A climate change cult has been well underway now for the past 80 or so years.
In the year 1948, Julian Huxley founded the group called the ‘International Union for Conservation of Nature’ (IUCN). This same Huxley also co-lead the formation of the group known as the ‘United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization’, most commonly known as UNESCO, in 1946.
Huxley was most famously known for his views on eugenics, a theory handed down to him by Francis Galton, the half-cousin of Charles Darwin, who first penned the term ‘eugenic’ in his book titled ‘Inquiries into Human Faculty and it’s Development’ in 1883. Eugenics can be defined as the study of the science of being genetically wellborn, ‘eu’ meaning “well” in Greek, and ‘genos’ meaning “kindred” or “offspring”.
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Gaia Earth
In Greek mythology, the Earth is believed to be a living spiritual entity, a deity, known simply as Mother Earth, or ‘Gaia’. This entity is believed to be the originator of all life, a primordial deity, through which all other Greek mythological deities and life were formed.
One writer describes ‘Gaia Earth’ in this way:
‘Spiritually, Gaia symbolizes the soul of the Earth and is the embodiment of maternal power. In this sense, she is quite literally life itself. More than a mother, Gaia is the entire reason life is being sustained. In relation to this, the belief of Earth being a living entity has lent to the modern Climate Movement, where Gaia is affectionately referred to as Mother Earth by climate activists across the world.’
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Who was the Unabomber?
In 1978, Ted Kaczynski began a near 20 year targeted mission, attempting to murder select individuals, through constructed explosive devices, which killed three people and seriously injured others.
In 1995, The Washington Post, upon threat of “intent to kill” by the ‘Unabomber’, published a 35,000 word essay written by Kacyznski, outlining his ideological views on the cause of all negative outcomes experienced by the world today.
The root issue, he believed? Industrial revolution and development. These he believed, ‘have been a disaster for the human race. They have greatly increased the life-expectancy of those of us who live in “advanced” countries, but they have destabilized society, have made life unfulfilling, have subjected human beings to indignities, have led to widespread psychological suffering (in the Third World to physical suffering as well) and have inflicted severe damage on the natural world. The continued development of technology will worsen the situation.
It will certainly subject human beings to greater indignities and inflict greater damage on the natural world, it will probably lead to greater social disruption and psychological suffering, and it may lead to increased physical suffering even in “advanced” countries.’
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Upon the release of this document, which was read by millions of people, Kacyznski found fame and notoriety in a different direction, eventually leading to his arrest and imprisonment, but also leading to the formation of a large network of like-minded individuals, who corresponded with him through letter while he was in prison.
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One such individual was Derrick Jensen, who outlined his ideological views in common with Kacyznski:
‘ “All modern technology must be eliminated — at any cost.” I agree. Please define modern. How far back do you want to go? Certainly I go farther back than the industrial revolution. I would go farther back than clocks. Here’s how I would say it. “Civilization must be eliminated — at any cost.” I would also say that, and I know that you and I may disagree on this, that civilization will go down in the reasonably near future, and that it is our primary task to see that it does so…”
“A managed wilderness is not a wilderness… Human control over wilderness must be avoided at all cost.” I would agree with this. I do not believe in management, nor do I believe in control. This does not mean that humans cannot exist within that wilderness. It DOES mean that civilized humans cannot exist within that wilderness.” ‘
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In response, Kacyznski echoed the same sentiments shared by Thomas Malthus, of the 18th century, stating:
‘If we are ever to get rid of the system, we will have to accept the consequences. The human race will have to pass through fire. When a species becomes too numerous, typically it reaches a point where it suffers a sudden population collapse, through starvation, epidemic, or whatever. The human race should be subject to the same law.’
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Green Anarchism
In 2011, Derrick Jensen founded the group called the ‘Deep Green Resistance’.
In their website, they state:
‘…civilization – the social structure that is responsible for destroying life on Earth. By recognizing the roots of the problem, we can create meaningful strategy to address it.
…industrial civilization is incompatible with life. Technology can’t fix it, and shopping—no matter how green—won’t stop it. To save this planet, we need a serious resistance movement that can bring down the industrial economy. Deep Green Resistance evaluates strategic options for resistance, from nonviolence to guerrilla warfare, and the conditions required for those options to be successful. It provides an exploration of organizational structures, recruitment, security, and target selection for both aboveground and underground action.’
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Part of this resistance includes an ‘Underground Action Calendar’, whereby ‘actionists’ can publicly share the attacks they have made on various components of infrastructure, such as substations, pipelines, telecommunications, powerlines, railways, buildings, dams, power stations and roads. This calendar can be viewed here.
As Matt Ehret from Canada writes,
‘Strange things are happening. Every few days, it has become customary to hear stories of trains carrying toxic waste derailing in rural food producing regions of the USA, or food processing plants going up in flames.
…Over the past two years a vast array of explosions of food processing facilities, granaries, and train derailments have rained down across North America and Europe. Is this destruction caused by “underground” eco-terror campaigns?
…Across the USA, over 1,951 dams were demolished in the past decade, including 57 in 2021. While many onlookers champion this restoration of nature, the destruction to lives caused by the reduction of food production and affordable electricity is devastating.
Bug eating appears to have no limits to its production since Canada’s government has proudly unveiled the world’s largest cricket farm while at the same time declaring war on conventional farming with a threatened 30% reduction in food production by 2030.
In the USA, Biden’s 2023 infrastructure bill pours more money into “appropriate” green energy sources that are of such low quality that humanity’s means of production will collapse resulting in the deaths of millions of people worldwide’.
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An Oil Spill and Earth Day
In the year 1969, an offshore oil rig off the coast of California situated close to the city of Santa Barbara, suffered a blow-out, releasing millions of gallons of oil into the surrounding area and beaches. This blow-out had been due to a waiver to proceed well drilling without a secondary wall of casing, normally required when drilling close to a high-pressure gas zone.
‘Union Oil requested the U.S. Geological Survey to waive various well casing requirements. Well casing prevents oil and gas from escaping the well bore and migrating into the surrounding geological formation… Solanas – exercising his legitimate statutory discretion – had authorized Union to drill A-21 without installing any surface casing at all. Moreover, he had permitted Union to run its conductor casing down to only 238 feet beneath the ocean floor.’
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What is interesting to note, is that for a well of that depth, federal regulations required conductor casing to be installed to a minimum depth of 300 feet, along with an inner secondary casing called surface casing, installed to a depth of 870 feet. Both of these requirements were waived.
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As it happened, a US Senator was traveling by plane over the area where the oil spill had occurred, triggering him to organize student campus teach-ins across America, ultimately leading to the first ‘Earth Day’ in 1970, in what was already a volatile time in America’s history.
A New Religion
In 1970, in response to the oil spill, Professor Rod Nash of the University of California Santa Barbara wrote and released this document titled ‘The 1970 Santa Barbara Declaration of Environmental Rights’.
In it, he states:
‘…centuries of careless neglect of the environment have brought mankind to a final crossroads. The quality of our lives is eroded and our very existence threatened by our abuse of the natural world.
…We need an ecological consciousness that recognizes man as member, not master, of the community of living things sharing his environment.
We must extend ethics beyond social relations to govern man’s contact with all life forms and with the environment itself.
…We must develop the vision to see that in regard to the natural world private and corporate ownership should be so limited as to preserve the interest of society and the integrity of the environment.
…WE PROPOSE A REVOLUTION in conduct toward an environment which is rising in revolt against us.’
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One famous environmentalist, David Suzuki, includes these words on his Foundation’s website:
‘We are nature. All people, and all species. We are interconnected with nature, and with each other. What we do to the planet and its living creatures, we do to ourselves. This is the fundamental truth guiding our work at the David Suzuki Foundation.
We are creatures of the Earth, and everything we learn about the Earth teaches us about ourselves.’
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David Suzuki is also quoted as saying:
“Every breath is a sacrament, an affirmation of our connection with all other living things, a renewal of our link with our ancestors and a contribution to generations yet to come. Our breath is a part of life’s breath, the ocean of air that envelopes the earth.”
“The way we see the world shapes the way we treat it. If a mountain is a deity, not a pile of ore; if a river is one of the veins of the land, not potential irrigation water; if a forest is a sacred grove, not timber; if other species are biological kin, not resources; or if the planet is our mother, not an opportunity — then we will treat each other with greater respect.”
“Our identity includes our natural world, how we move through it, how we interact with it and how it sustains us.”
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Greta Thunberg, another famous climate activist, states this:
“I don’t want you to be hopeful. I want you to panic. I want you to feel the fear I feel every day. And then I want you to act. I want you to act as you would in a crisis. I want you to act as if our house is on fire.”
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Thunberg also refuses to travel by plane, and in 2019 released this statement:
“As #COP25 [United Nations Climate Change Conference] has officially been moved from Santiago to Madrid I’ll need some help. It turns out I’ve traveled half around the world, the wrong way. Now I need to find a way to cross the Atlantic in November… If anyone could help me find transport I would be so grateful.”
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Matt and Mel Discussion
In this video below, Matt Ehret and Mel K discuss the climate change cult and it’s underground connection to eco-terrorism, for around the first hour or so.
Matt goes into greater depth about these things on his website, which you can read here. He also includes a partial history of the Unabomber, who underwent psychological experimentation and reprogramming led by a team of Harvard psychologists and CIA-MK Ultra advisers, while he was a student at Harvard University in the 1960s.