February 5, 2009

Al Gore Indoctrinates Children on Global Warming (VIDEO)

by MsUnderestimated — Categories: Video7 Comments

Apparently a group of school children (approx. 3,000 teens and pre-teens) were invited to hear OwlGore speak the weekend before the inauguration in D.C. One of the kids who got an invite was 12-year-old Caitlin Gleen, whose father Andy was very proud of the invite.

Although Andy was glad for the opportunity, he was also curious as to what Gore would say to this group of kids. So he armed Caitlin with a recorder, and they sent the recording to Glenn Beck. They appeared on his show this evening and Glenn played part of the tape. Frightening, indeed.

  • http://fishwrangler.blogspot.com/ snaggletoothie

    I don't believe that Algore asked his father that question.
    I suspect that little Algore asked, “Daddy, how can I get away with not paying my taxes when I grow up?” And Daddy Gore replied, “Become a Democratic senator and there'll always be someone to cover your ass.”

  • Feng

    GORE: There are some things about our world that you know that older people don't know. Why would that be? Well, in a period of rapid change the old assumptions just don't work anymore because they are out of date.”

    That's it!? This is what Beck is trying to equate to “don't listen to your parents” and indoctrination? Very very weak.

    The reaction from the father is what you would expect from someone who's outdated ideas are being invalidated.

    Again: climate change is not about belief as much as some people would try to make it. The evidence overwhelmingly indicates that there is human induced global warming. Anecdotal rebuttals on someone's blog count for nothing against scientific peer reviewed papers. The IPCC produces very conservative, carefully peer reviewed reports based on the best of evidence. Deniers have bluff and bluster. The IPCC will review and moderate the reports as new evidence comes to light. Deniers do not change their stance and continue to spout complete unscientific, unresearched, unvalidated, non peer reviewed factoids that push their side.

    People who continue to hold beliefs in the face of the research are failing themselves and their fellows.

    I wish there was a way to make this less harsh because (imho) the denier mentality becomes more solidified when faced with adversity. It is an inflexible way of thinking that needs more coaxing than argument.

    • TheSkig

      The IPCC has its own agenda.

      As does Al Gore. $

      It's not an act of denial to reject bad science, which is what the globalclimatewarmingchange cult uses as a basis for their beliefs. Unproven. Unscientific.

  • mark

    i am not convinced global warming is real. i am convinced pollution needs to be reduced. i am convinced that corporations are needless poisoning our environment and need to be held responsible. i do believe we need to leave the planet in better shape for the people that follow us. so, while global warming can be debated, allowing pollution to go unchecked is a very bad long term solution as we will be forced to clean it up at a yet undetermined cost.

    remember one thing, wingtards. when they asked gore how many troops were needed in iraq at the start of the war, he nailed it. cheney. wrong. bush. wrong. rumsfeld. wrong. gore was dead on, 100% correct with the numbers. it wasn't until the “surge” that they reached the troop levels gore had called for five years earlier. the surge worked to quash violence even though it was supposed to allow the government to form and take over, which didn't happen.

  • http://www.thegenxfiles.com Dave Sohigian

    It’s not surprising that a Boomer (Gore) would suggest that kids rebel against their parents. That was the approach of the entire generation – knock down the institutions built by their parents (the GI Generation). But he made a HUGE mistake in thinking that this generation of kids (Millennials) and their parents (Gen-X and some Boomers) would react well to trying to divide them.
    This is very much part of the battle that will unfold over the next few years as various Boomers try to convince the Millennials to follow their particular ideology. Asking them to rebel against their parents is unlikely to work (as the Millennials are generally very close to their parents), but that won't stop Boomers from trying. The reaction of the Gen X parent is very typical as we tend to be a fairly over-protective bunch and don't want representatives of institutions telling us how to parent.

    For more on why these generations clash, see my blog at http://www.thegenxfiles.com

  • http://www.thegenxfiles.com Dave Sohigian

    It’s not surprising that a Boomer (Gore) would suggest that kids rebel against their parents. That was the approach of the entire generation – knock down the institutions built by their parents (the GI Generation). But he made a HUGE mistake in thinking that this generation of kids (Millennials) and their parents (Gen-X and some Boomers) would react well to trying to divide them.
    This is very much part of the battle that will unfold over the next few years as various Boomers try to convince the Millennials to follow their particular ideology. Asking them to rebel against their parents is unlikely to work (as the Millennials are generally very close to their parents), but that won't stop Boomers from trying. The reaction of the Gen X parent is very typical as we tend to be a fairly over-protective bunch and don't want representatives of institutions telling us how to parent.

    For more on why these generations clash, see my blog at http://www.thegenxfiles.com

  • http://www.thegenxfiles.com Dave Sohigian

    It’s not surprising that a Boomer (Gore) would suggest that kids rebel against their parents. That was the approach of the entire generation – knock down the institutions built by their parents (the GI Generation). But he made a HUGE mistake in thinking that this generation of kids (Millennials) and their parents (Gen-X and some Boomers) would react well to trying to divide them.
    This is very much part of the battle that will unfold over the next few years as various Boomers try to convince the Millennials to follow their particular ideology. Asking them to rebel against their parents is unlikely to work (as the Millennials are generally very close to their parents), but that won't stop Boomers from trying. The reaction of the Gen X parent is very typical as we tend to be a fairly over-protective bunch and don't want representatives of institutions telling us how to parent.

    For more on why these generations clash, see my blog at http://www.thegenxfiles.com

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