Itโs no secret that many of the people and organizations funded by cigarette companies to defend โsmokerโs rightsโ and downplay the harmful effect of tobacco smoke have been involved in the energy industry-funded campaign to downplay the serious effects of climateย change.
No group typifies this more than the Heartland Institute, a Chicago-based โthinkโ tank that simultaneously operates the โsmokerโs loungeโ and โglobal warming factsโ sections on their website. The former arguing for โsmokerโs rightsโ and railing on about the need for โsound scienceโ on tobacco issues and the latter arguing that โglobal warming is not aย crisis.โ
Itโs no coincidence that the Heartland Institute has also received funding over the years from companies that stand to benefit from delaying government regulation in the areas of tobacco and greenhouse gasย emissions.
According to publicly available documents the Heartland Institute has received $676,000 from oil giant ExxonMobil. The oil money stopped flowing in 2006 from Exxon, but Dan Miller, executive vice president of the Heartland Institute, called its funding from ExxonMobil โpocket change.โ โWe can live without Exxonโs contribution just fine,โ Miller said. Yaย right.
Other reported funders over the years have been Philip Morris Management Corp., Chevron USA, the National Coal Association, the Brown & Williamson Tobacco corporation, Ford Motors, and Generalย Motors.
In his self-published book on tobacco smoke oddly titled Please Donโt Poop in My Salad, Heartlandโs President, Joseph Bast argues that a moderate amount of tobacco smoke is a mereย annoyance:
On global warming, Bast argues on Heartlandโs websiteย that:
Downplay the effects, downplay the need to do anything – same strategy, different piles of money. I guess everyone has to make a buckย somehow.
This month weโre giving away FREE copies Nobel Laureate Dr. Andrew Weaverโs new book Keeping Our Cool: Canada in a Warmingย World.
Go here to find out more details about DeSmogBlogโs monthly bookย give-away.
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