Beware the Global Climate Fund
Wednesday, December 13, 2023
The crown that King Charles III wore at his coronation earlier this year weighed 2.23 kg or almost five pounds. That explains a lot…
The St. Edward’s Crown was made for King Charles II in 1661 as a replacement for the medieval crown, first worn by Edward the Confessor in the 11th century, that was melted down in 1649. Apparently, they had global warming back then, too.
Balancing five pounds of gold and jewels on your head can give a person a splitting headache and, I assume, restrict blood flow to the brain. I suppose that explains – at least in part – King Charles’ inane and insulting comments at the World Climate Action Summit earlier this month. (For those readers who are not card-carrying members of the New World Order, the summit was part of the larger COP28 summit in Dubai.)
COP (Conference of the Parties) summits have been taking place almost annually since 1995. Perhaps the most infamous summit occurred in 2015, where 190 countries – including the United States – signed the Paris Accord, which proposed limiting global warming to 2 degrees Celsius or more preferably, to 1.5 degrees Celsius.
(As an aside, the U.S. formally withdrew from the Paris Accord the day after the 2020 election. President Trump, claiming that the accord would "undermine" the U.S. economy and put the U.S. "at a permanent disadvantage,” wanted to back out sooner, but the agreement stipulated that signatories could not begin the one-year withdraw process during the first three years of the accord. And so, America was screwed once again by President Obama.)
Back to the royal crown for a minute…
The St. Edward’s Crown is made of solid gold and contains more than 400 gemstones, including six sapphires and 12 rubies, and is complete with a velvet cap and an ermine band. Yes, in case you are wondering, an ermine (also known as a stout) is an animal whose fur is highly valued, especially by the rich and royalty. In other words, King Charles, a self-avowed conservationist and environmentalist, wore a dead animal’s fur on his head at his coronation.
The crown’s estimated value is L45 million British pounds or $57 million U.S. dollars… and the British crown jewels combined are valued at $6 billion. And so, when King Charles – whose personal net worth is estimated at between $750 million and $2.3 billion – starts lecturing me about redistributing wealth and showing more compassion for the world’s poverty-stricken masses, I want to barf.
The same goes for when he demonizes the use of fossil fuels while circumnavigating the globe on his fleet of royal jets and helicopters – all of which are fueled by petroleum products – at an annual cost of $2 million.
Do what I say, peasants, not what I do!
Not content to mildly scold the rest of the world for using oil, gas, and coal to heat our homes and drive our cars, King Charles called for countries and corporations to contribute $5 trillion per year to fight climate change, with the monies being deposited in the United Nations’ Global Climate Fund. In fact, King Charles was so adamant about the existential threat posed by climate change that he ponied up the astronomical amount of $0.00 from his own personal fortune.
Talk about putting your money where your mouth is… NOT!
And so, when His Royal Majesty shed crocodile tears about the world being "dreadfully far off track" as far as climate change is concerned, I was not moved. Nor was I swayed by his dire warnings of “alarming tipping points” and “survivability being imperiled” or his pompous proclamation that "I pray with all my heart that COP28 will be another critical turning point towards genuine transformational action."
I am not sure to whom this pseudo intellectual and amateur theologian was praying when he claimed that, contrary to Scripture, “The world doesn’t belong to us. We belong to the world.”
Good grief, please close your royal pie hole and instead, open a Bible to Genesis 1:26-30.
However, the tens of thousands of conference attendees – most of whom arrived in Dubai via private jets – must have been persuaded by King Charles’ words because they agreed to “quickly shift energy systems away from fossil fuels in a just and orderly fashion.” Called the UAE Consensus, this non-binding pact was ironically ratified on location in the United Arab Emirates, one of the world’s largest oil producers, under the watchful eye of summit president, Sultan Al Jaber. Yes, that Al Jaber whose “day job” is to serve as CEO of the Abu Dhabi National Oil Co.
You just can’t make this stuff up, folks. Hypocrisy, thy name is Charles… and Al Jaber.
But the worldwide Progressive revolution doesn’t stop there. At last year’s summit in Egypt, attendees voted to establish a “Loss and Damage Fund” to help transfer money from the richest countries, which are supposedly the most responsible for the looming climate crisis, to poor countries, where the impacts have been the most devastating... or so they say.
Ah, socialism at its very best!
The fund, which is scheduled to be established in 2024, will be hosted by the World Bank, located on H Street in Washington D.C. And that, my friends, is all part of the globalists’ plan for world domination.
Don’t take my word for it. Just listen to Melanie Robinson, the global climate program director for the World Resources Institute. “The world is not on track to achieve our global climate goals,” she recently told CNN. “But it also offers a really interesting concrete blueprint [and] mountain of evidence on how we can get the job done, so it should be a wakeup call of what we need to do but with a roadmap to get there.”
More like a blueprint and a roadmap to Armageddon – or oblivion – whichever comes first.