Of all the Elitism I’ve read from the climate cult rich folks, this easily makes the top 20. Maybe top 10
World Economic Forum 'agenda contributor' and CEO of Rabo Carbon Bank, Barbara Baarsma, argues the case for a personal carbon allowance:
"If I want to fly, I buy some carbon emission rights from someone who can't afford to fly, for example… Or if someone lives in a small… pic.twitter.com/Ur1N7KEWKF
— Wide Awake Media (@wideawake_media) June 1, 2023
Got that?
“If I want to fly, I buy some carbon emission rights from someone who can’t afford to fly, for example… Or if someone lives in a small house, he can sell his carbon emission rights to someone who lives in a big house. This way, poor people can benefit from the green economy.”
You can sell you rights away so the rich folks can keep living the high life! They’ll probably offer a pittance, then you’ll be taxed on it. Meanwhile
Italy helped a retailer open chocolate and gelato stores across Asia.
The United States offered a loan for a coastal hotel expansion in Haiti.
Belgium backed the film “La Tierra Roja,” a love story set in the Argentine rainforest.
And Japan is financing a new coal plant in Bangladesh and an airport expansion in Egypt.
Funding for the five projects totaled $2.6 billion, and all four countries counted their backing as so-called “climate finance” – grants, loans, bonds, equity investments and other contributions meant to help developing nations reduce emissions and adapt to a warming world. Developed nations have pledged to funnel a combined total of $100 billion a year toward this goal, which they affirmed during climate talks in Paris in 2015. The funding helped crown Japan and the United States as two of the top five contributors.
Although a coal plant, a hotel, chocolate stores, a movie and an airport expansion don’t seem like efforts to combat global warming, nothing prevented the governments that funded them from reporting them as such to the United Nations and counting them toward their giving total.
No, no, not a scam at all.
Read: Good News: You Poors Can Give Your Carbon Emissions Rights To Elites »