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De Omnibus Dubitandum - Lux Veritas

Saturday, December 12, 2015

US Threatens To Walk Out Of Paris Talks If Financial Obligations Made Legally Binding Paris Climate Poker On A Knife-Edge Paris Climate Talks Deadlocked Endgame: US Joins Group Of Countries Trying To Isolate China and India

My Take - What exactly did these blithering idiots in developed nations (touting this insane global warming Chicken Little disaster) think was going to happen?  Let's get this once and for all. Global Warming has stopped for 19 years.  The warming that took place didn't come anywhere near bringing the world's temperature as warm as it was during either the Roman Warming Period or the Medieval Warming Period, and the future warming they falsely reported didn't either.   

The underdeveloped nations are now aware of this, so this is nothing more than an extortion racket by these countries. I guess they view this as the penalty the west has to pay for being stupid - and stupid can't be fixed - however, it can be replaced. 

One more thing. If the Medieval Warming Period was warmer - substantially warmer - than it is today - and it was - is there anything in the historical record showing all the disasters they're predicting for today occurred then? No - there isn't. 

So if these modern projected disasters didn't occur when the world was substantially warmer - why should we expect these things to occur now? The answer is simple. These predictions are fraudulent bordering on neo-pagan mysticism - and we shouldn't expect anything they're predicting to come into being. Actually we shouldn't believe anything the green/left says since history has demonstrated they're pathological liars.  But that's foundational to the left.  They have no moral foundation except for the one universal morality shared by all of the left.  Say or do anything to attain power.

De Omnibus Dubitandum - Question Everything! 

The night saw an ugly brawl as US secretary of state John Kerry threatened that developed countries, including the US, would walk out of the agreement if it help up the wall of differentiation or if it was asked to commit to a road-map or a goal to deliver on its financial obligations in the Paris agreement. “You can take the US out of this. Take the developed world out of this. Remember, the Earth has a problem. What will you do with the problem on your own?” he said behind closed doors in negotiations to other ministers on the second revised draft of the Paris agreement. --Nitin Sethi, Business Standard, 11 December 2015

Britain and other rich countries face demands for $3.5 trillion (£2.3 trillion) in payments to developing nations to secure a deal in Paris to curb global warming. Developing countries have added a clause to the latest draft of the text under which they would be paid the “full costs” of meeting plans to cut emissions. The amount paid by rich countries is a key unresolved issue at the climate conference in Paris, which is supposed to end tomorrow. The latest version of the text has more than 360 points of disagreement. --Ben Webster, The Times, 11 December 2015

President Barack Obama reached out to Modi on Tuesday in an attempt to break the deadlock at the climate summit, where the responsibility of developing countries such as India in tackling rising global temperatures has been a sticking point. He spoke to Modi hours before US Secretary for State John Kerry and environment minister Prakash Javadekar held a 45-minute meeting in Paris. Sources said the meeting between Kerry and Javadekar failed to reach a compromise on a number of issues, including redefining the differentiation between the rich and the developing world in “changed circumstances” and a proposed review and verification of climate action plans. “There was very little agreement on most issues,” a negotiator from a developing country said. --Chetan Chauhan, Hindustan Times, 10 December 2015

The US has unexpectedly joined a large group of countries trying to isolate China and India in the tense home stretch of UN talks in Paris on a new global climate agreement. The group, which has dubbed itself the “high ambition coalition”, claims to include about half the 195 nations involved in the two-week Paris meeting known as COP21, which is due to end on Friday. “This is our moment and we need to make it count,” said Todd Stern, the US climate envoy, as he joined ministers from the EU, Latin America, Africa and Pacific islands at a news conference on Wednesday evening to demand that the new accord contain measures that China, India, Saudi Arabia and other nations are trying to resist. --Pilita Clark and Michael Stothard, Financial Times, 10 December 2015

What at the outset the French hosts called a "week of hope," is now coming to an end with frenetic, caffeine-fueled all-nighters aimed at beating the clock. The task is now nothing less than persuading many of the 196 countries represented here to give up on dearly held red lines to deliver a ground-breaking global deal on combatting climate change after 20 years of trying. To speed things along, Fabius has also already recommended that legal and linguistic experts start reviewing "clean" sections over which there is no dispute. But the remaining sticking points are significant, and from this point forward will likely require the direct involvement of, and concessions from, political leaders at home. --Nahlah Ayed, CBC News, 10 December 2015

Weary envoys from 195 nations battling to forge an accord to save mankind from disastrous global warming emerged Thursday from all-night talks facing an imminent deadline with deal-breaking rows still unresolved. Fabius has set an ambitious deadline of Friday for the deal to be reached, and negotiators met through the night to debate the text at a sprawling conference venue in Le Bourget on the northern outskirts of Paris. But Fabius announced no breakthroughs in any of the biggest arguments -- primarily between developing and developed nations -- that have derailed previous UN efforts to forge an accord. --Karl Malakunas, AFP, 10 December 2015

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