Guilbeault attacks Western Standard over climate change story
https://www.westernstandard.news/news/guilbeault-attacks-western-standard-over-climate-change-story/61396
Climate Change Steven Guilbeault has attacked the Western Standard on social media over a recent story calling him out.
Guilbeault previously published fake news from the Associated Press via CTV about 2024 being the "hottest year ever." All while Los Angeles burned.
The Western Standard provided strong evidence from geologic history, via Greenpeace co-founder Patrick Moore, that average global temperatures were much warmer prior to human industrialization.
Moore said, overall, Earth's temperature is actually cooling when charted through geologic time. There is a very slight recent warming — used by Guilbeault and others to provoke hysteria.
"Enough is enough," Guilbeault said on Tuesday. "The non-stop spread of misinformation is one of the greatest threats to fighting the run-away effects of a changing climate. This recent example from the Western Standard is particularly appalling."
Many of Ottawa's economic and environmental polices revolve around Guilbeault's religious attachment to climate change — Net Zero — ideology and carbon tax / rebate socialism — which has been a disaster for Canada.
He didn't appreciate being called out.
Extreme climate change, painful as it can be, is a normal part of life on earth. It's not new — but its politicization is.
Most atmospheric C02, crucial for survival, is produced by the earth.
Guilbeault has threatened to impost a de facto production cap on Alberta oil and gas to help save the planet from climate change.
Canada produces less than 2% of global emissions. A production cap would harm the economy and further necessitate dependance on carbon tax rebates — validating Guilbeault's beliefs.
"There is no definitive scientific proof, through real-world observation, that carbon dioxide is responsible for any of the slight warming of the global climate that has occurred during the last 300 years, since the peak of the Little Ice Age," said Moore, who holds a PhD in Forestry from the University of British Columbia.