Should You Cancel Your July 4 Barbecue to Save the Planet?

“A family barbecue creates almost as much air pollution as doing a 100-mile car trip, scientists claim,” according to The Sun, a UK news company.

By “pollution,” the author means greenhouse gases, primarily carbon dioxide, the gas used by plants to make food and release oxygen. A beefburger barbecue is claimed to be responsible for 23,048 grams of CO2, compared with 12,648 g from a chicken barbecue, and 8,236 g from a veggie sausage barbecue.

“Experts…claim by simply switching from cheese-topped beefburgers to chicken, families could nearly cut their carbon footprint in half. Not only do cows need lots more farmland than poultry, they scoff large amounts of grain and also burp greenhouse gases as they chew.”

Of course, one barbecue is completely insignificant; it’s about symbolism or perhaps the “optics.” The Green New Deal is part of UN Sustainable Development goals that include a war on meat. Some proclaim that meat consumption should be less than 1 oz per day. We are said to need a “Great Food Transformation” because “civilisation is at risk.”

When politicians call for “fundamental transformation,” find out what this means for the way you live.

For more on the Green New Deal, see Civil Defense Perspectives, January 2019.

For the effect of a drastic reduction in atmospheric CO2, see Climate Change IQ Question #5.

What Happens to Single-Family Homes under the Green New Deal?

Democrats running for President are very vague about the Green New Deal that they all seem to favor. “Smart,” “energy-efficient,” and “environmentally friendly” sound great. But what if it means 320 sq ft per person living areas, no parking places, and shared kitchen facilities?

Single-family houses in the suburbs may be a thing of the past. Without cars, people will need to live close to work. Most people may be unable to afford to retrofit their homes to meet energy standards: the cost to meet California requirements for an average home is $58,000. And as demands for “renewable” energy production cause electricity bills to soar (like in Germany), few will be able to afford to heat or cool a large home. Walk-up stack-and-pack aPodments might be in your children’s future.

The Green New  Deal is not Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez’s original idea. It’s part of the UN’s Sustainable Development agenda. A French nongovernmental organization, Novethic, proposes forbidding all new construction of single-family homes except trailers.

Let’s not wait to pass the Deal before we find  out what is in it.                

For more on the Green New Deal, see Civil Defense Perspectives, January 2019.

Will Middle-class Americans Be Able to Drive Cars under the Green New Deal?

Democrats running for President all seem to be in favor of a Green New Deal. Americans need to ask them: Exactly what does this mean—to us?

Joe Biden promises to build 500,000 charging stations for the new all-electric fleet.  If we are going to wean ourselves off our “addiction” to fossil fuels, that means we need to get over our love affair with the internal combustion engine. That means replacing—or junking—260 million cars.

Questions to ask your candidates:

1. How many batteries for electric cars can we manufacture?

2. How much will the basic electric car cost?

3. Will it be big enough to carry the kids and the groceries?

4. Will AAA add a new benefit: a diesel-fueled truck carrying a diesel generator to rescue cars stranded between charging stations?

5. Will you still be allowed to drive your old car? Or will gasoline be unaffordable or unobtainable when Bernie Sanders finishes taking the profits out of the oil industry?

6. Will there be a place to park your car?

7. What if the charging station doesn’t have enough juice? The “green” economy will require twice as much electrical generating capacity as we have now. And the more wind and solar we add, the more unstable the grid and the more wastage of power.

 8. What will become of our current fleet, including the cars not yet paid for?

         

Who Should Be Prosecuted for the “Climate Crisis”?

Kamala Harris was in prosecutor mode during the second Democratic presidential debate, and said it’s not “climate change,” but “climate crisis,” which threatens our very existence as a species. Joe Biden promises 500,000 charging stations for our new, all-electric automobile fleet. Bernie Sanders wants to “up the ante” on the Paris climate accord and make the rest of the world go along with a drastic transformation of the energy system. Millions need to rise up in a revolution against the fossil-fuel industry, the insurance industry, corporate greed in general, he said, and “we only have 12 years.” Gov. Hickenlooper said Colorado is leading the way on tough methane regulations.

Some follow-up questions that didn’t get asked:

1. Would they outlaw gasoline-powered cars and diesel-powered trucks? How about trucks carrying diesel generators to rescue electric cars stranded between charging stations? How about emergency vehicles or farm equipment or excavation equipment with internal combustion engines?

2. What would supply back-up generating capacity when solar and wind facilities are not generating any power (say to supply those charging stations and keep the lights on in the operating room)?

3. How do we prosecute China for building hundreds of coal-fired generating stations?

4. Where do we get jet fuel for our public officials if our own industry is destroyed? From Iran?

5. Who will pay the hundreds of billions of dollars to Third-World dictators in reparations for our driving cars and using coal-generated electricity?

6. Does AOC think her mentor Bernie Sanders has the “social intelligence of a sea sponge” to believe her 12-year deadline for Doomsday?

7. What did Gov. Hickenlooper do about methane-emitting cows and termites in Colorado? Should we still be allowed to eat meat?

For other major issues related to atmospheric carbon dioxide and climate (wildfires, health effects, ocean acidification, sea-level rise, Arctic ice, hurricanes, and more), see Climate Change IQ test. How well does your favorite candidate do?

Climate Change Questions for Democratic Presidential Candidates

During the first Democratic presidential debate, a number of candidates stated that climate change was an existential threat, one of our biggest national security threats, or their first priority. Here are some follow-up questions they all should be asked:

1. Would they outlaw gasoline-powered cars and diesel-powered trucks? How about trucks carrying diesel generators to rescue electric cars stranded between charging stations? Emergency vehicles or farm equipment or excavation equipment with internal combustion engines?

2.  Would they restrict meat consumption, air conditioning and heating, elevators, or home appliances such as clothes driers?

3. What would supply back-up generating capacity when solar and wind facilities are not generating any power?

4. How much increase in electrical bills is acceptable? What do they think of increases in Germany and Australia?

5. How much should homeowners be expected to pay to retrofit their homes for new energy-efficiency standards?

6. How many jobs will be lost in mining, oil and gas production, automobile manufacturing and servicing, other industries that require large amounts of reliable electricity, the trucking industry, etc.?

7. What will happen to living standards?

8. How much will climate change will result?

For other major issues related to atmospheric carbon dioxide and climate (wildfires, health effects, ocean acidification, sea-level rise, Arctic ice, hurricanes, and more), see Climate Change IQ test. How well does your favorite candidate do?

Health Effects of Marijuana

DDP Newsletter March 2019 Vol. XXXV, No. 2

In November 2018, Michigan became the 10th state to legalize recreational cannabis use. More than 200 million Americans live in states that have legalized marijuana for medical or recreational use, writes Alex Berenson (WSJ 1/4/19). One powerful push is the desire for tax revenue that might otherwise go to neighboring states. The New York City Comptroller’s Office estimated that legalizing marijuana for persons over age 21 could yield $1.3 billion annually at State and local levels. The Comptroller also touted reduced costs of law enforcement and the societal benefit of having fewer people, especially young black males, damaged by the impact of a criminal conviction (tinyurl.com/y68cjevf). E-mailed tips on the best cannabis stocks to buy anticipate more widespread legalization.

Continue reading “Health Effects of Marijuana”

Street Wars in the U.S.

DDP Newsletter January 2019 Vol. XXXV, No. 1

What most people have seen of Antifa is an occasional street demonstration, or a “woke” group of college students hanging out in coffee shops. In North Carolina, Antifa helped in the attack on memorials such as Silent Sam, a statue of a Confederate soldier. But beneath the theater of “protests” and occasional violent outbursts is a fairly high level of organization and funding by outside groups that are skilled at directing the masses, with the goal of sedition, not reforms.

Continue reading “Street Wars in the U.S.”

DDP 2019 – Agenda

The 37th Annual Meeting of Doctors for Disaster Preparedness will be in
Tucson, Arizona at the Doubletree Reid Park Hotel, July 19-21, 2019.

CLICK HERE to REGISTER TODAY

Make Your Room Reservation HERE Our group room rate is $89/night. Room reservation deadline is June 19.
Saturday and Sunday (July 20 & 21) will be two days full of presentations you won’t want to miss, from an all-star lineup of speakers!  Here is a preview of this year’s all-star faculty and topics:

Saturday, July 20, 2019

8:00 am: Willie Soon, Ph.D.
Dirty Tricks and Secrets of Greenpeace: All Green Cash and Not Peaceful. 

Dr. Soon, an astrophysicist, authored The Maunder Minimum and The Variable Sun-Earth Connection.

9:00 am: Ronan Conolly, Ph.D., Michael Connolly, Ph.D.          
Balloons in the Air: Understanding Weather & Climate. 
The son and father Connolly team use radiosonde balloon technology to study atmospheric chemistry and physics.

10:15 am: Debbie Bacigalupi
The UN 2030 Sustainable Development Agenda. 

Debbie Bacigalupi is a  California  cattle rancher and expert on the effects of environmental policy on rural America.

11:15 am: Patrick Wood
Technocracy: the Road to a “Scientific” Dictatorship. 

The author of Technocracy Rising and other books, Mr. Wood studies trends that  are transforming global politics, economics, and education.

12:15 pm: Jay Lehr, Ph.D.
Meeting the Energy and Water Needs of the Future. 

Dr. Lehr is a leading authority on groundwater hydrology and an internationally known consultant in many fields.

2:00 pm: Paul Driessen, J.D.         
How courtroom fraud is destroying companies, industries, technologies and honest science
.
Mr. Driessen is senior fellow with the Committee for a Constructive Tomorrow and author of Eco-Imperialism: Green Power Black Death.

3:00 pm: Robert Phalen, Ph.D.; James Enstrom, Ph.D.
The PM2.5 (Air Pollution) Controversy. 

Dr.  Phalen authored Introduction to Air Pollution Science. Dr. Enstrom is president of the Scientific Integrity Institute.

4:00 pm: Norbert Rempe
Induced Abortion: the Modern Anthropogenic Plague. 
Mr. Rempe worked 23 years at the Waste Isolation Pilot Plant (WIPP) near Carlsbad, NM. He is a DDP director.
 .
6:30 pm: Patrick Moore, Ph.D. 
Twelve Invisible Fake Catastrophes and Threats of Doom. 

Dr. Moore, Greenpeace co-founderauthor of Confessions of a  Greenpeace Dropout, has been a leader on environmental issues for 40 years.

Sunday, July 21, 2019

8:00 am: Steven Hatfill, M.D        
Mad Cow Disease: Forgotten, but Not Gone. Is Prion Disease a Threat in the U.S.? .
Dr. Hatfill is an adjunct assistant professor at George Washington Univ and has done research involving Ebola, Marburg, and orthopox virus.

9:00 am: The Irreproducibility Crisis in Science. David Randall, Ph.D. Dr. Randall is director of research for the National Association of Scholars. He writes about trends in higher education.

10:15 am: Carol Henricks, M.D. Healing Arizona Veterans        
A Cry from the Burn Pits:Toxic Injury in Veterans.
Dr. Henricks, a neurologist, is  a pioneer in using hyperbaric oxygenation and other modalities to heal seriously injured veterans.

11:15 am:  Jay W. Richards, Ph.D.     
The Human Advantage: Work in the Age of Smart Machines. 
Dr. Richards, a research professor at the Busch School of Business, Catholic University of America, is a  bestselling author.

12:15 pm: Donald W. Miller, M.D.
Lunch. If Not Oswald, Who Killed President Kennedy and Why? 

Dr. Miller practiced and taught heart surgery for 40 years and has authored 3 books and numerous articles, many for lewrockwell.com.

2:00 pm: George Gilder.
Life after Google: the Fall of Big Data and the Rise of the Blockchain Economy.
Mr. Gilder, author of 19 books, is a  founding fellow of the Discovery Institute, where he began his study of information theory.

3:00 pm: Charles Heller
Things to Know About Self-Defense

Mr. Heller is co-founder of Arizona Citizens Defense League. He has been a certified concealed weapons instructor for 26 years.

4:00 pm: Arthur Robinson, Ph.D.      
Truth in Education. 

Art Robinson is founder and research professor of chemistry at Oregon Institute of Science and Medicine, and editor of Access to Energy.

OPTIONAL TOURS:

SOLD OUT: On the morning of Friday, July 19, we will be visiting theworld-renowned Pima Air & Space Museum.  It is one of the largest non-government funded aviation museums in the world with over 100,000 square feet of indoor display space and a collection of 350 aircraft, including the first Boeing 777 and three hangers devoted to WWII aircraft.

The visit will include a tour of the word famous “Boneyard” aka the 309th Aerospace Maintenance and Regeneration Group (AMARG) Facility on the Davis-Monthan Air Force Base, featuring 4,000+ aircraft from the U.S. Air Force, Navy-Marine Corps, Army, Coast Guard, and several federal agencies including NASA in varying degrees of storage. A security check is require for the Boneyard portion of the tour and no one under age 16 is permitted.

SOLD OUT: Friday afternoon, we have the opportunity to also visit the Richard F. Caris Mirror Lab at the University of Arizona, which designs, fabricates, and tests the largest honeycomb optics in the world. Its mirrors are currently in the LBT, MMT, and Magellen telescopes among others. Currently, they are working on the mirrors for the LSST and GMT.
Friday evening, from 7pm to 9pm, will be the evening welcome reception where you can eat, drink, meet, and network with speakers and attendees.
There will be no group tour on Monday, July 22, but there are several places you may find interesting to visit on your own while you are in Tucson, such as the Titan Missile Museum, Arizona-Sonora Desert Museum, Kitt Peak Observatory, or Colossal Cave, just to name a few. 

We hope to see you in Tucson in July.

A Defenseless ‘Superpower’?

DDP Newsletter November 2018 Vol. XXXIV, No. 6

For decades, the American homeland has, by deliberate policy, been left virtually defenseless. The civil defense of the 1950s has been dismantled—only government elites are protected. We have only limited strategic anti-missile defenses. We have been relying on our status as the “world’s only superpower” to deter aggression by the threat of certain retaliatory annihilation. But what if American military supremacy is past, as Dr. Donald Miller argued at the 2018 meeting of DDP (https://tinyurl.com/y96dg8wd)?

In all the frequent reminders of the “911” disaster, two observations that are seldom discussed are: (1) The U.S. was apparently incapable of protecting Manhattan and the Pentagon from four hijacked airliners. Where was NORAD? Why no scrambled fighter jets? (2) Then our retaliatory strike against the alleged perpetrator (Afghanistan, which was purportedly harboring Osama bin Laden, who turned out to be in Pakistan) has us mired in a 17-year stalemate in the “graveyard of empires.”

During our 2017 tour of the National World War II Museum in New Orleans, I asked the docent about the vaunted “strategic triad.” He agreed that it certainly isn’t a triad now. At least the bomber aircraft are missing. The Strategic Air Command used to have nuclear-armed bombers on constant alert, and, as I recall, at least one airborne at all times.

Continue reading “A Defenseless ‘Superpower’?”

Green Health Hazards

DDP Newsletter September 2018 Vol. XXXIV, No. 5

To climate warriors, carbon is black, even when green in plants or invisible as CO2, and wind turbines and solar panels are green. These supposed ecophiles are generally against the reliable renewables, which require building dams or incinerators. “Green,” UNreliable energy sources get an undeserved pass on environmental impact.

The U.S. has so far managed to export the environmental degradation and human costs of mining rare earths and other necessary components of photovoltaic panels, wind turbines, and battery storage, but end-of-life costs are mounting.

The International Renewable Energy Agency (IRENA) estimated that solar panel waste, about 250,000 metric tonnes in the world at the end of 2016,  could reach 78 million metric tonnes by 2050 (Forbes 5/13/18, https://tinyurl.com/y8z5m7ar). A veteran solar developer said: “Contrary to previous assumptions, pollutants such as lead or carcinogenic cadmium can be almost completely washed out of the fragments of solar modules over a period of several months, for example by rainwater.” Toxic metals can be leached from broken panels because of natural events. In 2015, a tornado broke 200,000 solar modules at the Desert Sunlight solar farm in southern California. In Puerto Rico, Hurricane Maria broke the majority of the panels in the nation’s second largest solar farm.

Continue reading “Green Health Hazards”