Ron Arnold
With its $385
billion share value, Google, Inc. has bumped ExxonMobil to become America’s No.
2 ranked company in market capitalization.
That may not be a
good thing. A February article in New Scientist announced, Google wants to rank websites based on facts, not links,
and writer Hal Hodson said, “The internet is stuffed with garbage. Google has
devised a fix – rank websites according to their truthfulness.”
Not surprisingly,
the idea of changing page rank from popularity to “truthfulness,” based on a
Google-made “knowledge vault,” did not go down well.
Fox News reported,
“Google’s plan to rank websites is raising censorship concerns.” Douglass
Kennedy opened with, “They say you’re entitled to your own opinions, but you
are not entitled to your own facts. It’s a concept not everyone is comfortable
with.”
They’re saying
we’re only entitled to Google’s “facts,” which completely short-circuits
how slippery “facts” can be and naively equates facts with truth. Ask any
lawyer about truth.
Today’s climate wars
consist of arguments between highly qualified scientists about facts that some
sincerely believe are true, and some sincerely believe are false, each for
solid reasons. It should be an honest debate among equals, but it’s degenerated
into a power play by alarmists to kill debate to drive favored public policies
that are pushed by certain politicians and their social and political base.
Google’s truth plan
is not so simple. Facts are statements about existence. Statements about
existence can be true or false. Existence itself – your kitchen sink or the
climate or whatever – can’t be true or false; it just exists. Say anything you
want about existence, and it won’t change a thing. It still just exists.
Existence doesn’t give a damn what you think about it. Facts are statements
about existence, and statements are always arguable.
But get everyone to
believe Google Facts, and you can enforce political policies worth trillions of
dollars to climate profiteers – and impose punitive, economy-strangling,
job-killing regulations on millions of families.
You can see where
this is going.
Imagine: Big Google
the Universal Truthsayer. That’s as scary as “Mr. Dark” in Ray Bradbury’s 1962
novel Something Wicked This Way Comes, only worse. It’s the perfect machine to
kill all dissent and wither the Internet into a wasteland of groupthink,
susceptible to disinformation campaigns from any power center from the CIA, to
the rich bosses of Google, Inc. to Google’s political friends and allies.
What about those
rich bosses? Google’s two co-founders, Larry Page and Sergey Brin, created a
corporate foundation in 2005. The Google Foundation has 2013 assets of
$72,412,693, gave grants of $7.9 million, and added $29.4 million from
corporate profits.
Three of Google’s
top-ten recipients are key climate alarmists: the World Wildlife Fund ($5
million); Energy Foundation ($2.6 million); and rabidly anti-fracking Natural
Resources Defense Council ($2.5 million).
NRDC is
particularly influential because it also received $3.01 million in taxpayer-financed
Environmental Protection Agency grants since 2009 and has 50 employees on 40
federal advisory committees: NRDC has 33 employees on 21 EPA committees, and
more in six other agencies.
The big gun in
Google philanthropy is Executive Chairman Eric Schmidt, whose Schmidt Family
Foundation ($312 million, 2013 assets) is a major armory for groups that attack
skeptics of dangerous manmade climate change. The Schmidt Foundation has given
$67,147,849 in 295 grants to 180 recipients since it was endowed in 2007.
Top Schmidt money
went to Climate Central ($8.15 million), a group of activist climate scientists
bolstered by $1,387,372 in EPA grants since 2009.
Schmidt also gave
$3.25 million to the Energy Foundation, which was almost superfluous, since EF
is practically the Mother Ship of green grants, with $1,157,046,016 given via
28,705 grants to 11,866 recipients since 1999.
Among the shadier
grants in the Schmidt portfolio are anti-fracking, anti-fossil-fuel grants
totaling $1.19 million to the Sustainable Markets Foundation, a shell
corporation that gives no recorded grants, but funnels money to climate and
anti-fracking organizations such as Bill McKibben’s 350.org, so that the donors
are not traceable.
Schmidt supported
the far-left Tides Foundation empire with $975,000 for an anti-consumer film,
“The Story of Stuff.” It gave the Sierra Club $500,000 for anti-natural gas
activism, the Center for Investigative Reporting $985,000 for an anti-coal
film, and so forth. Schmidt’s list goes on for pages.
With all the
massive resources of wealth and power alarmists have, we must ask: Why do they
give so much to destroy the climate debate and the debaters? What are they
afraid of?
Perhaps they have
staked so much money and reputation on manmade climate catastrophe claims that
they are terrified by the prospect that inconvenient evidence, data, debate and
scientists could destroy their carefully constructed climate house of cards.
Or perhaps it’s
what Eric Schmidt said at January’s World Economic
Forum in Davos, Switzerland, when he was asked for his prediction on the future
of the web. “I will answer very simply that the Internet will disappear.”
How? The mature
technology will be wearable, give us interactive homes and cars, and simply
fade into the background – to become something that we all have, that most of
us don’t really know (or care) very much about, as long as it can do whatever
we want.
That’s the view
from the pinnacle of wealth and power. On the ground, the joke is on Google.
Michael Humphrey, Forbes contributor and
instructor at Colorado State University, sees younger people abandoning the
public forum in favor of one-to-one connectivity. He says they don’t trust the
Internet.
Why? Millennials
say the Internet is cheapening language, it is stunting curiosity (because
answers come so easily), we are never bored so we lose creativity, it steals
innocence too quickly, it makes us impulsive with our buying and talking, it is
creating narcissists, it creates filter bubbles that limit discovery, it hurts
local businesses, it is filled with false evidence, it desensitizes us to
tragedy, it makes us lonely.
They want the real
world.
Google that.
Ron Arnold is Ron Arnold is executive vice
president of the Center
for the Defense of Free Enterprise and coauthor of Cracking Big Green:
Saving the world from the Save-the-Earth money machine.
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