Bergoglian eco-mania just a means to an end
Ecological conversion…
A load of Bergoglian garbage, you say?
Well, yes, but it’s not his garbage, per se; Francis (as he likes to be called) is just the trash man du jour as he himself acknowledged later in the address when he gave credit to John Paul the Great Ecumenist who first issued that call back in 2001.
In context, the Polish pope said:
Unfortunately, if we scan the regions of
our planet, we immediately see that humanity has disappointed God’s
expectations. Man, especially in our time, has without hesitation
devastated wooded plains and valleys, polluted waters, disfigured the
earth’s habitat, made the air unbreathable, disturbed the
hydrogeological and atmospheric systems, turned luxuriant areas into
deserts and undertaken forms of unrestrained industrialization,
degrading that “flowerbed” – to use an image from Dante Alighieri
(Paradiso, XXII, 151) – which is the earth, our dwelling-place.
We must therefore encourage and support
the “ecological conversion” which in recent decades has made humanity
more sensitive to the catastrophe to which it has been heading.
Devastated… Disfigured… Unbreathable… Unrestrained… Catastrophe…It’s always the same with these humanists and their earthbound causes; rallying the masses with a near endless flow of hyperbole in order to create a frenzied sense of urgency.
Even as John Paul II spoke, contrary to his claim that the environment was being devastated with neither restraint nor hesitation by the industrialized nations of the world, the same were investing in technological advances that would make more efficient use of the planet’s natural resources, lead to an improved quality of life for many of its poorest inhabitants, while also lowering humankind’s impact on “our dwelling-place.”
For example, 2001 was the very year that the first mass-produced hybrid automobile, the Toyota Prius, hit the marketplace.
As for the plight of the poor, one would think based on Francis’ constant drumbeat about income disparity and poverty that the trend is decidedly downward. Not so.
In a 2017 Op-Ed for New York Times, Nicholas Kristof, a columnist specializing in “human rights, women’s rights, health, and global affairs,” posed the following pop quiz:
On any given day, the number of people worldwide living in extreme poverty:
A.) Rises by 5,000, because of climate change, food shortages and endemic corruption.
B.) Stays about the same.
C.) Drops by 250,000.
We know how the Bergoglians would answer, but Kristof reveals:
Polls show that about 9 out of 10
Americans believe that global poverty has worsened or stayed the same.
But in fact, the correct answer is C. Every day, an average of about a
quarter-million people worldwide graduate from extreme poverty,
according to World Bank figures.
This is the New York Times! About that so-called “climate change” problem, Francis said in his address:
All governments should strive to honor
the commitments made in Paris, in order to avoid the worst consequences
of the climate crisis … We cannot afford to waste time.
Putting an ersatz religious spin on his eco-mania, he said:
Here we can think back on the call that
Francis of Assisi received from the Lord in the little church of San
Damiano: “Go and repair my house, which, as you can see, lies in ruins”.
Today, the “common home” of our planet also needs urgently to be
repaired and secured for a sustainable future.
In truth, as told by St. Bonaventure in a biography of St. Francis:
Francis began zealously to repair the
church materially, although the principle intention of the words
referred to that Church which Christ purchased with his own blood, as
the Holy Spirit afterward made him realize.
Church, smurch… who needs it? Not Francis, who went on to invoke the
“climate / environmental / ecological crisis” three more times in his
brief address even though the cat’s well and truly out of the bag –
there is no crisis.Al Gore, the Nobel Prize winning purveyor of global warming hysteria, whose personal carbon footprint is the size of several small towns put together, is a laughingstock among all but the most deluded for his laundry list of failed predictions of environmental doom.
More noteworthy are the scientists whose voices will no longer be silenced; men like Richard Siegmund Lindzen, an atmospheric physicist known for his work in the dynamics of the atmosphere, atmospheric tides, and ozone photochemistry, who said in a recent interview:
The mostly non-scientist proponents of
climate hysteria realize that distant forecasts of remote problems by
inadequate models are unlikely to motivate people to shut down modern
industrial society. They, therefore, attempt to claim that we are seeing
the problems right now. Of course, the warming that has occurred over
the past 200 years or so has been too small to have been a major factor.
However, objective reality matters little when it comes to propaganda –
where repetition can effectively counter reality.
The Bergoglians, however, are undeterred, and we were given a hint as
to the reason when Jorge said, “All governments should strive to honor
the commitments made in Paris…”Their motives were made all the more clear when the Ringleader in Rome went on to say:
Along with states, local authorities,
civil society, and economic and religious institutions can promote the
culture and practice of an integral ecology.
States, authorities, religious institutions…You see, eliminating poverty and caring for Mother Earth are not the real goals of conciliar madmen like Wojtyla, Bergoglio, and Ratzinger for that matter; those are but rallying cries used to stir the emotions of the ignorant and the faithless as a means toward attaining the ultimate prize – a one-world government that will have oversight over a one-world religion.
SOURCE