Monday, January 24, 2011

Slaughter OF Millions Is Good For The Environment

By Semperpapa

It is a good thing that we can always rely on some elitist scientist to give us a chuckle or two.

Here is the case of Julia Pongratz, head of a research team at the Carnegie Institution’s Department of Global Ecology, quite a mouth full, I dare say.

Ms. Pongratz headed a study that concentrated on the environmental impact of great historical events and what these braniacs concluded was that the Mongol invasions of the 13th and 14th century had a real great impact on the carbon footprint mankind placed upon the environment.

Genghis Khan, so unfairly portrayed by John Kerry when he compared the Mongol tyrant to American troops in Vietnam, could be actually considered as the environmental pioneer, sort of an Al Gore with a personality.

The Mongolian leader, who was able to create an empire covering about 22% of the entire land mass of the time, was responsible for the slaughter of approximately 40 million people, during his eco-friendly marauding of Asia.

According to the superior brains at the Carnegie, the mass killing created a shortage of farmers which in turn fostered the re-forestation of large portions of agricultural fields and in turn the estimated absorption of about 700 million tons of carbon.

So, if my inferior intelligence does not fail me, it looks like that the best solution to the global warming debacle would be the elimination of a large portion of the world population and the return of large areas of land to its primitive state by eliminating the impact of mankind upon it.

Sounds good to me! Let’s start by eliminating all those snobs crowding the Carnegie Institute, small potatoes comparing to Genghis Khan, but we must start somewhere. We will then move on to all the other university professors and on to all liberal progressives.

That should get us in the ballpark.

According to their website, the Carnegie Institute is a private organization based on the Stanford campus, and it appears that, luckily, no public funding may have been used for the financing of this crock of horse manure.

But it is amusing, to some degree, that there are actually people out there in the utopian stratosphere of liberal progressivism, who would actually look at the brutality of a historical event like the Mongolian invasion and put a positive twist to it by paring it up with a false farce of today.

I wish there would be some video circulating of these moonbats having their meetings, probably interrupted by some tree worshiping services aimed at getting back in touch with the soul of vegetation.

Like I said, we can always count on these miscreants for a good laugh.

Just my thoughts!

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