@BreesAnna I sincerely hope the inquiry - when it comes - has a remit to cover the full extent of the way the MSM have conducted themselves, not least in the spreading of misinformation & scaremongering.
Over the past fifty years, the world has lost an area of Amazon Rainforest roughly the size of India.
That's equivalent to Uruguay every 5–7 years since 1970. Much of it is now baked laterite clay, as hard as concrete — and nothing can grow there now. Around 1.3–1.5 million km², or 20–24% of the original 6.7 million km², is gone — along with 10% of Earth's known species: 40,000 plants, 3,000 freshwater fish, 1,300 birds, 427 mammals and millions of insects (most are still unnamed).
The main drivers are expanding cattle ranching (70-80%), soy and palm plantations, illegal logging, mining and roads cut through the forest, like the Trans-Amazon Highway.
High-value hardwoods already vanish by the millions of cubic metres, but so does balsa for wind turbines. Between 2015 and 2025, an area of 20–25 million hectares was stripped in the western Amazon — much of it illegally.
A single 100-metre blade consumes 150 m³ of ancient forest. This 'balsa fever' has devastated watersheds in Ecuador and Peru, hitting protected areas and indigenous territories, feeding factories in China, Europe and the US.
Degradation and new frontiers in Bolivia and Peru keep the pressure on. Scientists warn that at 20–25% lost, large parts of the Amazon can flip irreversibly to dry savanna.
Every new turbine blade now carries a hidden Amazon invoice. That's the price of tragedy.
Meet the real Ed Davey
Ed Davey earned £833 an hour – over £220,000 in total – advising lawyers representing the Post Office. This involved taking taxpayers’ money to persecute terrified and innocent people.
Global plant biomass has increased by an astonishing 60% since the start of the Industrial Revolution (1760 to 1840).
This transformational period began in Great Britain with the advent of coal, steam power and mechanised manufacturing. It marked a massive historical shift from agrarian economies to heavy industry — and with it, the return of stored carbon back into the atmosphere.
Since then, atmospheric CO₂ has risen from a baseline of 280 ppm to over 420 ppm. Far from just 'pollution', this increase has supercharged global plant growth via the CO₂ fertilisation effect.
Satellite studies led by NASA have confirmed the planet is becoming visibly greener. Long-term data from 1982 to 2015 reveals 25–50% of vegetated lands have greened significantly. The added leaf area is equivalent to twice the continental United States — and CO₂ fertilisation explains roughly 70% of that growth.
The productivity gains are even more striking when integrated over time. Global photosynthesis — the ultimate proxy for plant growth — is also up by more than 30% since 1900, a trend heavily supported by peer-reviewed analysis (such as Haverd et al).
This has triggered higher crop yields, enhanced carbon uptake by global vegetation, and the noticeable greening of drylands across Africa, China, and India.
CO₂ isn't the enemy. It's fundamental plant food that has helped make the modern Earth the greenest it has been in decades.
@RealPatriotsRVQ@patriots777888 I don’t trust any of them but out of a pretty reprehensible bunch I prefer someone who hasn’t spent the majority of his/her career sponging off the taxpayer
Bill Clinton: “I killed myself trying to give the Palestinians a state. I had a deal they turned down that would have given them all of Gaza and 97% of the West Bank. You name it. They turned it down.”
The Palestinians never wanted peace.
This must be shared every single day.