Green Tyranny: Exposing the Totalitarian Roots of the Climate Industrial Complex

Climate change was political long before Al Gore first started talking about it. In the 1970s, the Swedish Social Democrats used global warming to get political support for building a string of nuclear power stations. It was the second phase of their war on coal, which began with the acid rain scare and the first big UN environment conference in Stockholm in 1969.

Acid rain swept all before it. America held out for as long as Ronald Reagan was in the White House, but capitulated under his successor. Like global warming, acid rain had the vocal support of the scientific establishment, but the consensus science collapsed just as Congress was passing acid rain cap-and-trade legislation. Rather than tell legislators and the nation the truth, the EPA attacked a lead scientist and suppressed the federal report showing that the scientific case for action on curbing power station emissions was baseless.

Ostensibly neutral in the Cold War, Sweden had a secret military alliance with Washington. A hero of the international Left, Sweden’s Olof Palme used environmentalism to maintain a precarious balance between East and West. Thus Stockholm was the conduit for the KGB-inspired nuclear winter scare. The bait was taken by Carl Sagan and leading scientists, who tried to undermine Ronald Reagan’s nuclear strategy and acted as propaganda tools to end the Cold War on Moscow’s terms.

Nuclear energy was to have been the solution to global warming. It didn’t turn out that way, most of all thanks to Germany. Instead America and the world are following Germany’s lead in embracing wind and solar. German obsession with renewable energy originates deep within its culture. Few know today that the Nazis were the first political party to champion wind power, Hitler calling wind the energy of the future.

Post-1945 West Germany appeared normal, but anti-nuclear protests in the 1970s led to the fusion of extreme Left and Right and the birth of the Greens in 1980. Their rise changed Germany, then Europe and now the world. Radical environmentalism became mainstream. It demands more than the rejection of the abundant hydrocarbon energy that fuels American greatness. It requires the suppression of dissent.

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Green Tyranny: Exposing the Totalitarian Roots of the Climate Industrial Complex

Climate change was political long before Al Gore first started talking about it. In the 1970s, the Swedish Social Democrats used global warming to get political support for building a string of nuclear power stations. It was the second phase of their war on coal, which began with the acid rain scare and the first big UN environment conference in Stockholm in 1969.

Acid rain swept all before it. America held out for as long as Ronald Reagan was in the White House, but capitulated under his successor. Like global warming, acid rain had the vocal support of the scientific establishment, but the consensus science collapsed just as Congress was passing acid rain cap-and-trade legislation. Rather than tell legislators and the nation the truth, the EPA attacked a lead scientist and suppressed the federal report showing that the scientific case for action on curbing power station emissions was baseless.

Ostensibly neutral in the Cold War, Sweden had a secret military alliance with Washington. A hero of the international Left, Sweden’s Olof Palme used environmentalism to maintain a precarious balance between East and West. Thus Stockholm was the conduit for the KGB-inspired nuclear winter scare. The bait was taken by Carl Sagan and leading scientists, who tried to undermine Ronald Reagan’s nuclear strategy and acted as propaganda tools to end the Cold War on Moscow’s terms.

Nuclear energy was to have been the solution to global warming. It didn’t turn out that way, most of all thanks to Germany. Instead America and the world are following Germany’s lead in embracing wind and solar. German obsession with renewable energy originates deep within its culture. Few know today that the Nazis were the first political party to champion wind power, Hitler calling wind the energy of the future.

Post-1945 West Germany appeared normal, but anti-nuclear protests in the 1970s led to the fusion of extreme Left and Right and the birth of the Greens in 1980. Their rise changed Germany, then Europe and now the world. Radical environmentalism became mainstream. It demands more than the rejection of the abundant hydrocarbon energy that fuels American greatness. It requires the suppression of dissent.

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Green Tyranny: Exposing the Totalitarian Roots of the Climate Industrial Complex

Green Tyranny: Exposing the Totalitarian Roots of the Climate Industrial Complex

by Rupert Darwall
Green Tyranny: Exposing the Totalitarian Roots of the Climate Industrial Complex

Green Tyranny: Exposing the Totalitarian Roots of the Climate Industrial Complex

by Rupert Darwall

Hardcover

$25.99 
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Overview


Climate change was political long before Al Gore first started talking about it. In the 1970s, the Swedish Social Democrats used global warming to get political support for building a string of nuclear power stations. It was the second phase of their war on coal, which began with the acid rain scare and the first big UN environment conference in Stockholm in 1969.

Acid rain swept all before it. America held out for as long as Ronald Reagan was in the White House, but capitulated under his successor. Like global warming, acid rain had the vocal support of the scientific establishment, but the consensus science collapsed just as Congress was passing acid rain cap-and-trade legislation. Rather than tell legislators and the nation the truth, the EPA attacked a lead scientist and suppressed the federal report showing that the scientific case for action on curbing power station emissions was baseless.

Ostensibly neutral in the Cold War, Sweden had a secret military alliance with Washington. A hero of the international Left, Sweden’s Olof Palme used environmentalism to maintain a precarious balance between East and West. Thus Stockholm was the conduit for the KGB-inspired nuclear winter scare. The bait was taken by Carl Sagan and leading scientists, who tried to undermine Ronald Reagan’s nuclear strategy and acted as propaganda tools to end the Cold War on Moscow’s terms.

Nuclear energy was to have been the solution to global warming. It didn’t turn out that way, most of all thanks to Germany. Instead America and the world are following Germany’s lead in embracing wind and solar. German obsession with renewable energy originates deep within its culture. Few know today that the Nazis were the first political party to champion wind power, Hitler calling wind the energy of the future.

Post-1945 West Germany appeared normal, but anti-nuclear protests in the 1970s led to the fusion of extreme Left and Right and the birth of the Greens in 1980. Their rise changed Germany, then Europe and now the world. Radical environmentalism became mainstream. It demands more than the rejection of the abundant hydrocarbon energy that fuels American greatness. It requires the suppression of dissent.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781594039355
Publisher: Encounter Books
Publication date: 10/03/2017
Pages: 352
Product dimensions: 5.90(w) x 9.10(h) x 0.70(d)
Age Range: 18 Years

About the Author


Rupert Darwall is strategy consultant and policy analyst. He read economics and history at Cambridge University and subsequently worked in finance as an investment analyst and in corporate finance before becoming a special adviser to the Chancellor of the Exchequer. He has written extensively for publications on both sides of the Atlantic, including the Wall Street Journal, National Review, the Daily Telegraph and The Spectator and is the author of widely praised The Age of Global Warming: A History (2013).

Table of Contents

Foreword Conrad Black ix

Preface xv

Acknowledgments xix

1 America in Lilliput 1

2 The Great Transformation 13

3 Northern Lights 23

4 Europe's First Greens 29

5 Intellectuals, Activists, and Experts 42

6 Raindrops 57

7 Acid Denial 70

8 Double Cross 83

9 Born Again Greens 91

10 Scientists for Peace 105

11 Sweden Warms the World 117

12 Sun Worship 131

13 Renewable Destruction 143

14 The Curse of Intermittency 157

15 Climate Industrial Complex 170

16 Power without Responsibility 179

17 Swallowing Hard 193

18 Golden to Green 201

19 Capitalism's Fort Sumter 211

20 The Washington, D.C., Energiewende 218

21 "Our Kids' Health" 231

22 Saving the Planet 244

23 Spiral of Silence 254

24 The American Republic 261

Notes 267

Index 315

What People are Saying About This

From the Publisher

“Darwall wrote Green Tyranny as a sequel to his similarly incisive 2013 book, The Age of Global Warming, specifically to expand on the critical roots of environmental ideology and power-seeking in Europe — in particular Sweden and Germany. He also records how the issues of acid rain and ‘nuclear winter’ were in many ways political trial runs for the great assault on freedom in the name of saving the world from climate change. In each case, a critical factor was the corruption of science by politicized scientists.”
–Peter Foster, Financial Post

“The book does a great service in documenting the duplicitous dealings of the Climate Industrial Complex; disrobing bogus emperors is always a worthy cause…Rupert Darwall deserves high praise for rising to the occasion and telling it like it is.”
–Juliana Geran Pilon, Israel Journal of Foreign Affairs

Green Tyranny is a must-read for every person who cherishes freedom and who wants to know how environmentalism could become so powerful that, in some countries, it seems like a new state religion.”
–Wolfgang Müller, Acton Institute

“On a subject on which so many people’s opinions are fixed into dogma, it is valuable to have a fresh and iconoclastic voice. Looking at the history of the climate debate and what preceded it, as Rupert Darwall does, gives us a much-needed perspective, and should make us re-examine our own opinions.”
–Robert Tombs, professor of history at Cambridge Universityand author of The English and Their History

“Everything has a history. We are blessed that Rupert Darwall has eloquently linked the roots of environmental extremism to the modern assault on American exceptionalism in hydrocarbons. Darwall powerfully illuminates the reality that the climate debate is less about the future of ‘the planet’ and more of a full-on assault on hydrocarbons and democratic institutions in America’s (so far) free-market disruption of global energy markets.”
–Mark Mills, tech and energy expert and co-author of The Bottomless Well: The Twilight of Fuel, the Virtue of Waste, and Why We Will Never Run Out of Energy

“The documentary evidence provided by Darwall is irrefutable, for this is a considered, well-researched and scholarly work.”
–James Delingpole, Breitbart

“While his first book provides an account of the intellectual sources of the global warming movement from an English and American perspective, Green Tyranny focuses on the less well-known background in Sweden and Germany…It’s an impressive piece of scholarship written in a lucid style.”
–Myron Ebell, Director of the Center for Energy and Environment, Competitive Enterprise Institute

“In this new volume, his forensic rigour again puts muscle into every page.”
–Tony Thomas, Quadrant

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