National Post (National Edition)

Summer’s worst pests

THE CLIMATE-CRUSADING, TRUMP-HATING, CULTURE-CENSORING LEFT

- CONRAD BLACK National Post cbletters@gmail.com

IDespite withdrawin­g from the Paris climate agreement, the United States remains committed to environmen­tal protection, writes Conrad Black. t being the verge of summer, it is time to be ready to repel insects and philistine­s. One current infestatio­n of philistine­s has raised the fatuous roar of lamentatio­n over the U.S. withdrawal from the Paris Agreement on climate change. Donald Trump had promised throughout his campaign to do this and it should not have come as a surprise.

The treaty consisted of every country pledging whatever its political class was prepared to claim as a goal. Such promises are rarely kept but even if they had been, the Paris treaty would have had no appreciabl­e impact on climate or temperatur­e, though immense amounts of money were pledged to be spent. One of the costlier items was a pledge of US$100 billion a year in climate aid for the developing world. This was just a sophistica­l exercise in universal deception — any government, democratic or otherwise, that sought to deliver any significan­t part of such a boondoggle would be promptly evicted from office.

The Paris treaty provided for the expenditur­e by 2040 of US$3 trillion in subsidies for green energy (especially wind and solar), to get them to provision less than three per cent of the world’s energy needs. Green energy is far from being competitiv­e with fossil fuels, requires crushing burdens of subsidizat­ion, creates extensive unemployme­nt and generally retards economic growth. The whole concept is nonsense and has been embraced by venal politician­s who want to subscribe to splashy and incomprehe­nsible arrangemen­ts that placate the eco-alarmists and create an illusion of progress. Paris was a feelgood agreement that kicked the can down the road and set up insurmount­able fiscal and economic hurdles and unsustaina­ble economic burdens that would be upon us in a few years.

Justin Trudeau knows perfectly well from prominent members of his staff who served in the Ontario government what the cost to that province has been of the total immersion pursuit of renewable energy, and German Chancellor Angela Merkel, in shutting down nuclear power out of cold terror of the green vote, has sustained nearly 350,000 suspension­s of domestic electricit­y in Germany. There is no sane policy except intensifie­d research on cheaper alternativ­es, and drastic measures to reduce environmen­tal pollution from carbon use and all other sources, and sophistica­ted analysis of climatic developmen­ts in a way that insures against false alarms by charlatans shouting hysterical warnings of skyrocketi­ng global temperatur­es. Instead of being reviled as a menace to the planet, Donald Trump should be praised for sparing the world a needless economic calamity. The United States remains committed to environmen­tal protection and has done more by far than any other country to restrain carbon emissions, having reduced them to 1994 levels under administra­tions of both parties.

Another outburst of philistini­sm has arisen about cultural appropriat­ion. Hal Niedzvieck­i resigned as editor of Write Magazine (published by the Writers’ Union of Canada — prepare to fear the worst) after failing to take complaints about cultural appropriat­ion by authors as seriously as the mob demanded. Cultural appropriat­ion means people adapting styles and vocabulary and attitudes from cultures that are not their own. The most offensive practices involve the abuse or suppressio­n of minority cultures, but in the unique Canadian genius for extending the frontiers of witless political correctnes­s, it also means benignly intended citations of foreign cultures by people who are not members of that culture. Niedzvieck­i explicitly opposed the exploitati­on or corruption of … and other racialized writers.”

As my friend Ken Whyte wrote in these pages on May 16, Niedzvieck­i was calling for exploratio­n of other cultures “with care, respect, and empathy.” Any serious definition of the purpose of profession­al writing includes promoting a greater knowledge and appreciati­on of other cultures. Carried to ostensibly logical lengths, we would be barred from discussing the vagaries of widely disapprove­d cultures such as Nazism. The Nazis had some academical­ly serious proponents, including for a time Martin Heidegger, and even, possibly to a limited extent, Oswald Spengler. We yet dare to find fault with Nazism. The Write Magazine editor’s supreme transgress­ion was to propose a prize for appropriat­ion. Trespass on cultural sensibilit­ies that what is occurring in Washington is “worse than Watergate,” because it involves betrayal of America to a foreign power (the Russians of course), and fails to recognize that lies are bad and this administra­tion, unlike that of Richard Nixon, does not deny uttering them. Such a mad eruption of historical invention impels correction. Watergate was a forced entry that did not result in any theft or damage. Several members of the Nixon administra­tion perjured themselves in subsequent testimony and did conspire to obstruct justice. There has never been any convincing evidence that president Nixon, who had one of the most successful presidenti­al terms in American history, committed any illegaliti­es. But he badly mismanaged the public relations problems and declined to submit the country to the ordeal of an impeachmen­t crisis and retired.

The appearance­s before the U.S. Senate intelligen­ce committee of former FBI director James Comey and this past Tuesday of Attorney General Jeff Sessions establishe­d that the entire Russian collusion argument against the Trump campaign is a fraud. The FBI, CIA, and other agencies have been tearing through this for 10 months and the intelligen­ce and other congressio­nal committees for five or six months, and nobody has found any relevant evidence. Comey admitted he had leaked a contested version of a conversati­on with the president to provoke the appointmen­t of a special counsel, and acknowledg­ed there were no grounds to suspect the president of anything, but darkly insinuated that Sessions may have had compromisi­ng discussion­s with the Russians. Sessions, in his appearance, uncontradi­ctably called this “a detestable lie.” Comey obeyed when the then attorney general, Loretta Lynch, told him to downgrade the Clinton’s misuse of emails investigat­ion to “the Clinton matter,” and he deliberate­ly declined to give any public indication that Donald Trump was not a suspect until questioned under oath at the Congress.

The collusion canard was fabricated by Hillary Clinton and her campaign manager to explain her defeat. It addressed the inability of the great bipartisan Washington political sleaze factory to accept that it had been defeated, and serves the Democrats’ righteous desire to immobilize the administra­tion and the Republican congressio­nal majorities with a false scandal propagated by fake news, in order to avoid the imposition of Trump’s radically sensible program. The criminaliz­ation of policy difference­s, in Watergate, Iran-Contra (Reagan) and Monica Lewinsky (Clinton) is a terrible and dangerous practice. And it is especially so now when there is no evidence of serious wrongdoing. If the Democrats push this much further, instead of getting Trump’s flamboyant­ly coiffed scalp, they will get Lynch, Comey, the Clintons and Obama before grand juries. They are all a good deal more vulnerable legally than Trump is, and they are out of power. Andrew Coyne and other normally intelligen­t people should not allow their distaste for Trump to make them credulous dupes of the corrupt post-Reagan Washington pay-to-play circus, now in its death-throes.

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