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Tony HellerPLUS

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Deep Thoughts

  - 4:02

Deep thoughts from the left about climate change and other random ideas passing through their heads


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Uploaded 3 years ago  

November 24th 2020  

File Size: 50 MB

Category: Politics







20 Comments

Robert__C111

- 3 years ago  

Gosh, i have lived next to an ocean lagoon here in Australia for the past 30 years and during that time the level of the lagoon (outside of high and low tides) has not even raised a noticeable inch.

GreyGeek

- 3 years ago  

Bulgaria, like most of the other former eastern block countries, have homes built before 1990. They are prefabs with poor thermal insulation. Read cheap. Here are seven facts about the situation: https://borgenproject.org/7-facts-about-energy-poverty-in-bulgaria/

AncientDano

- 3 years ago  

Tony, I've noticed you've got no new videos on youtube the last 2 weeks. Have you decided to make the move here exclusive, or is youtube banning your videos the last 2 weeks as part of their "shut down anything that denies biden won" policy? I'm actually interested in your take on the whole dominion voting scandal.

Vlad

- 3 years ago  

I notice that the Bulgarians are using a renewable energy source - wood.

Zeke

- 3 years ago  

Newsom will have to get right on this future forest fire problem if it may affect his wine country property. That seems to be the only thing that motivates him, or any other Democrat, to reasonable action is self interest.

europa

- 3 years ago  

Scott Stephens is a professor of embezzlement propaganda using the hoax called climate change.

Mongoloid

- 3 years ago  

Misleading about Bulgarian data. Over 70% couldn't afford their homes, and now it's only 33%. Adding misleading stories doesn't help this great cause you've built.

GreyGeek

- 3 years ago  

Tony wasn't talking about 10 years ago, he was talking about today. Six other EU nations are in the same boat: https://www.statista.com/chart/12412/where-europeans-cant-afford-to-heat-their-homes/ However, if one does an DDG search on " can't afford " you'll find that 10.3% of Americans supposedly can't afford their electric bill. Other percentages can't afford their water bill, their property taxes, their down payments, and a ton of other things. Yet, the median income has risen to $68K and the poverty level is around $15K to $32K, depending on your income. $15K is a king's income in some countries, but not the USA. Most of Bulgaria's homes were built before 1990 using prefabs and poor insulation. Once they got rid of the yoke of Marxism they began to improve their lives. So, while 10 years ago 70% couldn't afford to heat their homes, no only 33% can't. That's a good improvement but still puts them behind the rest of the EU countries. More than anything it shows how poor a "worker's utopia" really is.

twaoPlons

- 3 years ago  

I agree with Toto :)

Touchstone

- 3 years ago  

please also open account on Rumble

Visser

- 3 years ago  

The brand new projections predict a 7-foot decline in intelligence for SFweekly readers.

CatastrophicNE

- 3 years ago  

If they turned those dead trees into 2x4s, it would solve a solve a couple problems. Have you seen the price of framing lumber recently? About double what it was a couple years ago. Maybe if the trees are in sensitive areas we could use those cool skidders that walk like giant insects that they use in Sweden.

PWeissmann

- 3 years ago  

Awesome Tony, Still loving your work. Particularly your destruction of the bogus global temperature graph. Keep them coming mate. ;-)

Mobius

- 3 years ago  

Someone said the Green New Deal will provide millions of jobs for Americans. Those jobs will be unboxing Chinese solar panels, assembling and setting them up. Not exactly jobs that need a college degree in puppetry. Or, maybe so...

JacobH

- 3 years ago  

"SFWeekly", that reads as Science Fiction Weekly. Good to see that the article does not disappoint in that. The question is what assumptions the scientists made to arrive at a sea level rise of 2.1336 meters. Seems like a rather arbitrary value.

TheGeneralist

- 3 years ago  

Bang on. Science fiction weekly. If you look at the sigmoid curve of sea level change over the last glacial period it is clear that we are at the top of the curve, and that sea level cannot rise significantly further. Intensive forest management by would create hundreds of thousands of high quality jobs not only harvesting timber, but also replanting and managing the forests, and provide much healthier habitat for wildlife if protected areas are properly managed to maintain old growth habitat for vulnerable species. Doing nothing only creates the conditions where wildfires can run rampant and cause more ecological and economic damage than is prevented.

stevetwosheds

- 3 years ago  

I just wondered whether this guy's claim at about 1 minute into his video, re record wild fires, is correct or not - the video is about the 737 Max but people do like to throw in their 2 cents on climate change at every opportunity, so wondered whether it was of interest to anyone. I imagine pilots are among the best informed but wonder whether Tony would have something to say about his claim.

Billington

- 3 years ago  

I'm not sure what claim you are referring to, the 100 million dead trees? I have been looking at the things Tony talks about for around a year now, I started with his realclimatescience.com page. There he has a section called Extreme Wildfire Fraud In The National Climate Assessment. Have you ever looked at his page?

JazzFan98

- 3 years ago  

the day of the rope approacheth

Matilda

- 3 years ago  

Correcteth