Breakdown of Planet of the Humans
There is a very good reason people question theories. It’s because they are not as yet proven facts. That’s why it’s always been okay for “climate change deniers” to question the “climate change alarmists”, as the new Michael Moore backed film “Planet of the Humans” has done.
Like a green religion, the environmental flock has been trying to have the film banned for supplying false information (as they see it). I see it as good clean information to help even the greenest of cult members face the flaws and inconsistencies of the climate change movement: namely that renewable energy in 2020 is as bad for the environment as fossil fuels (and cannot be produced without petroleum); and that many environmental leaders are as corrupt and hypocritical as former TV evangelist Jim Baker.
The documentary shows several examples of environmentalists telling people at rallies that the event is produced entirely on renewable energy, yet the crew around back laugh as diesel generators provide the real power. Other environmental fairy tales exposed in the film:
• Electric vehicles plug into grids fed by coal or natural gas. Vehicles are often charged at night when there is less wind and no sunshine.
• A football field sized solar array can only produce enough power for 10 homes. To feed a city the size of Lansing, Michigan (110,000 pop.) the array would have to be 40 sq. km, more than half the size of the city itself. . . . contd.