During the May 1 edition of The OโReilly Factor, talk-radio guest host Laura Ingraham used a well-known Republican tactic to smear Al Gore, former Vice President, climate activist and Nobel Peace Prize winner. Ingraham took only those parts of Goreโs Waxman-Markey testimony that supported her contention and ignored the rest.
Ingraham may consider this balanced reporting, but here in the real world we call this a convenient and highly unscrupulous oversight.
Goreโs testimony, from the April 24 House Energy and Commerce Committee hearing (on the 2009 American Clean Energy and Security Act), clearly stated that โevery pennyโ he earned from his climate-change advocacy (i.e., books, movies, and investments in renewable energy) has gone into his nonprofit organization, Alliance for Climate Protection, which aims to persuade Americans to adopt comprehensive solutions to the approaching climate crisis.
By conveniently overlooking that part, Ingraham suggests that Gore has profited wildly from his activisim. Of course, Ingraham โ who is raking it in hand over fist on her โconservativeโ (read Republican fear-mongering) talk show, books and appearances โ probably hasnโt come into contact with a real penny for a decade. This, if not so infuriatingly duplicitous, would actually be funny, suggesting as it does that only a select few are allowed to profit from their labors.ย
Ingrahamโs slant was less surprising than the usual Republican tactics, which frequently involve non sequiturs and Bible-bending (โGod decides when the earth will endโ), but the viciousness of her attack apparently took even Marc Morano by surprise.
Morano โ whose climate-change denial website Climate Depot purports to โredefineโ global warming โ cautiously suggested that Gore was an ideologue, so it wasnโt fair to say he was โdoing it all for the moneyโ (this is known as damning with faint praise). Morano was quick to add that global warming is โbig businessโ in Washington, with four climate lobbyists for every member of Congress โ a remark that undoubtedly restored him to the right-wing climate denial fold, though probably not without a proverbial rap on the knuckles at some future date.
What Morano failed to note was that the largest sectors in this lobby are manufacturing, power companies, and the oil and gas industry, all of which oppose climate legislation and carbon taxes. In fact, the American Coalition for Clean Coal Electricity, or ACCCE (representing 48 mining firms, coal-hauling railroads and coal-fired utilities), was 2008โs biggest lobbyist group, spending $9.95 million, or more than any other organization.
But back to Ingraham, who suggested during the talk show that Gore has used his activism to enrich himself to the tune of about $98 million. Morano hastened to note that Goreโs future earnings from his carbon market operations will, if cap-and-trade passes, make the $98 million look โpikerlyโ (someone buy that man a Thesaurus; next time try paltry, Morano).
My takeaway from the OโReilly episode? The Republican right has backed itself into such an indefensible position on climate change, misrepresentation is the lastย defense.
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