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Neither is there any destruction of the ozone layer. Volumes of scientific texts have been published to refute this hoax. Have anyone ever wondered why the so-called ozone hole is over the arctic regions, which are about as far away from populations centers where CFCs are used, as one can get? The reason is that ozone is constantly generated through interaction with sunlight, which is at its weakest in the Arctic. Then add to it chlorine from volcanos, and the result is what you see. For this natural result the U.N. supported environmental lobby has banned the world production of CFCs, forcing mankind to replace all existing refrigeration systems the moment they require recharging, at a global estimated cost of 5 trillion dollars. This cost is roughly equal to the national debt of every nation on the planet, combined, for which sake hospitals are shut down, social support structures are eliminated, etc.. The CFC ban means the end to refrigeration in most of the poor countries, at an estimated cost of 20-40 million human deaths per year. These figures may prove to be conservative, once the cold chain breaks down, and the already scarce food stuffs in third world nations cannot adequately be preserved.
It is a shame that Canada supports these conferences where such insane policies are shaped. Why is it, that this great country with the highest sensitivity to human life support organizations for murder? There is no CFC problem that endangers the ozone. Mankind is endangered. CFCs are 4 times heavier than air, they settle into the ground and are found dissolved in the oceans where they have been measured to exist, but they were never ever actually detected in the stratosphere, where they are merely assumed to exist.
3. Should Canada act on recommendations from U.N. conferences on human rights? The U.N. talks about human rights; what ever happened to the right of mankind to life, to economic and technological development, to infrastructure development, to water development, to agricultural development - all of which the U.N. and the IMF actively impede, imposing poverty and starvation? By the U.N.'s own figures 33,000 children under the age of 5 die every day as the result of imposed underdevelopment. Add to this the adult population, and the figure rises to close to 100 million deaths per year. What about those people's rights? What about a human being's right to life?
Yes, the rights of woman are grossly ignored in many countries, even in this one to some degree, but the right of mankind to develop the human potential is far more violated by the U.N., itself, than the worst of the rest of human rights violations combined. Hitler murdered 6 million in his gas chambers, over a span of 6 years, and the atrocities will never be forgotten. But what about the U.N., and its policies that murder 100 times as many people? Who cries for them? Who even cares? Whoever enacts policies that destroy human lives does commit murder as surely as if he were to go out into the fields and cities to bludgeon people to death. Canada should not be involved with any organization, no matter what its name may be, which aim it is to destroy human beings.
4. Should Canadian aid to third world nations be coupled to environmental protection? No nation intentionally destroys its environment. It is forced underdevelopment that causes a people to resort to lower grade resources that put pressures on the environment. Modern, high tech.. agriculture, with intelligent use of fertilizers, pesticides, and large scale irrigation projects, minimizes the land use requirements for supporting a population. Except, this is the very type of project that the U.N. prevents through its IMF austerity demands, its promotion of environmental myths, and its aid in banning the most effective and safest pesticide ever developed, the DDT chemical. Thus, invariably, the pressure is to exploit the natural system, like in the Amazon. Or would the U.N. prefer that people don't eat? It is the primitive economy that destroys the environment, and this for totally unnecessary reasons.
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Stories about
War
from novels by Rolf A. F. Witzsche
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