Topic: Maurice Strong

8 chapters across the catalog

Stimming
Episode 1802 50:03 - 54:16

1802: Stimming

Maurice Strong, Population Bomb Legacy

The history of the UN climate agenda is traced back to Maurice Strong and Al Gore, who promoted carbon trading and the Chicago Climate Exchange. The discussion links these movements to Paul Ehrlich’s 1970 book "The Population Bomb," which predicted global catastrophe by the year 2000. Ehrlich's lesser-known and controversial 1978 work, "The Race Bomb," is also highlighted as a suppressed text regarding race and intelligence.

Haley's Comment
Episode 1621 58:23 - 1:04:25

1621: Haley's Comment

Tokenization of Nature and Natural Capital

Financial institutions are moving toward the "tokenization" of nature, assigning monetary value to water, trees, and biodiversity. Recent deals include the UAE purchasing large swaths of land in Zambia for carbon credits, treating the "natural capital" of the global south as a tradable financial asset class.

Moral Army
Episode 1177 9:32 - 12:03

1177: Moral Army

Club of Rome, Maurice Strong, Carbon Credit Trading

The origins of the environmental movement are traced back to the Club of Rome, founded in 1968, and Maurice Strong. Strong is identified as a key figure who worked with Al Gore to create carbon credit trading platforms. The hosts argue that modern trends like eating insects and plant-based meat substitutes like the Impossible Burger are direct outgrowths of this long-term agenda.

Eleven Eleven
Episode 1111 2:28:12 - 2:32:21

1111: Eleven Eleven

Climate Science Walking Back, 2030 Deadline

The segment posits that climate scientists are beginning to "walk back" extreme predictions as the 2030 deadline for "catastrophe" approaches. The hosts trace the history of the movement from 1970s global cooling to Al Gore's carbon exchange initiatives. They argue that the current rhetoric is being "abused" by political groups like the Justice Democrats to implement radical economic shifts.

Long Gun
Episode 778 1:50:57 - 1:54:08

778: Long Gun

Maurice Strong's Death and Obama's "Market Failure" Theory

Following the death of Maurice Strong, a key figure in the global environmental movement, President Obama describes climate change as a "market failure." He argues that the market has failed to price the "externalities" of carbon emissions. The hosts dispute this, questioning when the "science" became definitive enough to justify such a massive economic shift.

Seven Proxies
Episode 600 2:56:16 - 3:01:00

600: Seven Proxies

Al Gore, Roger Revelle, Maurice Strong, UN IPCC Origins

The historical origins of the global warming movement are traced back to Roger Revelle's 1957 paper on CO2. Al Gore, a student of Revelle at Harvard, is credited with turning the research into a political campaign. Maurice Strong is identified as the UN bureaucrat who leveraged the movement to establish the IPCC in 1972, with the ultimate goal of global governance and carbon trading.

Abundance of Caution
Episode 593 1:44:37 - 1:50:58

593: Abundance of Caution

John Kerry's Science Lesson and Maurice Strong

Adam Curry deconstructs a speech given by John Kerry in Jakarta, Indonesia, where the Secretary of State attempted to explain the "veracity" of climate science using analogies about gravity and boiling water. Kerry cites Maurice Strong, the co-founder of the Chicago Climate Exchange. The hosts mock Kerry's delivery and his comparison of climate change to a weapon of mass destruction.

USA Attacks Yemen
Episode 158 1:07:27 - 1:11:28

158: USA Attacks Yemen

Maurice Strong, Population Control, and the EU Model

Maurice Strong is identified as a key proponent of using environmentalism to protect the wealth of the super-rich while implementing population control measures. The expansion of global governance is compared to the 50-year rollout of the European Union, which moved from an economic community to a centralized political power without direct voter consent. This "fractal" model of governance is being applied globally to establish a central bank and a one-world currency.