Mainly it's about reducing consumption.C-Mag wrote: ↑Thu Oct 18, 2018 11:26 pmSo, it's all about Globalism eh ?
It's what's good for the people of the world, even if it hurts patriots locally ?
Patriotism is the last refuge of a scoundrel.
Mainly it's about reducing consumption.C-Mag wrote: ↑Thu Oct 18, 2018 11:26 pmSo, it's all about Globalism eh ?
It's what's good for the people of the world, even if it hurts patriots locally ?
According to a study out Monday on global climate change, your dog (or your cat) is probably killing the environment, and if you want to stem the tide of global warming, it’s time to say “good-bye” to Fido and Fluffy.
The study, which appears in the online journal PLOS, claims the human compulsion to seek out animal companionship is one of the primary factors affecting our climate, particularly in the United States where there are 163 million companion animals — roughly one pet for every two Americans — the highest number of any country in the world.
Researchers at the University of Sydney in Australia claim that those 163 million pets have a detrimental impact on the environment, from the food they consume to the waste they produce.
https://truepundit.com/environmentalist ... your-pets/
How about we shoot every pet we see in a normal place of business. IMO, people don't have the right to take their pets with them all about town. I don't want to go to the hardware store and see Fido pissing on merchandise I might buy.
More than 75% of the Italian city of Venice was inundated by high tides and extreme winds on Monday and Tuesday, leaving most of the so-called “Floating City” with the worst flooding in a decade.
So it regularly floods (4 times a year) and yet it's the fault of climate change. Then they throw out some "estimates" made by who, Al Gore? People like him told us most of Florida would be underwater by now. I'm about ready to give up on all news media.So why is Venice flooded? One answer is climate change, which has turned the lagoon city’s proximity to the sea problematic in recent years. Some estimates suggest the Mediterranean Sea levels will rise five feet by the end of the century, which could cause the city to flood twice daily. Currently, Venice experiences fairly severe flooding about four times annually.