(NewsWorthy.news) – Canadian journalist Elizabeth Nickson has argued that the Climate Change narrative is effectively a transfer of $100 trillion from the poor to the rich. Natural News, an independent organization advocating for “natural health”, shared Nickson’s article from 2022 on June 27 2024, highlighting an overlooked driving force behind mass immigration across the US southern border under President Joe Biden’s administration.
In her article, Nickson claimed that land in the migrants’ home countries is being grabbed by the World Economic Forum, the UN and Black Rock to gain access to fertile soil while herding migrants into tenement cities. Nickson referenced Agenda 2030, which lays out the WEF’s deadline for addressing the Climate Crisis by focusing on so-called sustainable development. The WEF’s agenda considers the leading economies of China and the US as essential in reaching its target.
Nickson referred to Climate Change as a “complex financial mechanism”, which she claimed is primarily designed to protect a “predator class”. She suggested that the agenda abuses a state policy to force those in countries south of the US to abandon their ancestral homelands.
In an article published on June 15, Nickson continued to blast the “epic bulls**t” of climate change. The journalist specifically took issue with Independent presidential candidate Robert F Kennedy Jr, whose “environmental left” ideas she blamed for British Columbia’s forestry industry being shut down. She claimed that the cartels control America and that the green agenda had “destroyed” the province.
Kennedy has been accused of being right-wing by the Democratic party and of being “radical left” by former President Donald Trump. The environmental activist has also raised concerns among other advocates for green energy, however; despite supporting a ban on the exporting of natural gas, the independent candidate views Biden’s subsidies for green energy as excessive. Kennedy has also not committed to sticking with Biden’s unprecedented measures to curb emissions and move over to electric vehicles.
In another article in June, Nickson argued that committing 11% of farmland to regenerative agriculture would absorb and eliminate any excess carbon dioxide. Deforestation and industrial farming practices factor into climate change, and Nickson highlighted efforts over the last two decades by farmers and scientists to use cattle to restore soil goodness. She cited Allan Savory’s experimental ranches in Zimbabwe as evidence that, despite a considerable amount of desertification of land occurring before the modern era, such regions can be regenerated.
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