I
remember it well. After reading his book “Earth in the Balance” I
had high hopes for Al Gore but I remember the betrayal – his
singualr roll in scuppering the Kyoto Agreement.
Now
he tells the world that all that needs to be done is to adopt “new”
technology.
This
man has to be exposed for who he is.
Don’t
fall for this charlatan
How the Kyoto Protocol Was Gored
Joshua
Frank
1
August, 2017
Seems
as though Al Gore’s part-documentary part-campaign flick is
reaching quite a few people this summer, environmentalists and
skeptics alike.
Perhaps
the ol’ VP is repenting for some of the dirty deeds he supported
during his compliant years in Washington.
One
of the more egregious of Gore’s follies, while serving his country,
came about in the late-1990s when the Clinton administration was
debating whether or not to back the largest international
environmental pact in history, the Kyoto Protocol. Mr. Gore, the big
“enviro,” despite common belief, was the one most responsible for
Clinton’s derailment of the landmark accord.
Seems
contradictory, I know. Here’s the most populist environmentalist
speaking out about the fact that the Earth is rapidly warming —
indeed, pointing out that humans are at least partially to blame.
Yet, when he had the power to do something significant at the
governmental level, Gore refused to act. In fact, Gore’s
culpability in enviro degradation goes well beyond his family’s
past ownership in Occidental Petroleum, where they owned over a
quarter of a million dollars in the company while Gore sought the
presidency in 2000.
It
was the winter of 1997 when Vice President Gore, who was in direct
control of Clinton’s environmental policies, flew to Japan to
address the international delegation about the US position on the
Kyoto Protocol. Gore and Clinton had just come off an election
victory and it was time to pay back the big oil and gas companies who
had handed over $6 million to their party the year before.
Gore
warmed up his attentive audience by affirming that Clinton and the US
public believed the Earth was in peril and that all global citizens
must act swiftly to save it. But in typical Gore doublespeak, he
declared the United States would not support the agreement because it
did not ask enough of developing nations, even though the US is the
leading polluter in the world.
As
Gore put it then, “Signing the Protocol, while an important step
forward, imposes no obligations on the United States. The Protocol
becomes binding only with the advice and consent of the US Senate.”
Gore
soon returned to Washington only to reiterate his message that the
Clinton administration would not put the Kyoto Protocol before the
Senate. “As we have said before, we will not submit the Protocol
for ratification without the meaningful participation of key
developing countries in efforts to address climate change,” he
said.
It
was at that moment when Clinton and Gore ruined any chances of the
Kyoto Protocol being honestly debated in Washington. Later in
November of 1998, Gore “symbolically” signed the accord, likely
to appease his environmental pals like the Sierra Club’s Carl Pope,
a close friend.
But
the Vice President’s tepid gesture couldn’t have carried less
weight. The Clinton administration, with Gore’s guidance, refused
to allow the Republican controlled Senate to decide on the Kyoto
Protocol for themselves. Gore advised Clinton not to send the
Protocol to the Senate to be ratified. The blame could have burdened
the Republican Party, not the Democrats and the Clinton
administration. But instead the buck stopped with Al Gore and Bill
Clinton. Predictably, President Bush followed their lead.
And
there you have it. It was Mr. Global Warming himself who first tried
to kill off the Kyoto Protocol.
JOSHUA
FRANK, author of Left Out! How Liberals Helped Reelect George W. Bush
(Common Courage Press, 2005) edits www.BrickBurner.org. He can be
reached at: BrickBurner@gmail.com.
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