by Augusto Zimmermann November 19, 2023 from RT Website
FILE PHOTO: Environmental activists participate in a die-in during a rally for action against climate change in the Financial District in New York City. © Drew Angerer / Getty Images
disrupting fellow humans' lives, and wishing for death on a massive scale, environmentalism shows cult-like tendencies...
Those primitive peoples believed that through human sacrifice, the forces of nature could be coerced in their favor.
For example,
The modern environmentalist movement is often compared to a religion.
Above and beyond the presence of actual neo-pagans and Gaia worshippers in its ranks, the environmentalist movement itself is displaying characteristics of a nature-worshipping cult... and a remarkably anti-human one at that.
The Just Stop Oil movement provides a compelling example of how modern environmentalism has become a primitive and barbaric religion by any other name.
In October 2022, iconoclastic activists targeted Vincent Van Gogh's Sunflowers (1888) in the National Gallery, London, for a "climate emergency" protest.
By damaging works of art
in museums, blocking roads, stopping play at sports matches and
more, these eco-fascists reveal an environmentalism not only endowed
with apocalyptic overtones but also with an intent on making
life miserable for fellow humans and destroying some of the finest
examples of historic human achievement.
However, 'environmentalist' efforts to cut carbon emissions make energy less affordable and accessible, which,
By contrast,
At the core of climate-change extremists' beliefs are two main tenets:
This sounds like
religious scripture, and, while environmentalists will readily
provide scientific research to back up their statements, rarely will
they tolerate counter-arguments - such as when someone points out
that none of their apocalyptic predictions have come
true so far.
When the temperature rises, we hear,
But when there's a rapid cooling, we hear,
According to Jonah Goldberg, the founding editor of National Review Online,
In other words,
This irrefutability makes it a perfect basis for a religious belief.
Franklin Delano Roosevelt, who served as US president from March 1933 to April 1945, once contended that,
Life requires the satisfaction of necessities like food, clothes, and shelter.
Hence, Roosevelt insisted that,
James Tonkowich from the Institute on Religion and Democracy in Washington, DC, explains that there is a long history of environmentalist thinking that sees humans primarily as consumers and polluters.
Forgoing children and even having an abortion is thereby promoted by the 'greenie elites' in the so-called 'Western democracies' as environmentally friendly, while childless women are doing their bit to reduce the carbon footprint of civilization.
A married woman once told a newspaper that,
The same article reports another woman who terminated her pregnancy in the firm belief that:
Of course, concerns about overpopulation are not new.
In 1968, ecologist Paul Ehrlich echoed 18th-century economist Thomas Malthus when he predicted worldwide famine due to overpopulation and advocated immediate action to limit population growth.
Ehrlich's 'The Population Bomb' was one of the most influential books of the last century.
Needless to say, that prophecy never came true...
Despite all the worry,
access to food and resources increased as the global population
rose.
Prince Philip, the late Duke of Edinburgh, wrote in 1986:
We should be deeply suspicious of any argument that employs language that refers to humans as,
This is an argument that
betrays a desire to bring death at a large scale, to
eliminate human beings in search of some utopian
small number of sustainable survivors.
We have come to the point
that even a new human life is seen as a threat to the environment,
where some candidly contend that new babies represent an undesirable
source of greenhouse emissions and consumers of natural resources.
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