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greenpeace_activists

Unethical Greenpeace actions threaten the livelihoods and lives of millions

Should corporate ethics principles apply only to profit-making companies? Or should they also cover nonprofit corporations, especially those that badger for-profits to be more “socially responsible”?

Should corporations be judged partly on creating jobs, supporting communities, or improving and saving lives? And should nonprofit corporations be penalized for impeding the enhancement of human life?

The answers should be self-evident. But they’re not, as US nonprofits and politicians have repeatedly demonstrated.

Consider Greenpeace. This self-proclaimed paragon of virtue constantly harasses companies that it deems insufficiently virtuous in advertising their products, protecting the environment and promoting their public image. But the Rainbow Warriors’ own actions would frequently merit fines or even jail time if committed by profit-making businesses.
Greenpeace publicity stunts, anti-corporate campaigns and fund-raising appeals are often laden with false and misleading claims about companies and their operations. The Warriors justify their actions as necessary to advancing their legal, legislative and regulatory agenda – and getting people and foundations to write a check or click their website’s “donate now” button. Almost anything goes, because Greenpeace and its comrades in eco-warfare are apparently beyond the reach of the Lanham Act and mail fraud or tax laws that apply to ordinary corporations and citizens.

In the olden days, it made sense to carve out exceptions, to protect legitimate public interest organizations from persecutions and prosecutions based on inadvertent falsehoods or political motivations. But that was before the roster of tax-exempt nonprofits included so many unsavory elements, like unscrupulous eco campaigners and pressure groups for whom truth, ethics and real social responsibility mean little.

In 1995, Greenpeace attacked Shell Oil, claiming the company was going to dump tons of oil and toxic wastes in the ocean, by sinking an obsolete North Sea oil production platform as an artificial reef. A year later, after raking in millions in contributions and free publicity, the Warriors admitted they’d known all along there had been no oil or chemicals on the platform.

Their shiny armor got tarnished, but there were no legal repercussions. A few years later, the Rainbow Warriors were caught diverting funds raised for tax-exempt educational purposes into non-exempt, and sometimes illegal, lobbyist and activist programs. Donors got charitable deductions, and Greenpeace got more millions to stage protests against drilling, manufacturing and free trade; lobby Congress and EPA; and vandalize crops and corporate facilities.

The IRS sent Greenpeace a strong reprimand, demanding that it cease its money laundering, but again no real penalties. Canada, by contrast, refused to recognize the Greenpeace Environmental Foundation as a charity, saying its activities provided no discernable benefits to the public and, in fact, could send families “into poverty.”
But back in the USA, former EPA Administrator-turned-Climate-Czar Carol Browner and other federal agency heads continue to fork over large sums of taxpayer money to eco-activists, to subsidize their anti-corporate, global warming, “sustainable” energy and regulatory thumbscrew campaigns. Meanwhile, the taxpayers are precluded from writing off contributions to congressional candidates who might support long overdue investigations, reforms and penalties.

The truly odious ethical violations, however, involve activities that directly damage the livelihoods and lives of innocent people, particularly in impoverished countries.
In Britain, France and elsewhere, Greenpeace vandals have destroyed bio-engineered crops, wiping out millions of dollars in research to develop food plants that require fewer pesticides, are more nutritious, reduce dangerous mold toxins, withstand floods and droughts, and increase crop yields. The people who would benefit most from this research are the poorest, most malnourished on Earth. They could improve their lives, simply by planting different, better corn, cotton or soybean seeds.

“With the old maize,” says South African Richard Sithole, “I got 100 bags from my 15 hectares [38 acres].” “With Bt maize I get 1,000 bags. And now I don’t have to buy any chemicals.”

In fact, Bt corn has enabled farmers like Sithole to cut pesticide use and expenses by 75%, triple their profits, save 35-49 days per season working in fields, and save enough to buy a refrigerator or even new house. And yet rich-country Greenpeace activists oppose the technology.

Greenpeace campaigns against insecticides and insect-repelling DDT are even more lethal. These chemicals could prevent malaria, which kills a million people annually and leaves millions more brain- damaged. Today, DDT is sprayed just on the inside walls of thatch and cinderblock homes, to keep mosquitoes out and serve as a long-lasting bed net over entire families.

But Greenpeace claims “some researchers think” DDT “could be inhibiting lactation because of its estrogen-like effects and may be contributing to lactation failure throughout the world.” No peer-reviewed medical studies back up these claims, and lactation problems are definitely associated with the malaria and malnutrition that would be reduced by technologies the Warriors oppose.

Worldwide, 1.5 billion people still don’t have electricity for lights, refrigerators, stoves, schools, shops, hospitals and factories that would bring health, opportunity and prosperity. Yet Greenpeace continues to battle hydrocarbon, hydroelectric and nuclear power, telling people they should be content with solar panels or wind turbines that provide intermittent, insufficient energy – and guarantee sustained poverty.

Greenpeace justifies its anti-energy ideologies by claiming they are preserving rivers, avoiding dangerous radiation and preventing “runaway” global warming. It has vilified me and two of my Committee For A Constructive Tomorrow colleagues as “climate criminals” and applauded a recent Rolling Stone magazine article that branded CFACT’s ClimateDepot.com director Marc Morano as a “climate killer.”

Our “crime”? Saying climate change is natural and cyclical. Noting that thousands of scientists agree there is no convincing evidence that human CO2 emissions are causing a global warming disaster. And pointing out that, even in the midst of a global cooling period and widening Climategate scandal, Greenpeace is still clinging to its tired fabrications and storylines.

Why the Packard, Winslow, Schaffner Family and other foundations continue to support Greenpeace remains a mystery. That the Turner, Rockefeller Brothers and Merck Foundations would give hundreds of thousands to Greenpeace’s anti-biotechnology campaigns is astounding. That other donors are now using Fidelity, Vanguard and Schwab to hide their donations suggests that they don’t want their friends and neighbors to know they give money to this shady outfit.

Last month’s climate gab fest offered an opportunity for CFACT activists to highlight these ethical lapses and give Greenpeace a dose of its own medicine. They unfurled a "Propaganda Warrior" banner from the rails of the Rainbow Warrior ship, and a “Ship of Lies” banner from Greenpeace’s other vessel, the Arctic Sunrise, as they lay anchored in Copenhagen harbor.

“Greenpeace’s callous disregard for the truth and people’s well-being has become intolerable,” CFACT executive director Craig Rucker stated. “They need to start behaving honestly and ethically. We don’t expect them to be Mother Teresa, but it would be nice if they’d start helping people to improve their health and living standards, and began supporting real environmental stewardship.”

The world would be a much better place.

Paul Driessen is senior policy adviser for the Committee For A Constructive Tomorrow (CFACT), which is sponsoring the All Pain No Gain petition against global-warming hype. He also is a senior policy adviser to the Congress of Racial Equality and author of Eco-Imperialism: Green Power - Black Death.

Comments  

 
# Gary 2010-01-17 22:07
GreenPeace is populated by wide eyed naive idiots lead by dishonest Nutbars.
They are barely above PETA in credibility.
Ignore them. They are too stupid to pay attention to .
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# Bob 2010-01-18 03:16
Opposing adoption of golden rice by Greenpeace is even greater scandal. Each year 50.000 children get blind and millions are suffering by A vitamin deficiency. Now that technology is available using genetically modified rice Greenpeace uses all sorts of propaganda, to slow down its approval and cultivation. Terrible!
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# amicus curiae 2010-01-18 09:58
while i realise Gpeace are a seriously tainted group I do dispute the benefits of GM foods. No human safety data and Mon... do as IPCC do they HIDE their reseach and results. as climate change is a fraud so is the claims of high yields and need for it.Recent independant research in truth does show issues with GM grains. Until it it PROVEN independantly safe I refuse to consider it acceptable.owning 80% of the world seed stocks is NOT good for the world.Golden rice is a miserble failure. spending the reseach money on Vit A drops would have saved millions in the 30 years that sham has been going on for.

greenpeace wwf and others are responsible for the approval of Kyoto in aus and now we see Farmers land stolen without reparation because of it.
see www.agmates.ning.com Peter Spencer blog page
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# Bob 2010-01-18 12:15
I am sure that your opinion is such because of the series of misinformation placed deliberately by the same organizations, that promote global warming. Also the scaring methods are the same.
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# Pete 2010-01-18 12:38
ALL.. corn is genetically modified.

Tastes good; farmers have higher yields, so price is lower, more people have food.
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# Michael 2010-01-18 16:06
The problem I have with GM crops is the crippling restrictions and bullying tactics that the big companies use. for example, farmers are not allowed to re-plant any of their crop to produce the next year's crop (they will be sued if they try). They have also been known to sue farmers who don't use GM crops, just because there was un-intended "spill-over" from a neighbor's crop.
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# KDK 2010-01-18 20:14
True.. isn't it lovely to pollute your neighbors crops, then SUE THEM!!!!

Insanity rules... Monsanto is EVIL; no wonder bho loves them and uses their people in his admin... Pathetic.
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# KDK 2010-01-18 20:11
BS... GM/AGW are in the same boat. No long-term real science. Investigations by independents are done all the time and do find flaws with GM. It is NOT natural to insert genes from other species into our natural food sources claiming, like agw "this will save the world"... etc. Anyone promoting agw must be profiting from it, pure and simple.
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# Craig 2010-01-27 11:43
All crops that are currently grown commercially are modified, and have been since humans turned to agriculture.Farmers used seeds from the best performing crops to increase yield,creating strains that flourish under different conditions. Although ancient, it is none the less "genetic manipulation", no different from ranchers reproducing their best animals. This has always been done using best current technology, trial and error, GM etc. "All times are modern times"
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