Wednesday, November 5, 2008

Prince Charles Tells the World: Starve to Save the Planet

Prince Charles Tells the World: Starve to Save the Planet
Increase DecreaseNovember 4, 2008 (LPAC) -- Bonny Prince Charles gave an exclusive interview to the raunchy sex-tabloid The Sun while touring Indonesia, the target of his genocide plan. His "Rainforest Project," which began last year, wants to stop development in rainforest areas, and even "return" current agricultural areas to rainforests.

Writes The Sun: "Indonesia is one of the nations where Charles hopes his Rainforest Project can help to reverse years of destruction. Rainforest countries have, for years, been forced to cut down vast areas so the land can be put to more lucrative use. Instead of natural habitats that help filter the world's oxygen supplies, the acreage was used to produce goods such as beef, palm oil, and soya. The Rainforest Project wants all that to change so that mankind and Earth can flourish in the future."

Indonesia contains 9% of the world's rainforests, and is also the fourth most populous nation on earth, with about 237 million people, making it a leading target for the British Empire's depopulation policies. Charles told The Sun how committed he is: "We risk provoking a crisis between man and nature and that is what I fear we are beginning to see all around us. Now is the time for the whole world to come together as one to find a solution. We have just proved we can do it to tackle the global financial crisis. The credit crunch is causing real pain to countless people across the world. The climate crunch, however, will affect every man, woman and child on this planet." So, stop eating and plant trees.

Charles wants his pilot project in genocide to serve as a model for adoption at the UN Environmental Summit, to be held in Copenhagen in 12 months, to replace the Kyoto Protocol. He retails every lie from his pal Al Gore and other fraudsters: "I really started this project because the experts came to me in despair, saying, 'Unless we do something pretty dramatic in the next 18 months we will have lost a major part of the battle against it' -- catastrophic climate change. There is enormous weight of concern and opinion throughout the world and particularly, for instance, among Sun readers. The speed at which destruction takes place is petrifying. Not only do they [Antartic ice samples] show that levels of carbon dioxide began to rise dramatically at precisely the point the Industrial Revolution began in the 18th century, but that today carbon dioxide levels are at their highest for 800,000 years. Even more terrifying, we also know that if levels continue to grow at current rates, by the end of this century average temperatures will have risen by five degrees. This would be catastrophic and would, to a large extent, make the planet uninhabitable for humans. Earlier this year we learnt that the north polar ice cap is melting so fast some scientists are predicting that in five years it will disappear completely in the summer."

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