manmade climate change" and "renewable energy will save the planet" agendas, the political classes ignored them. So the stage was set.
- Monday, July 17, 2017


Monumental, unsustainable environmental impacts

Demands that the world replace fossil fuels with wind, solar and biofuel energy--to prevent supposed catastrophes caused by manmade global warming and climate change--ignore three fundamental flaws.
- Sunday, July 2, 2017

We should be glad the US is out

Ten states, some 150 cities, and 1,100 businesses, universities and organizations insist "We are still in"--committed to the Paris climate agreement and determined to continue reducing carbon dioxide emissions and preventing climate change. In the process, WASI members claim, they will create jobs and promote innovation, trade and international competitiveness. It's mostly hype, puffery and belief in tooth fairies.
- Monday, June 26, 2017

Advancing scientific integrity on bees

Second Lady Karen Pence and Secretary of Agriculture Sonny Perdue recently teamed up to install a honeybee hive on the grounds of the Vice President's residence at the Naval Observatory in Washington, DC. This will serve as a "great example" of what people can do to help "reverse the decline" in managed honeybee colonies around the country, the secretary said.
- Monday, June 19, 2017

More rational policies in our future?

In the wake of President Trump's exit from the Paris climate treaty, reactions from other quarters were predictably swift, nasty, sanctimonious and hypocritical. Al Gore paused near one of the private jets he takes to hector lesser mortals to say the action will bring "a global weather apocalypse." Billionaire Tom Steyer got rich selling coal but called the President's action "a traitorous act of war."
- Sunday, June 11, 2017

Exiting the Mad Hatter's climate tea party

I can guess why a raven is like a writing-desk, Alice said. "Do you mean you think you can find out the answer?" said the March Hare. "Exactly so," said Alice. "Then you should say what you mean," the March Hare went on. "I do," Alice replied. "At least I mean what I say. That's the same thing, you know."
- Saturday, June 3, 2017

Please Exit the Paris Climate Treaty

Dear Mr. President: Are you are still wondering whether to Exit Paris? Overseas and US officials, environmentalists and bureaucrats urge you to Remain. But you promised voters you would Exit. Please keep your promises.
- Tuesday, May 30, 2017

Nipping a legal problem in the bud

One of my recent articles predicted that the Fish & Wildlife Service's endangered species designation for the rusty patched bumblebee would lead to its being used to delay or block construction projects and pesticide use on hundreds of millions of acres of US farmland. The abuses have already begun.
- Sunday, May 28, 2017

Land, energy and mineral lockdowns

President Trump has directed Secretary of the Interior Ryan Zinke to review recent land withdrawals under the 1906 Antiquities Act, to determine whether some should be reversed or reduced in size.
- Monday, May 15, 2017

Refocusing a Chicago water summit

President Trump's proposal to reduce the Environmental Protection Agency's $8.1-billion budget by $1.6 billion was cut to an $80-million trim in the omnibus spending bill. However, the EPA funding and staff controversy will undoubtedly resume during the next budgetary battles in September.
- Sunday, May 7, 2017

Ignorance, intolerance, violence

Recent science and climate marches demonstrated how misinformed, indoctrinated, politicized and anti-Trump these activists are – and how indifferent about condemning millions in industrialized nations and billions in developing countries to green energy poverty. Amid it all, University of Michigan history professor Juan Cole helped illustrate how the marchers became so ignorant, insensitive and intolerant.
- Monday, May 1, 2017

Green Energy Poverty Week

April 22 was Earth Day, the March for Science and Lenin's birthday (which many say is appropriate, since environmentalism is now green on the outside and red, anti-free enterprise on the inside). April 29 will feature the People's Climate March and the usual "Climate change is real" inanity.
- Monday, April 24, 2017

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