Wednesday
Nov302011
by Josh
Climate Change Act Reconsidered part I - Josh 129
Nov 30, 2011 Climate: IPCC Climate: Parliament Josh
A packed Committee Room 14, House of Commons, Westminster, London, UK, on Wednesday 30th Nov 2011, heard from Dr Philip Stott, Rev Philip Foster, Prof Ian Plimer, Donna Laframboise, James Dent, Ruth Lea and Matt Ridley. Josh sketched some notes...
... and we started with some verses from the Bible.
Click image for a slightly larger version. More as they are scanned in at Cartoons by Josh
Reader Comments (20)
Josh is excelling himself, I love what I see and hope there is more of this high quality cartooning to follow.
Some years ago, one of the telcos on this side of the pond had a series of warm, fuzzy TV ads encouraging viewers to "call long distance ... it's the next best thing to being there".
[With a nod to the late, great Canadian humourist, Stephen Leacock] Josh's Brilliant Sketches of a Little Meeting ... are the next best thing to being there!
These are superb! Many thanks, Josh :-)
Thank you Josh. :-)
I hope the Committee was receptive to the evidence provided and that the Act will be repealed or significantly watered down. But with Chris Huhne still there I doubt it. Come on CPS, charge the b*st*rd!
In our present economic climate and given the hiatius to the warming since 1998, the Act should be repealled. However, unfortunately, no chance of commonsense prevailing whilst Chris Huhme is around; so we will all be forced into yet more poverty and will struggle to pay our fuel bills not to mention the loss of industry and consequential increase in the jobless putting yet more strain on the public finances.
The first thing Osbourne should have done was to suspend the Act (repeal it if necessary) which would have effectively put more money in the pockets of consumers who may then have been able to spend a bit more in the High Street promoting growth and of course reduced the expenditure for industry also assisting growth. Then he should have drastically cut back spending on overseas aid which would have cut back on government waste saving many billions without adversely impacting on domestic hardpressed working families. These two measures would have done more to reduce the budget deficit than all the other measures taken together that he has put into effect. Yalk about poor economic management.
I liked the cartoons.
Well said Richard
Come on CPS, charge the b*st*rd!
Dec 1, 2011 at 1:11 AM | Chris B
Hell Chris! My first job of the day (after making the cuppa!) is to stoke up the computer, hit the online newspapers and search for CPS/Huhne! One of these days my wife is going to leap out of the bed (she likes and deserves her lay in at her age!) to find out why I am screaming in joy or disgust!
Great stuff. Some of this looks like it might have been inspired by Chris Huhne and the Climate Choir
Sorry Josh, compared to the "climate choir" you are just not funny, don't you when to give up ? !!!
Very good meeting, well done to all the speakers and to Josh! Also mention Johnny Ball with some trenchant comment on the poor behaviour at the BEEB and elsewhere.
Roger T, you are right, I cannot compete with Climate Choir. At least we had Philip Foster's bible verses which got a lot of laughs.
;-)
At the risk of repeating myself, the epetition to repeal the CCA is still there:
http://epetitions.direct.gov.uk/petitions/2035
Just over 1000 signatures to-date, although I expect that most people here have already signed it.
Until you de-programme the brainwashed green-twins Cameron and Milibean and then there is the loon Huhne to boot, I doubt that we are having any effect whatsoever.
Underpinning and steering the ship is the EU and Cameron is a fully paid up and very dutiful member and the hated EU - they are 'not for turning' the AGW supertanker.
Still, we've gotta try, BTW, good stuff JOSH!
I very much enjoyed listening to the presentations and thought this was a very worthwhile (and long overdue) event. It was good that we also had at least two MPs present - Andrew Tyrie and Peter Lilley - albeit ones who voted against the Climate Bill in 2008 and thus didn't need convincing!
Josh - I like the "Sorry we don't do history" mini cartoon, as IMO history is very much a neglected treasure trove when it comes to climate science.
I do so love a Josh cartoon first thi g in the morning!
Did you know that smiling, grinning and laughing transports more blood to the brain, which therefore functions much better?
Perhaps that is the reason watermelons don't get it and never will. They demonstrably have no sense of humour, so their brains can't work as they out to ...
:))
Gah!
It is of course "ought to", not 'out to'!!!!
iPad + aged eyes is not a good combination, alas.
I agree with Alex - and look forward to the next scan of Josh's amazing cartoons. I sat next to him yesterday and was most impressed by his drawing skills: we're lucky to have him on our side.
Re the unlikelihood of the repeal of the CC Act, I sent this email this morning to my MP, Peter Lilley:
Dear Mr Guenier,
Re your posting at 10.37AM
I heard you make this very interesting, and potentially very valuable, point yesterday. Well done. I do hope that you will feel able to share with us Peter Lilley's response. I now intend to make the same point to my MP, a junior minister in the Coalition government.
Making sensible adjustments to the Climate Change Act, rapidly and progressively reducing its impact to near zero, rather than abolishing it outright, could well be the better way forward politically in the short term. Then let it wither and die.
Robin G, your comment at the meeting yesterday was well received and very funny! I wish I could remember exactly what you said, the punchline was excellent - do share!
And it was great to meet you and Alex, and one or two others who managed to make it. We need Barry to give us a full overview... Barry?
Josh:
Yes, it sounded good at the time and it's hard now to remember it precisely. (And unfortunately Alex's tape recorder wasn't working.) I think it was a rather more crisp version of the end of my third paragraph above: "So ... instead of trying to get rid of the Act, we should be getting rid of the Secretary of State."
Hmmm, perhaps the WWF was in the right to sue the other WWF over the use of the letters "WWF". (Going WTF? Google it.) What I do know is these cartoons are even funnier if you think of the other WWF while looking at/reading them. :)