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Cornwall Alliance – December 12, 2009
Copenhagen Update: Protests Today
By E. Calvin Beisner, Ph.D.
Had you asked me 20 years ago, or 1 year ago, or last week, I could never have predicted what I did today here in Copenhagen. I took part in a protest march, carrying a sign (”The science is not settled!”) and shouting slogans (”Al Gore lies! Al Gore lies” “Investigate climategate! Investigate climategate!” “Freedom! Freedom!”), and even singing a ditty (”You better not cook! You better not drive! You better not breathe! I’m telling you why! Al Gore is coming to town!”).
We were a small group (about 30 or 40 of us) in the midst of a roiling sea of protesters (almost all on the “other side”), probably twenty thousand or so, in downtown Copenhagen, waving signs, shouting slogans, etc. The biggest groups seemed to be the Communist Party (yes, their signs said that), the International Socialist Youth Movement, the Radical Climate Activists, and Greenpeace, and one of the most widespread slogans was “System change! Not climate change!” – the meaning of which was, get rid of capitalism and usher in communism to save the world!
After our own protesting (walking about two or three miles) downtown for a while (complete with bullhorns and drums, by the way), we walked the roughly five miles out to Bella Center, the actual location of the conference, to pick up our credentials, and then protested outside that for about two hours, halfway through which the rest of the crowd, now swollen to probably forty thousand, came marching through, with torches (it was now dark), loudspeakers, trucks with mammoth signs written on them (spewing out CO2, of course!), and soon our group (dwindled to about 20) was fully surrounded by these folks filled with passion – but not with much knowledge.
Only a couple of times did things seem to come close to violence within our eyesight, but I understand that at least one of the groups planned to overturn and burn cars and do other such very persuasive bits of acted-out rhetoric.
We eventually took down our sign, partly as a matter of safety, and then walked the five miles or so back to the downtown area, where we debated quite a while about where to eat, and then walked about two more miles to an Italian restaurant (our numbers now down to 11 – lots of students had gone off to other exciting ventures). At this restaurant, chosen because one of our leaders knew it to be far less expensive than most, I found that a dinner salad and pasta dish with white sauce and a few small bites of salmon, a few small shrimp, and a few small mussels cost our hosts about $40 US – and the two glasses of Sprites probably added about another $10.
Life is expensive in “Christian socialist” countries like Denmark (and most of Europe and Scandinavia). Of course the businesses (restaurants included) all have to make up for all the extra taxes they pay to cover all the entitlement programs that, once in place, are nearly impossible to eliminate because they built highly self-interested and passionate constituencies. But, hey, who am I to complain? After all, everyone registered for COP-15 gets “free” public transportation throughout our week here. And there are so many of us (about 30,000 to 40,000) that we’ve increased the population of Copenhagen by about 10%, and the ticket checkers have simply ceased checking anyone, which means all the locals get “free” transport, too, for the duration.
One thing I’ve learned: being in the middle of a seething mass of angry protesters is not conducive to prolonged, rational, or civil conversation between those who disagree. Tried it. Doesn’t work.
Another thing I’ve learned: It doesn’t take many questions about the scientific facts related to fears of manmade global warming to reach the end of most marchers’ knowledge. Here they are, having traveled (many of them) halfway ’round the world (with horrendous carbon footprints!), and if you ask, “How much warming can be calculated to come from doubling CO2 content in the atmosphere?” they stare at you blankly and say, “Huh?” I confess I tried a good many such questions on a good many of them. I suppose I’m one of those hope-springs-eternal types. But I never did find anyone – anyone – who could answer any such questions. Ah, well.
In general the crowds were noisy, dirty, pierced, discourteous, thoroughly irrational, thoroughly anti-Christian, thoroughly anti-free market. A perfect demonstration of mobocracy at work.



