Well, Al Gore and Bill Maher are blaming global warming for all the flooding. Meanwhile, a piece in The American Thinker says the Corps of Engineers is intentionally flooding America’s heartland due to concerns from environmentalists.
First, here’s a video clip of HBO’s Bill Maher: (h/t Accuracy in the Media)
Here’s more from Accuracy in the Media:
Al Gore gave a speech in New York last week in which he linked the flooding in the Midwest and the fires in Arizona to global warming: “Today, the biggest fire in the history of the state of Arizona is spreading to New Mexico. Today, the biggest flood in the history of the Mississippi River Valley is under way right now,” Gore said. “At what point is there a moment where we say, ‘Oh, we ought to do something about this?’”
One of Gore’s dimmer acolytes, Bill Maher, took up the issue on his show on HBO, “Real Time with Bill Maher.” Maher seemed to be hooked up to a machine that gave him a shock every time he uttered the words “global warming,” which he repeatedly did, before, in each case, correcting himself to say “climate change.” He said, “I don’t call it global warming anymore because that is bad. It is climate change.” Maher finally got it out, sort of, and asked, “Why doesn’t he [Obama] point to this and say this is all because of climate change. He doesn’t seem to use what he has to make a case.”
AIM linked to this piece in The American Thinker by Joe Herring: (Joe will now be a guest on Tuesday’s Voices of Montana)
Some sixty years ago, the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers (USACE) began the process of taming the Missouri by constructing a series of six dams. The idea was simple: massive dams at the top moderating flow to the smaller dams below, generating electricity while providing desperately needed control of the river’s devastating floods.
But after about thirty years of operation, as the environmentalist movement gained strength throughout the seventies and eighties, the Corps received a great deal of pressure to include some specific environmental concerns into their MWCM (Master Water Control Manual, the “bible” for the operation of the dam system).
Greg Pavelka, a wildlife biologist with the Corps of Engineers in Yankton, SD, told the Seattle Times that this event will leave the river in a “much more natural state than it has seen in decades,” describing the epic flooding as a “prolonged headache for small towns and farmers along its path, but a boon for endangered species.” He went on to say, “The former function of the river is being restored in this one-year event. In the short term, it could be detrimental, but in the long term it could be very beneficial.”
We need to begin the investigations immediately. It seems that it is sanity, and not the river, that needs to be restored.