The “New Religion of
by Trevor Thomas
August 28, 2009
Anthropogenic (man-made) Global Warming (AGW) skeptics have an unusual ally from the land Down Under. Recently, by a vote of 42 to 30, the Australian Senate rejected their version of cap-and-trade.
In a speech opposing the bill, Senator Nick Minchin stated,
“this whole extraordinary scheme, which would do so much damage to
Leading
His latest book, Heaven and Earth: Global Warming, the Missing Science, is the product of 40 years’ research containing over 2,300 footnotes. It sheds light on many of the false claims of man-made global warming. As Robert Tracinski and Tom Minchin recently noted, “The influence of Plimer's book is particularly interesting because it is not a light introduction to the topic. It is a thick book, chock full of science…If the book is comprehensive in its scope, that is because everything science has discovered about ‘history, archaeology, geology, astronomy, ocean sciences, atmospheric sciences, and the life sciences’—Plimer's list—refutes the global warming dogma.”
Interestingly, Plimer is also an
ardent atheist and evolutionist. In other words, he is normally a darling of
the political left.
As vehemently as Plimer has gone
after Christians, especially those who take a literal view of the Bible, he has
gone after the AGW crowd. He calls global warming “the new religion of
Now, of course, I could not disagree with him more when it comes to Christianity, the Bible, and Creation. I also find it highly ironic that, even though Plimer possesses a worldview that in almost every way agrees with those who have turned their eyes toward “Mother Earth”—worshipping and serving “created things rather than the Creator,”—he remains an “unbeliever.”
After all, evolutionary philosophy teaches that, since all life sprang from the same single celled source, all living things are “related.” Darwinian evolutionists see humans as a product of nature and natural processes. Therefore, to see humans on equal footing with all other life and owing our very existence to the earth are very logical conclusions for such a philosophy.
This view of the “
There you have it. Leave it to an atheist such as Plimer to recognize a religion when he sees one.
This would all be just interesting and sad if we weren’t
staring at climate legislation that threatens to cripple our economy further and
is based on such nonsense. However, there is still hope that, just as happened
in
Copyright 2009, Trevor Grant Thomas