But aside from increased energy use not being
consistent with Gore’s preaching about downsizing our lifestyles, it’s
worth noting that his personal energy use increased despite using
energy saving devices and solar power.
During a
time of an alleged crisis, the profile of his personal power
consumption is more akin to "greed" than "green"; moreover, the
environmental impacts of the Tennessee Valley Authority’s "green power"
program from which Gore buys high-priced energy are murky, if not
downright trivial.
Only 0.05 percent of TVA’s power
is "green" and TVA acknowledges its green power program still produces
greenhouse gases. All Gore really knows about any alleged benefits is
that he pays an extra $4 for every 150-kilowatt hours of "green power"
purchased.
He also says he has purchased "carbon
offsets to offset the family’s carbon footprint." It’s not at all
clear, however, that carbon offsets actually offset anything.
Carbon offsets and the industry that sells them are so dubious that
Congress and the Federal Trade Commission launched investigations of
them last year.
Gore’s electric bill is outpaced only by his amped-up rhetoric and chutzpah. In his new slideshow,
a sort of "Son of An Inconvenient Truth," Gore ironically chides those
who "talk the talk" but don’t "walk the walk" when it comes to saving
the planet.
In observing that religion is about
behavior rather than belief and citing Gandhi’s "you must become the
change that you wish to see in the world," Gore says, "… the outcome
about which we wish to be optimistic is not going to be created by the
belief alone except to the extent the belief brings about new
behavior."
Well, we’ve seen Gore’s behavior with
respect to his personal energy consumption and it certainly doesn’t
match up with the alleged beliefs he continually broadcasts through a
gullible media to a gullible public. Gore’s new slideshow goes on to
expand the definition of behavior.
"As important as it is to change the light bulbs, it is more important to change the laws," he says.
Here’s
where it gets more interesting. The laws that Gore is referring to, of
course, are those that would provide subsidies to and mandates for the
alternative energy industry. Gore spotlights a number of these
companies, including Smart Car; Amyris Biotechnologies; Altra Biofuels;
Mascoma (cellulosic ethanol); Great Point Energy (biomass-to-gas and
carbon capture technology); Altarock Energy (geothermal energy);
Bloomenergy (fuel cells); Missole (solar technology); and Ausra (solar
technology).
As the companies; corporate logos
flash on the screen, Gore states: "Here are just a few of the
investments that I personally think make sense. I have a stake in
these."
Putting aside the questionable legality
of Gore’s promotion of his investments — conduct that could very well
be contrary to federal and state securities laws that forbid an
unlicensed individual from promoting unregistered securities to the
public — it seems that it’s important to change the laws so that Gore
can expand the $100 million-plus fortune he’s already accumulated since
leaving public service in 2001.
Without laws that
either mandate the adoption of alternative energies or subsidize their
use, society has little use for these inefficient and
not-ready-for-prime-time alternative energy technologies. While showing
an image of the founding fathers signing the Declaration of
Independence, Gore calls for a new "hero generation" to save us from
the "planetary emergency."
He apparently sees
himself as a 21st century Ben Franklin. But while the founding fathers
risked their lives and fortunes in the pursuit of political freedom and
self-government, Gore risks just a small part of his vast fortune in
pursuit of potentially huge profits that will come at the expense of
our pocketbooks and freedoms.
He can hardly be
called heroic. Even more grandiosely, Gore sums up his slideshow by
stating, "I think we ought to approach this challenge with a sense of
profound joy and gratitude that we are the generation about which a
thousand years from now, philharmonic orchestras and poets and singers
will celebrate by saying 'they were the ones that found it within
themselves to solve this crisis and lay the basis for a bright and
optimistic human future.'"
Move over, Achilles and Hector. Make room for Gore-acles, the hero of the future epic "The Iliad (Global Warming Edition). Source