
Financial Post
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Richard Littlemore |
Political Position Paper Masquerading as Business Survey5 Jun 07
Look to the Financial Post business magazine ad feature (attached) for the latest bit of public relations spin on climate change and Kyoto.
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Richard Littlemore |
National Post: Defending the Insensible9 Apr 07
Here's a vintage piece from Canada's National Post, a long non sequitur that presumes to prove that CO2 is not threat - by calling it benign and by suggesting that there really isn't that much of it around. Update I: Gunter's column was re-published in the Vancouver Sun today . |
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Richard Littlemore |
Denier Specialist Solomon Offers up Careful Culling of "Science"22 Dec 06
Lawrence Solomon is back in the National Post with another in his series on climate change "deniers" - this time lauding the patriarch of the denial movement, Dr. Richard Lindzen. First, let's concede that Dick Lindzen is probably the most credible climate change denier on record, even if his actual denials grow ever more conditional. But it's a leap to go from Lindzen's caution about the certainties of science to Solomon's contention that the case for anthropogenic climate change is unproven. In fact, Solomon has misled his readers on that count. |
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James Hoggan |
In response to the Financial Post26 Nov 06
The following letter was sent to the National Post yesterday, Friday, Nov. 24, 2006. A much-edited version ran in the business section today. We reprint the entire letter here for your interest: I must respond to a series of unwarranted attacks by Financial Post Editor Terence Corcoran on me personally and on DeSmogBlog.com that I run, independent of my business (James Hoggan & Associates). |
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Richard Littlemore |
Climate Change Economics From a Real Economist25 Nov 06
In an article entitled Mr. Corcoran, Meet Mr. Orwell, the Financial Post gives Simon Fraser University economist Mark Jaccard space to skewer its own editor, Terence Corcoran. Jaccard makes all kinds of good sense arguing that a carbon tax would be the most effective way to begin to address the greenhouse gas problem. He also says that Corcoran's recent "diatribe (to the contrary) reminds me of George Orwell's Nineteen Eighty-Four, with Mr. Corcoran as Minister of Truth - redefining concepts and rewriting history to accord with his opposition to reducing such greenhouse gas emissions as carbon dioxide." |






