First published at 07:49 UTC on March 2nd, 2020.
Hello!
Today we discuss how Greenpeace gets wrong their tree-planting strategy. First, they want to plant trees wherever, so that CO2 levels go down and we freeze. Well, you freeze, you are the biological beings after all. Second, at the same time …
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Hello!
Today we discuss how Greenpeace gets wrong their tree-planting strategy. First, they want to plant trees wherever, so that CO2 levels go down and we freeze. Well, you freeze, you are the biological beings after all. Second, at the same time that they want to prevent levels of CO2 to go up, denying the reclamation of deserts, they want to plant them in places with plenty of fertility, which will compete advantageously for CO2 with the regions bordering deserts, which are the ones with the potential to contract and eliminate deserts. And in the process they will be messing up with people in Africa and Latin America, to name two examples. From the comfort of their homes in places like Candem, in the UK.
Nice going, Greenpeace! You could even be regarded as navel-gazing racists, according to SJW standards!
References.
Greenpeace trying to plant trees in the wrong place, competing against African farmers...among others.
https://greenwire.greenpeace.org/uk/en-gb/events/camden-social-tree-planting-trees-cities-sat-30th-nov
The Andean Plateau, another place which needs to benefit from higher levels of CO2 and water.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Altiplano
Greenpeace activists damage a site in Nazca... to prevent us from stopping the next ice age and a snowball earth.
https://www.theverge.com/2014/12/11/7378035/peru-criminal-charges-greenpeace-nazca-heritage-damage
The Arctic Polar ice cap is just two million years old, get ver it!
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Greenhouse_and_icehouse_Earth#Modern_conditions
Reference and Link to our naughty heroes: Claussen, Martin, and Veronika Gayler. “The Greening of the Sahara during the Mid-Holocene: Results of an Interactive Atmosphere-Biome Model.” Global Ecology and Biogeography Letters, vol. 6, no. 5, 1997, pp. 369–377. JSTOR, www.jstor.org/stable/2997337.
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