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Americans, along with citizens of many countries, have been cooling off in regard to climate change. This was happening even before the e-mail exposure of scientists who were only pushing pro-global warming propaganda and suppressing anything that indicated that the changes were not man- -made.
According to new research released by The Neilsen Company and the Oxford University Institute of climate change, concerns about climate change have been decreasing during the past two years.
The interest in climate change and the environment apparently peaked in 1997 at the time of the Live Earth concerts and when Al Gore documentary 'An inconvenient Truth.'
Now, according to U.S News & World Report, preliminary analysis of the contents of thousands of E-mails and documents taken from the computer archives of the Climate Research Unit at England's University of East Anglia—possibly by a hacker, possibly by a whistleblower—indicate a number of the world's most important scientists engaged in research designed to prove that global warming
really does exist may have been cooking the books.
If the populations of many countries around the world were already cooling off to the importance of man-made climate change, the trust once held in climate scientists who were promoting is in doubt, will it turn out to be an "inconvenient truth."
What happens at the meetings in Copenhagen shortly will indicate whether the American public, which is already least in favor of government intervention or actions toward change, will completely turn their backs on the global warming theories and perhaps sound the death knell for the President Obama's Cap and Trade program.
Source: The Neilsen Company














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