Godfrey Bloom

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Welcome to my blog. An unprecedented democratic deficit is developing in the UK. Our interests are being ignored for the benefit of pointless and self-serving EU and environmental bureaucracies. On this blog I will be offering unfashionable arguments in favour of freedom and democracy, and against the dangerous eco-zealots' attack on our economy, jobs, and industry. Read more...

J’Accuse... Greenpeace
Thursday, 18 February 2010 07:12
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It seems that people are more upset with the style of my criticism of Greenpeace than with its substance. In their silly complaints about me ‘supporting terrorism’ or ‘advocating murder’ – neither of which I have done – they only raise the profile of the criticism I have made of their behaviour. They make it all the more obvious that it is a criticism which they simply cannot answer. They are attacking the man, not the message.

Let me be clear. I have not ever supported or advocated terrorism or murder. It is only fantasy that allows Greenpeace to turn criticism of them into a celebration of a death.

Greenpeace like to play the victim. They like to be the poor, put-upon David, to the Goliath: the government, corporations, or whoever. But the truth is that Greenpeace is a very powerful organisation, with a great deal of influence, for which it is almost completely unaccountable.

I don’t believe that the influence Greenpeace has is legitimate. I don’t think that what it has done with its influence is right. I think that it has caused a great deal of harm, for which they should be held accountable. I think it is time that somebody stood up to these people.

Let’s start with the facts. In 2007, Greenpeace’s income was over 200million Euros. That’s a billion Euros every five years. That amount of money buys you a lot of influence and a lot of propaganda. Some of them might look like unwashed hippies, but the volumes of cash they have at their disposal has brought them closer to the political establishment than you might think. See for yourself...

You have just seen the man mostly likely to be the UK’s next Prime Minister prancing around on the roof of Greenpeace’s headquarters, taking advice from them on the energy policies he has drawn up with their approval. Did you ever wonder why the Labour, Conservative, and Liberal Democrat parties suddenly became committed environmentalists? Did you ever notice that you’ve not once been given the chance to choose between parties that take -different stands on the climate issue? Well, now you know why. Powerful and well-funded groups like Greenpeace have called the shots, and squeezed democracy out of politics. The result is the bizarre image of David Cameron holding a press conference in front of one of the boats that has been used to commit acts of sabotage and the obstruction of lawful activity.

Of course, Greenpeace can only get their way so often. And the environmentalists that now populate the top tiers of the political establishment can only give them what they want so often. When they don’t get their own way, Greenpeace appear to clash with their Westminster chums.

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I have an interest in military history. I know what it means when a seat of power is occupied and an aggressor’s flag is raised. This symbolic act says that Parliament is no longer sovereign. Their flags demand that we “change the politics...” But it was already changed. It changed the moment Cameron surrendered to them on their own roof, two years previously. Cameron, like many politicians, seems to be less concerned with what you or I think – after all, we have no choice in the matter – and far more concerned with what Greenpeace think. Greenpeace want to change the way politics is done, but they don’t want to do it through the ballot-box, and through winning us over in democratic debate. They don’t think they need to persuade you of their argument. Greenpeace do not believe in democracy.

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Greenpeace have been able to use their financial muscle to delay and obstruct. Any new power station, airport expansion, road building, factory or other civil infrastructure must meet Greenpeace’s approval. If it doesn’t, Greenpeace will send in the protestors and the lawyers.

Protestors are effectively teams of unpaid workers. They stage high profile stunts such as the rooftop occupation of Parliament. They terrify local residents into believing that they are being exposed to harm.

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This is intended to whip up local support, and to attract attention to themselves and to make their campaign appear to be a spontaneous and popular protest, not one organised and directed by a £multi-million international organisation.

There are often legitimate objections to developments of all kinds. I am involved with campaigning against the many hundreds of windfarms that have been put up, against the wishes of people living near them. But Greenpeace aren’t interested in protecting the rights of people living near planned developments. They are only interested in using such people for their own ends. Once they have established protests under their own control, they move against the very things we all rely on for our day-to-day lives: power stations, businesses, and transport. These things are bad for the climate, they say – the issue is not the lives of those affected, either by the construction, or those that need it to be built.

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While the protestors make Greenpeace’s actions look like people power, their team of lawyers mount legal challenges against the plans of government or businesses wishing to build.

Greenpeace’s actions have threatened energy production in the UK. They have mounted challenges to every attempt at fuel exploration and production, or the construction of conventional power generation plants, and to nuclear processing and power generation. Through decades of lobbying, protest, scare-mongering, direct action and legal challenges, Greenpeace have contributed to the UK’s failure to maintain its energy infrastructure. The result is that what we have left is in imminent danger of collapse, and energy experts warn that we face imminent shortages. Increasingly weak governments have given in to the pressure from these bandits. And as we can see with Cameron, he’s given in to them before he’s even taken office. Expect things to get worse.

When we are finally faced with the reality of Greenpeace’s influence, energy costs will have soared. We will be left with a dilapidated electricity supply, and a hugely expensive, poorly integrated and heavily subsidised network of ‘renewable’ electricity producers, that only actually produce energy when – i.e. if – the wind blows. Bills will rise. Costs will rise. Households and businesses will suffer.

This is already showing signs of happening. Thanks to recent government’s inability to stand up to Greenpeace and their kind, our bills have already risen sharply to subsidise the green energy sector. And this is already having a dramatic human effect. During the winter of 2008/9, there were 37 thousand more deaths than there were compared to the non-winter period, and 12 thousand more than the average winter. By a wide margin, the cold has affected the elderly more than any other part of the country. The people who deserve the most respect and help are vulnerable to colds and flu, cannot negotiate icy streets, and are left to freeze in their homes. Meanwhile, Greenpeace tell us that “climate change” is “the biggest issue facing mankind”. I beg to differ.

It’s not just on these shores that Greenpeace uses its muscle to get what it wants. Greenpeace is a global organisation, and just as with old people in the UK, the effects of Greenpeace’s toxic influence are most obvious where people are the poorest.

In 2002, many parts of Africa experienced a terrible famine. Across Ethiopia, Eritrea, Mauritania, Angola, Zambia, Zimbabe, Mozambique, Malawi, and Lesotho, more than 13 million people faced starvation. That summer, it was revealed that a shipment of 17,000 tonnes of food aid from the USA was sitting in storage in Zambia while millions went without food. Greenpeace had lobbied the governments of many of the countries affected by the famine to not allow the food aid into the country. Some of the shipment was genetically modified (GM) crop, they told the African leaders, and it would poison people and the land. Just as they have here in the UK, Greenpeace had terrified people and governments into doing as they were told.

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The other African countries affected by the famine soon dropped their ban on GM, allowing the US food aid to be milled before being distributed. But it took Zambia until December before it allowed 60,000 tonnes of food aid to reach starving people. By this time, the famine had gripped even more of the continent. Now nearly 40 million people faced starvation. It was during this time that Greenpeace told the Zambian government that if it allowed GM crops into the country, it would be denied access to the UK’s organic food market – a market that Greenpeace, through its campaigns of spreading fear and terror, had created.

It would be impossible to calculate how many people have been killed as a consequence of Greenpeace’s actions. They have used their cash to impose their environmental ideology with a callous disregard for some of the most vulnerable people in the world.

Greenpeace might answer that the cash that allows them to act in this way proves that the public are behind them, but nothing could be farther from the truth. Of the 6.7 billion people on the planet, just 2.8 million people worldwide donate to Greenpeace last year. That’s little more than a twentieth the number of people who faced starvation in the 2002 Famine. That’s less than the number of elderly people there are here in the UK. But which cause sets the political agenda?

Greenpeace supporters might try and argue that they are protecting the world’s resources, and saving endangered species. At first, this seems like an unquestionable and worthwhile aim. And this is how Greenpeace make their money. They tell people that they are ‘saving the whales’. What they don’t tell people is that they commit illegal acts of sabotage and acts of near piracy in order to achieve their aims. They don’t tell their donors that their mission to save the whales endangers human lives. They don’t tell their donors of the way they use their funds to pay for expensive and high profile PR campaigns against their targets to win a political and ideological battle. They don’t say they will use their funds to subvert democracy. They don’t tell their donors that their money will be used to deny starving children of food aid. They don’t tell people that the consequences of their actions will be to turn Britain back to the dark ages. They don't tell people that this is their intention.

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The last line of defence for Greenpeace is that they have “Science” on their side. But they don’t. Time and time again, Greenpeace abuse science in order to raise the profile of their campaign. They terrify people with stories about cancer, environmental Armageddon, and exaggerated climate change ‘facts’. These lies are used to help win public support.

One such case of Greenpeace mythmaking is that of Brent Spar. The installation had come to the end of its useful life. Shell planned to dispose of it by sinking it in deep waters, in the North Atlantic, a few hundred miles away from Scotland. This had the support of the UK government, and had been properly assessed as the safest and most human and environmentally-healthy option. In fact, sunken vessels such as this make excellent habitats for sea life. But Greenpeace launched a worldwide campaign to boycott Shell. They claimed that the Brent Spar still contained over a hundred times as much oil as Shell had said. They said this would have a devastating effect on the local environment. It was a lie. But Shell had been so damaged by Greenpeace’s stunt that they gave in to their demands, and the plans to dispose of the Brent Spar were abandoned.

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In Zambia, on the rooftops of parliament, and on the seas, what Greenpeace claim are merely attempts to save the planet, are in fact battles to further its own interests and its own influence. Disobey Greenpeace, and the full force of their publicity machine, activist-terrorists, terrorised-protestors, and legal teams will descend upon you.

In this battle for power, Greenpeace are indifferent to the plight of the people their actions affect. The blind pursuit of their ideological objectives gives them a sense of ‘higher purpose’. Democracy and lost lives are merely ‘collateral damage’. And anyway, nobody is holding them to account.

In summary, Greenpeace...

  • ... Threaten business, jobs, and the economy
  • ... Use lies and bad science to terrify the public and to blackmail companies and governments
  • ... Have been a significant cause of our energy infrastructure’s imminent collapse
  • ... Hold an illegitimate influence over the democratic process
  • ... Put lives at risk here and around the world
  • ... Force governments to make policies which cause deaths
  • ... use fear and terror to spread their propaganda and secure their ideological goals
  • ... are almost completely unaccountable for their actions
  • ... are completely undemocratic

A few people have got upset, because my words in my Copenhagen video have been twisted to make it look like I support terrorism and murder.

This is nonsense. I stand against it. That is why I made a stand against Greenpeace in Copenhagen.

Greenpeace are the ones with blood on their hands.

And look who it is supporting them. Look who bends to their demands. Look who makes public gestures to them. That’s right – your elected representatives.

Take a stand against Green violence. Stand against Greenpeace.

Greenviolence

Comments
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Paul Harris --- Subject: NGOs etc --- posted at 2010-02-18 17:34:54
Greenpeace is probably the best example of a lot wider problem in the ‘charity’ sector. Regarding climate change I was looking at the website of a well-known multinational charity that boasted that it pretty much had a hotline directly to the EU Commission, and this ‘helps to tackle climate change’. Now that is more than what democratically elected MEPs have!

Also yes it is totally true they play the victim and the voice of the people and try there hardest to hide their wealth. This is pure social engineering and it is what the communists practiced. Greenpeace are like insurgents, much like the Bolsheviks I suppose. The whole of the NGO sector is like one giant network of cells, all preaching the exact same policies, and of course they work closely with the UN as well. It is a huge can of worms that few have been brave enough to tackle because they get labelled as ‘uncaring’.

Again this is commie talk as was the reason for the Berlin Wall being some sort of capitalist protection barrier. And yes that is what they told people at the time. They have simply used the same techniques but used different styles, colours etc in a sort of PR makeover, but it is the same animal.
Bill --- Subject: {title} --- posted at 2010-02-18 22:22:33
Gosh, Mr Bloom, what a lot of trouble you've gone to in order to avoid any of that ugly backtracking and capitulation stuff! What a long and obsessive post you've written here, it must have taken ages to put together.

As a European and British citizen, I'd much prefer to see the MEPs that we all pay for administering their parliamentary duties rather than spending hours toiling over a character assassination on a hardly ever looked at website just to back up a bit of glib mouthing off.

Shouldn't you be working on your actual job?

You're a proud man, that's plain to see. Willing to go that extra mile to ensure you're not considered wrong. To stick to your guns no matter what. It's a characteristic that your few followers admire. Most people prefer someone who has the humility to put their hand up and admit what they've done. Universally it's a much more admirable trait.

As far as the content of your post goes, it's like a game of double bluff, a mirror. Everything you accuse Greenpeace of, you do yourself, the propagandising, the twisting of words, of numbers and events. You cleverly tell it all to suit your purpose. It's good, if I were your 'A' level tutor I'd give you a good mark. I reckon I could tell it and make Greenpeace out to be pushing a Jewish Clown agenda. If I could be bothered.

You're obviously an intelligent man, so (and it's just one example from your wonderful litany here) I have to assume that you are deliberately refusing to see Cameron's obvious fake green self promotion as anything more than cynical vote garnering. It's a fantastic extrapolation to then reverse it and claim Greenpeace are forcing Cameron to hang with them and not only that but they are controlling all our power structures to their own inexplicable, invisible end. Have you been studying under David Icke?

A comment I made on another of your posts bears repeating:

People are much more highly regarded when they speak, act and fight FOR their beliefs, rather than AGAINST another set of beliefs. I'm not seeing a politician acting for anything, just a deranged old bloke railing against anything and anyone he can.
Godfrey Bloom --- Subject: {title} --- posted at 2010-02-18 23:12:56
"Everything you accuse Greenpeace of, you do yourself, the propagandising, the twisting of words, of numbers and events. You cleverly tell it all to suit your purpose."

The difference between me and Greenpeace, then, is that people get the choice to vote for me, or not. Nobody was ever given the opportunity to say what they think about Greenpeace setting the agenda. None of the many thousands of people who were killed by famine ever got to say what they think about Greenpeace's lobbying.

E200million/year has bought them a great deal of influence. If it hadn't, why would they bother lobbying and protesting, and paying for expensive legal actions in the high court? And why would "Dave" bother? We know that the public aren't interested in his green agenda.

"People are much more highly regarded when they speak, act and fight FOR their beliefs"

Thank you. My belief - what I am for - is in democracy, parliamentary sovereignty, and the independence of the UK. That is why I am against Greenpeace.
Bill --- Subject: {title} --- posted at 2010-02-20 22:00:16
Mr Bloom -
Don't thank me. I'm not praising you.

People *choose* to donate towards your Greenpeace million-Euro-lobby just like they *choose* to vote for you. Some people are easily led, it seems.

You can't seriously be claiming to be *for* all those things when your whole raison d'etre as a member of the European Parliament is to *oppose* the idea of our membership of the European Parliament. How much is your position worth?

Again, all I've ever seen you do is *oppose* things. I stand by my statement.

Apologies for the excessive use of ** but you seem to have some trouble understanding...
Godfrey Bloom --- Subject: {title} --- posted at 2010-02-21 17:48:25
Bill says "People *choose* to donate towards your Greenpeace million-Euro-lobby just like they *choose* to vote for you."

Hardly anyone donates to Greenpeace. There are roughly 2.8 million donors world-wide. For every donor in the world, there are nearly 3,000 who didn't vote. Some of those donors are extremely wealthy individuals and organisations. Some of them are people who are accosted in the street, or harassed by telephone by professional fund-raisers into parting with monthly amounts, taken directly from their bank account.

A donation is not a vote.

Perhaps donating is a choice that such individuals make, and it is their right to do so. But that doesn't make Greenpeace's actions right. People vote for me, but they, and others are able to vote against me. How do people 'vote' against Greenpeace?

I am accountable. Greenpeace are not. Greenpeace don't participate in open, public, democratic debate. Their only public actions are stunts. they use these stunts to say to politicians and businesses, "look what we can do to you, if you don't do as we say". The result is that oil companies do as they say to protect their businesses, political leaders such as Cameron make public statements swearing their allegiance to Greenpeace, and third-word presidents are blackmailed into depriving starving children of food which is sat waiting for them.

What processes or institutions exist to hold Greenpeace to account?

I happen to be trying, but you're saying that I am wrong to do so. You say, "all I've ever seen you do is *oppose* things"

I'm not going to get into a pointless metaphysical debate about what it means to be for or against something. I've told you what I'm for. You can take it or leave it.

Godfrey Bloom --- Subject: {title} --- posted at 2010-02-21 17:55:06
Bill was saying that donating is equivalent to voting. He seemed to be suggesting that Greenpeace have some kind of democratic right to bully and harass democratically elected politicians, and companies.

As I point out above, worldwide, 2.8 million people have donated to Greenpeace. Just in the UK, 2.5 million people voted UKIP at the last election.

I think I win.
Bill --- Subject: {title} --- posted at 2010-02-22 08:14:00
You think you win? Win what?
I didn't realise you and Greenpeace had a running tally going. I didn't realise that all the votes for all candidates nationwide for UKIP can be claimed by you as a personal victory.
I didn't realise we were engaged in a race or a battle or a competition or even a debate or argument. Even if that were the case, your specious misquoting and point-avoiding could never count as a win. Above all, there's nothing to win.

I did not say a vote is equivalent to a donation. Those are your words.

How do people "vote" (your word) against Greenpeace? They can choose to not donate. They can choose to donate to the plethora of organisations, charities, NGOs and corporations who actively and unaccountably work for principles that oppose those of Greenpeace.

I think I should retract my previous statement regarding your intelligence, judging by the evidence of your comments here I probably over-estimated you.
Either that or your stubbornness is suppressing your ability to think.
Godfrey Bloom --- Subject: {title} --- posted at 2010-02-22 13:37:33
Oh dear. Looks like Bill may have got out of the wrong side of the bed this morning.

"They can choose to donate to the plethora of organisations, charities, NGOs and corporations who actively and unaccountably work for principles that oppose those of Greenpeace."

Tell us, Bill, which "organisations, charities, NGOs and corporations" are "actively and unaccountably" working against Greenpeace?
Bill --- Subject: {title} --- posted at 2010-02-22 18:03:45
Well, Mr Bloom, as they say: D'uh!
*Cough*Big oil, car industry, whaling industry, big pharma, etc et flippin cetera*cough*!

You know I stumbled upon your blog here because I'm interested in hearing the antidote to the green mindwash we're all being force fed daily from every angle. I'm sick of all this green rubbish costing the taxpayer a fortune. At first I thought you were a promising voice, a good lead.

However, from your comments, your hostile reaction to a little questioning and from a little background reading, I now understand your position.
Though most consider you eccentric, or even a bit mad, it's obvious you're just a stubborn, antagonistic little man who is less interested in the causes to fight for than winding people up.

Shame. I thought you were genuine.

I shan't grace your blog with any more hits or flatter you with comment numbers any longer.

You plough a lonely furrow Mr Bloom.
Godfrey Bloom --- Subject: {title} --- posted at 2010-02-22 19:29:43
Bill says that "Big oil, car industry, whaling industry, big pharma" are some kind of opposition to Greenpeace's illegitimate and undemocratic influence.

Maybe he forgot to read my blog post. I point out how even "big oil" is held - pardon the pun - over a barrel by Greenpeace. This much was demonstrated by the Brent Spar affair.

Bill confuses the object of Greenpeace's attacks with an opposition to Greenpeace. This is like calling a old lady an "opposition" to a mugger. Not to say that oil companies are helpless victims, or lack any clout, but that they aren't campaigning organisations; they're just businesses. And it's hard to imagine them lobbying third world leaders to prevent food from reaching starving people.

At least the industries Bill mentions provide us with fuel to heat and light our homes and power our places of work, medicines, transport and food.

What does Greenpeace do for us?

It's a bit rich, Bill complaining about "hostile reactions"!
Paul Harris --- Subject: Energy Companies --- posted at 2010-02-23 23:44:27
I think energy companies have been cut in on the deal. In the Daily Mail the other day it stated that in a report it found the UK’s energy companies overcharging their customers by a considerable amount, due to the price of oil and gas going down as they maintain the same price or just lowering it a fraction. (A ratchet effect in fact) Then you have OFGEM turning a blind eye to what some suspect is an energy cartel operating in the UK.

I think the deal works something along the lines that they spend their money promoting green nonsense and then that keeps the regulators looking the other way. I contacted my MP a while ago about this and he raised the matter in the House of Commons, and it got a bit of publicity and a few angry MPs but no movement with OFGEM.

Then there is the practice of reducing supply by capping oil wells so as to keep the price artificially high. Of course this practice has been going on since the 70s with OPEC, but now the government want a high energy price because it is good for windmills. Actually I think the high energy prices are the main reason people are investing in solar panels and that sort of thing. It’s monstrously inefficient but again that is what they want. Finally we have this other parallel scam called Peak Oil, and of course there is nothing peaking about it at all, it is just a red herring to keep eyes off the real plot.

Climate change has not seen the profits of these companies in anyway harmed; indeed it is precisely the opposite, and they are posting record-breaking profits. A while back BP invested £400 million in a bio-fuel refinery. They are definitely, with out a shadow of doubt cut in, and remember who makes these solar panels. The antics of Greenpeace are just to make you think they are on opposite sides, and of course the same goes for the government. Greenpeace and the government are just two different departments of the same thing; there is no friction between them. Keeping the proletariat poor has always been the way communists have kept a grip on power.
Paul Harris --- Subject: Funding --- posted at 2010-02-27 20:30:29
With reference to my statement about the government and the protest groups being one of the same thing I would like to point to some recent evidence I have just spotted. This involves the British Council paying those thousands of loony protestors at the Copenhagen talks. They were funded by British taxpayer's money.

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/comment/columnists/christopherbooker/7231466/British-Council-gets-in-on-the-climate-act.html

This is deeply disturbing and also illegal. We should look therefore at Greenpeace funding because I have this hunch that some of the money they receive could be channelled via complex financial methods from the taxpayer.

I did a little investigation regarding funding of certain charities and found some rather disturbing things out. The more you look the more you find it seems.

Another source of funding appears to be where someone has left a will for some particular cause and then one of these bent organisations has used that money for something that is only very weakly connected. In the case I was looking at, a rich industrialist’s widow had left some money to fund education in literature 'or something similar' as it was worded in the will, but in actual fact it was being used to promote homosexuality. I would guess environmental funding uses similar tricks.


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