Benny Peiser’s Global Warming Policy Foundation Reports
That US
Republicans Shrug Off Pope Francis' Climate Message and
“The Green Pope” Gets Uneasy Reception In USA and Poland
US Republicans
Shrug Off Pope Francis' Climate Message - The reactions [to the papal
encyclical] suggested that the pontiff's desire to translate his climate views
into real action to combat greenhouse gases could fall flat, at least as far as
the American political system is concerned….Pope Francis' call for dramatic
action on climate change drew a round of shrugs from congressional Republicans
on Thursday, while many of the party's presidential candidates ignored it
entirely. "I don't want to be disrespectful, but I don't consider him an
expert on environmental issues," said Texas Rep. Joe Barton, a senior
Republican on the Energy and Commerce Committee, in a comment echoed by a
number of other Republicans. Even Capitol Hill's many Catholics, despite their
religion's reverence for the holy father, seemed unmoved by his urgent plea to
save the planet. --Erica Werner and Matthew Daly, Associated Press, 18 June 2015
Pope Francis’s Vow Of Poverty — For All - Like other environmental activists, the pope — who might now be considered the world’s leading green — is using global warming to prosecute a deeply ecological, anti-capitalist agenda. The pope’s green Peronism is hardly going to persuade American conservatives to join his climate crusade. Indeed, the pope invites disagreement with his views. “The Church does not presume to settle scientific questions or to replace politics,” the --Rupert Darwall, National Review, 18 June 2015
My Take - So the Pope says “But I am concerned to encourage an honest and open debate.” That all sounds great, but when he had the chance to have that "honest and open debate" except Vatican heavies silenced climate skeptics at the UN Papal Summit. When exactly and with whom did he wish to start that "honest and open" debate?
Less Than Half Of U.S. Catholics Believe In Man-Made Climate Change - A new Pew Research Center survey, released as Pope Francis publishes an encyclical on the environment and climate change, finds that 71% of self-identified American Catholics believe the earth is getting warmer, but only 47% attribute the perceived warming to human activity. --Susan Berry, Breitbart News, 17 June 2015
Green Pope Gets Uneasy Reception In Catholic Heartland Of Poland - Pope Francis's plunge into the climate change debate has caused uneasiness in the heartland of European conservative Catholicism in Poland, exposing the dilemma for Catholics who are devout but prefer their leaders to steer clear of "liberal" causes. For many Poles, coal is a national security issue. Without it, the country would need to import much more gas from Russia, making it dependent on a former overlord which it views with deep suspicion. Piotr Naimski, a member of parliament who is drafting energy policy for Law and Justice, would not comment directly on the encyclical but said: "All actions related to climate policy should be based on local needs." --Pawel Sobczak and Jakub Iglewski, Reuters, 18 June 2015
Richard Tol: The Pope Disappoints On Climate -The Pope has released an Encyclical on Care for our Common Home. It is rather long. It has good things. It has bad things. Carbon dioxide is referred to as pollution, which is a nonsense (outside the US legal system). Para 24 offers the alarmist claptrap you would expect to find in a Greenpeace magazine. Para 25 suggests that the poor are vulnerable to climate change because of where they live. Actually, they're vulnerable because they're poor. The Pope misdiagnoses, and thus recommends the wrong treatment. Economic growth is the prime strategy against the disproportionate impacts of climate change on the poor. --Richard Tol, 19 June 2015
Pope Francis’s Vow Of Poverty — For All - Like other environmental activists, the pope — who might now be considered the world’s leading green — is using global warming to prosecute a deeply ecological, anti-capitalist agenda. The pope’s green Peronism is hardly going to persuade American conservatives to join his climate crusade. Indeed, the pope invites disagreement with his views. “The Church does not presume to settle scientific questions or to replace politics,” the --Rupert Darwall, National Review, 18 June 2015
My Take - So the Pope says “But I am concerned to encourage an honest and open debate.” That all sounds great, but when he had the chance to have that "honest and open debate" except Vatican heavies silenced climate skeptics at the UN Papal Summit. When exactly and with whom did he wish to start that "honest and open" debate?
Less Than Half Of U.S. Catholics Believe In Man-Made Climate Change - A new Pew Research Center survey, released as Pope Francis publishes an encyclical on the environment and climate change, finds that 71% of self-identified American Catholics believe the earth is getting warmer, but only 47% attribute the perceived warming to human activity. --Susan Berry, Breitbart News, 17 June 2015
Green Pope Gets Uneasy Reception In Catholic Heartland Of Poland - Pope Francis's plunge into the climate change debate has caused uneasiness in the heartland of European conservative Catholicism in Poland, exposing the dilemma for Catholics who are devout but prefer their leaders to steer clear of "liberal" causes. For many Poles, coal is a national security issue. Without it, the country would need to import much more gas from Russia, making it dependent on a former overlord which it views with deep suspicion. Piotr Naimski, a member of parliament who is drafting energy policy for Law and Justice, would not comment directly on the encyclical but said: "All actions related to climate policy should be based on local needs." --Pawel Sobczak and Jakub Iglewski, Reuters, 18 June 2015
Richard Tol: The Pope Disappoints On Climate -The Pope has released an Encyclical on Care for our Common Home. It is rather long. It has good things. It has bad things. Carbon dioxide is referred to as pollution, which is a nonsense (outside the US legal system). Para 24 offers the alarmist claptrap you would expect to find in a Greenpeace magazine. Para 25 suggests that the poor are vulnerable to climate change because of where they live. Actually, they're vulnerable because they're poor. The Pope misdiagnoses, and thus recommends the wrong treatment. Economic growth is the prime strategy against the disproportionate impacts of climate change on the poor. --Richard Tol, 19 June 2015
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