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General : Al Gore WINS the Nobel PEACE Prize ... YESSS !!
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 Message 1 of 11 in Discussion 
From: MSN Nicknameí_n_ìº_ºÍ•_•�?_-̲  (Original Message)Sent: 10/12/2007 11:21 AM
... To Follow up his Oscar Meyer wiener Hollywood award ... Can Presidential Run be Far Behind ... The Gore-Clinton Ticket ... LOLOL... even !!    


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 Message 2 of 11 in Discussion 
From: MSN Nicknameí_n_ìº_ºÍ•_•�?_-̲Sent: 10/12/2007 11:28 AM
 
Gore wins Nobel Peace Prize

16 minutes ago
 

Former Vice President Al Gore and the U.N.'s Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change have won the 2007 Nobel Peace Prize for their efforts to spread awareness of man-made climate change, and to lay the foundations for the measures needed to counteract it.
 
 
********************
 
Way to go, Mr. Vice President!! ... Even !!  

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 Message 3 of 11 in Discussion 
From: MSN Nicknameí_n_ìº_ºÍ•_•�?_-̲Sent: 10/12/2007 7:29 PM
The other Half was won by IPCC an organisation in India on Climate Change ... http://in.rediff.com/news/2007/oct/12nobel.htm
 
Dr. Rajendra Kumar Pachauri Chairman of IPCC Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change
 
Way to go Mr. President that was Robbed !! ... even !!  
 

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 Message 4 of 11 in Discussion 
From: MSN Nicknameí_n_ìº_ºÍ•_•�?_-̲Sent: 10/12/2007 7:43 PM
Peace or Pacific Ocean Pursuits ... also a Poke in the Eye of the Bush - Cheney Administration married to Fossil Fuel Hegemony and Consumerism to advance Green House Gas emissions and Wage Wars to do so running counter to Peace Prize aspirations ... even !!  

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 Message 5 of 11 in Discussion 
From: MSN Nicknameí_n_ìº_ºÍ•_•�?_-̲Sent: 10/12/2007 9:11 PM
 
 
Okay, he's not really there, but would it surprise you? Nearly seven years to the day after the Bush/Rove machine stole the Florida election from Al Gore and Al Gore from America, the truth wins. The most prestigious global prize has been handed to the former vice president, not for his government service, but for his passion to teach the world, one person at a time, about the perils we face here on our fragile planet. Frankly, it makes Bush seem smaller than ever and it makes us wonder all the more what these past seven years would have been had Al been president...
 
continued:
 

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 Message 6 of 11 in Discussion 
From: MSN Nicknameí_n_ìº_ºÍ•_•�?_-̲Sent: 10/12/2007 9:25 PM
I received this from him today:
 

I am deeply honored to receive the Nobel Peace Prize. This award is even more meaningful because I have the honor of sharing it with the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change--the world's pre-eminent scientific body devoted to improving our understanding of the climate crisis--a group whose members have worked tirelessly and selflessly for many years. We face a true planetary emergency. The climate crisis is not a political issue, it is a moral and spiritual challenge to all of humanity. It is also our greatest opportunity to lift global consciousness to a higher level.

My wife, Tipper, and I will donate 100 percent of the proceeds of the award to the Alliance for Climate Protection, a bipartisan non-profit organization that is devoted to changing public opinion in the U.S. and around the world about the urgency of solving the climate crisis ... even !!   


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 Message 7 of 11 in Discussion 
From: MSN Nicknameí_n_ìº_ºÍ•_•�?_-̲Sent: 10/16/2007 9:05 PM
Al Gore ... a fat cat ... LOLOL ... Even !!             

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 Message 8 of 11 in Discussion 
From: MSN Nicknameí_n_ìº_ºÍ•_•�?_-̲Sent: 10/16/2007 9:06 PM
uh-oh, time to repaint the private jet with the latest award title? 
 
 
 

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 Message 9 of 11 in Discussion 
From: MSN Nicknameí_n_ìº_ºÍ•_•�?_-̲Sent: 10/17/2007 5:19 PM
Gore sponsored the 1988 National High Performance Computer Act (which led to the development of Internet) and co-sponsored the Information Infrastructure and Technology Act of 1992.
 

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 Message 10 of 11 in Discussion 
From: MSN Nicknameí_n_ìº_ºÍ•_•�?_-̲Sent: 10/17/2007 5:31 PM
October 15, 2007
 

Gore Derangement Syndrome

By PAUL KRUGMAN

On the day after Al Gore shared the Nobel Peace Prize, The Wall Street Journal’s editors couldn’t even bring themselves to mention Mr. Gore’s name. Instead, they devoted their editorial to a long list of people they thought deserved the prize more.

And at National Review Online, Iain Murray suggested that the prize should have been shared with “that well-known peace campaigner Osama bin Laden, who implicitly endorsed Gore’s stance.�?You see, bin Laden once said something about climate change �?therefore, anyone who talks about climate change is a friend of the terrorists.

What is it about Mr. Gore that drives right-wingers insane?

Partly it’s a reaction to what happened in 2000, when the American people chose Mr. Gore but his opponent somehow ended up in the White House. Both the personality cult the right tried to build around President Bush and the often hysterical denigration of Mr. Gore were, I believe, largely motivated by the desire to expunge the stain of illegitimacy from the Bush administration.

And now that Mr. Bush has proved himself utterly the wrong man for the job �?to be, in fact, the best president Al Qaeda’s recruiters could have hoped for �?the symptoms of Gore derangement syndrome have grown even more extreme.

The worst thing about Mr. Gore, from the conservative point of view, is that he keeps being right. In 1992, George H. W. Bush mocked him as the “ozone man,�?but three years later the scientists who discovered the threat to the ozone layer won the Nobel Prize in Chemistry. In 2002 he warned that if we invaded Iraq, “the resulting chaos could easily pose a far greater danger to the United States than we presently face from Saddam.�?And so it has proved.

But Gore hatred is more than personal. When National Review decided to name its anti-environmental blog Planet Gore, it was trying to discredit the message as well as the messenger. For the truth Mr. Gore has been telling about how human activities are changing the climate isn’t just inconvenient. For conservatives, it’s deeply threatening.

Consider the policy implications of taking climate change seriously.

“We have always known that heedless self-interest was bad morals,�?said F.D.R. “We know now that it is bad economics.�?These words apply perfectly to climate change. It’s in the interest of most people (and especially their descendants) that somebody do something to reduce emissions of carbon dioxide and other greenhouse gases, but each individual would like that somebody to be somebody else. Leave it up to the free market, and in a few generations Florida will be underwater.

The solution to such conflicts between self-interest and the common good is to provide individuals with an incentive to do the right thing. In this case, people have to be given a reason to cut back on greenhouse gas emissions, either by requiring that they pay a tax on emissions or by requiring that they buy emission permits, which has pretty much the same effects as an emissions tax. We know that such policies work: the U.S. “cap and trade�?system of emission permits on sulfur dioxide has been highly successful at reducing acid rain.

Climate change is, however, harder to deal with than acid rain, because the causes are global. The sulfuric acid in America’s lakes mainly comes from coal burned in U.S. power plants, but the carbon dioxide in America’s air comes from coal and oil burned around the planet �?and a ton of coal burned in China has the same effect on the future climate as a ton of coal burned here. So dealing with climate change not only requires new taxes or their equivalent; it also requires international negotiations in which the United States will have to give as well as get.

Everything I’ve just said should be uncontroversial �?but imagine the reception a Republican candidate for president would receive if he acknowledged these truths at the next debate. Today, being a good Republican means believing that taxes should always be cut, never raised. It also means believing that we should bomb and bully foreigners, not negotiate with them.

So if science says that we have a big problem that can’t be solved with tax cuts or bombs �?well, the science must be rejected, and the scientists must be slimed. For example, Investor’s Business Daily recently declared that the prominence of James Hansen, the NASA researcher who first made climate change a national issue two decades ago, is actually due to the nefarious schemes of �?who else? �?George Soros.

Which brings us to the biggest reason the right hates Mr. Gore: in his case the smear campaign has failed. He’s taken everything they could throw at him, and emerged more respected, and more credible, than ever. And it drives them crazy.

http://www.nytimes.com/2007/10/15/opinion/15krugman.html?ei=5087&em=&en=c5e1aa67f8266958&ex=1192766400&pagewanted=print


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 Message 11 of 11 in Discussion 
From: MSN NicknameŖĄìŅΒŎώSent: 11/3/2007 4:53 PM
I love it!  Gald to see others still care about Al Gore. 

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