See Al Gore at the Society of Environmental Journalists’ convention in Madison, Wisconsin.
See Irish filmmaker Phelim McAleer, director of Not Evil, Just Wrong, a movie critical of the global warming movement confronting Gore.
See Gore sweat (must be that darned global warming).
It seems that Gore’s flick, An Inconvenient Truth, is so packed with fraud and lies (gee, what a surprise – as Gore continues to rake in the millions made off this hoax.)
The question asked of Gore was: "The judge in the British High Court, after a lengthy hearing, found that there were nine significant errors [in the movie]. This has been shown to children. Do you accept those findings, and have you done anything to correct those errors?"
Gore brushed off the question by going straight to the sweet polar bears. "You don’t think they’re endangered?" Gore demanded of McAleer. (uh, no, their numbers are increasing)
But the United Kingdom’s High Court in London ruled that An Inconvenient Truth contains "alarmist and exaggerated" content which can only be legally shown to school children if accompanied by a warning regarding the film’s blatant "political brainwashing."
In his ruling, Judge Michael Burton said the "apocalyptic vision presented in the film was politically partisan and thus not an impartial scientific analysis of climate change." It was, he continued, the work of a "talented politician and communicator, to make a political statement and to support a political program."
Because he could not find a real polar bear succumbing to heat stroke in an iceless sea, Al Gore had to use an animated polar bear drowning in his movie. Finding the real deal is virtually impossible.
Truth is, polar bears are prospering. Residents of Barrow, Alaska, the state’s northern-most city, are always heavily armed with loaded shotguns when out and about, because of this population explosion. When in contact with a polar bear they are instructed to shoot to kill at close range.