By Cal ThomasÂ
What is it about people who are successful in one field and believe that gives them credence to serve as an expert in a totally unrelated field?
Bill Gates, the founder of Microsoft and reportedly the fourth-richest person on the planet, now self-identifies as a climate expert, and not only an expert, but a fervent disciple of the latest religion for the non-religious, which would be âclimate change.â
In a new book, âHow to Avoid a Climate Disaster,â Gates takes the rhetoric to a new and hysterical level when he claims the battle against changing climate is âan all-out effort, like a world war, but itâs us against greenhouse gases.â
As all statists do, he urges âregulation to force people to eat synthetic meat.â
Gates invests in a synthetic meat company called Beyond Burgers. Anyone else see a potential conflict of interest? Heâs not alone. Al Gore, the original âChicken Littleâ of climate panic, has lobbied for climate policies that limit meat while his firm invests $200 million in meat substitutes.
Gates also believes cow flatulence contributes to climate change but told a CNN interviewer he doesnât know how to control it. Since there are more humans on Earth than cows, I wonder why he doesnât go after human gas emissions?
Like most people of a certain worldview, Gates tries to have it both ways. He says, âItâs true that my carbon footprint is absurdly high. For a long time I have felt guilty about this.â
The message? You can continue to live like a plutocrat, as long as you feel guilty about it and donate money to organizations and causes favored by your ideological fellow travelers. Gates adds, âI am aware that Iâm an imperfect messenger on climate change ⊠so who am I to lecture anyone on the environment?
Who, indeed?
Even The Guardian newspaper expresses skepticism about Gatesâ goal of âcarbon neutralityâ in a decade, calling it âa fairytale.â
Are we seeing a pattern? Government and âexpertsâ have already robbed us of some of our liberties, using the pandemic as their excuse. The Biden administration wants more gun laws, which will only be obeyed by people who obey laws, but not by criminals who are, by definition, lawbreakers.
Now comes Gates proposing restrictions on our food choices and lifestyles while he continues to fly around the world on his private jet (like Bidenâs âclimate envoyâ John Kerry) and presumably eats whatever he wants.
Liberty is fragile. When it is lost to the state and regulators, it is difficult to get back. Like the frog in the kettle story, the heat is being slowly turned up on us. If we continue to willingly bow to the state, it will think it has permission to further erode liberties until they are either gone or so rare we wonât recognize the country we once loved.
In the film âThe Matrix,â the character Cypher says to the agent known as Mr. Smith: âI know this steak doesnât exist. I know when I put it in my mouth the Matrix is telling my brain that it is juicy and delicious.â In a sense, Cypher is eating fake meat.
The World Economic Forum is also promoting fake meat. It says a printer can print up to six kilograms of the stuff in an hour. It expects we will get used to it, as we do over time with many lies that become accepted truth.
Wendyâs, the fast-food chain, used to run a TV ad that promoted its hamburgers. It ended with an old woman shouting, âWhereâs the beef?â
It could be a shout by meat lovers everywhere unless we tell our âmastersâ we have had enough. Isnât that at least part of the explanation for the rise of Donald Trump and why so many still support him?