Genghis Khan Killed Enough People To Cool The Planet
The world's first climate warrior?
Almost 700 million tonnes of carbon were removed from the atmosphere during the Mongol invasion of Asia.
Source:
https://www.iflscience.com/genghis-khan-killed-enough-people-to-cool-the-planet-71583This new scientistic revelation of Benjamin Taub is being actively promoted by the near-scientific mass media, with
translations into different languages.
Benjamin Taub, with a Master’s degree in anthropology from University College London, he has embarked on numerous mind-expanding fieldwork assignments in the Amazon as well as in mental health facilities throughout Europe, where he studied the therapeutic use of psychedelics. He has worked for a major neuroscience institute and several psychedelic-focused drug rehabilitation facilities.
It is this that seems to have enabled the bold researcher of psychedelics at public expense to synthesise the burning agendas of climatology and history with each other.
The climatologist agenda of justifying a political tax on CO2 has been
actively funded by a multitude of specialised foundations in recent decades, but despite the climatologist lobby, some scientists still publish research that is not promoted by the popular media. For example, scientists from Princeton University and MIT have
published a study on climate change in which the authors conclude that
Net Zero, the global movement to divest from fossil fuels and CO2 and other greenhouse gases, is scientifically unsound and a threat to the lives of billions of people. Some other scientists have uncovered climate lobby schemes, such as
one leading climate scientist admitting to
fabricating articles for the sake of publication in scientific journals; he reported that researchers put forward "pre-approved" establishment climate narratives in their articles - whether true or not - in order to publish in leading journals and advance their careers in the field.
As for the historical agenda in Benjamin Taub's new mix of justifying depopulation with the Mongol invasion for the glory of fighting climate change, it is worth noting that only about 300 years ago the English-speaking world began to write regularly about a certain Tatar empire, today no longer existing as a concept, and about 200 years ago for the first time began a gradual even growth of references to the "Mongol Empire" and with it a gradual almost complete extinction of references to the Tatar Empire. Among such references we can single out the
Thesaurus Geographicus by the Anglo-Dutch cartographer, engraver and publicist
Herman Moll:
The Principal Cities of the Rest of Tartary.
...
The City of Samarchamb in Usbech Giagathay, or Mawaralnara, is in the 43 Deg. of Latitude, and 105 of Longitude: ‘Tis nothing to considerable as it hath been. It was the Native place of the Famous Emperor of the Tartars, Tamerlane.
Today,
Tamerlane is considered to be a
Timurid emperor, of "Turko-Mongolian" origin. Some independent scholars consider that the
Mongol Empire was fabricated in order to tweak the importance of the Turkic
Mughal Empire for the benefit of the
British East India Company at a time when the British throne was occupied by the German
Hanover dynasty. The Mughals controlled most of India, Pakistan, Bangladesh and south-eastern Afghanistan as recently as 200 years ago. In Russian historiography, there is the concept of the "
Tatar-Mongol yoke" (in Italian still called "
Giogo tartaro" - Tatar oppression) and which is a key national-forming element of Russian history. That said, many alternative historians come to the view that in Russian history there is noticeably more evidence of the "Teutonic yoke" of the Romanov's
Oldenburg dynasty, settled in
Ingermanland, while the "Mongol-Tatar yoke" was invented by the German historians they invited (Bayer, Müller, Schlözer and company), some 200 years ago. This is clearly confirmed by
comparing the charts of references to the Tatar and Mongol empires in English:
Despite this, a courageous psychedelics researcher practising in psychiatric clinics in Europe points out that, according to the decrepit precepts of climatology and history, wiping out tens of millions of people along the lines of the Mongol Empire's army is even more effective than a Black Death epidemic in the difficult task of reducing in the atmosphere the carbon dioxide (
needed for plant growth through the process of photosynthesis):
According to the researchers, the Mongol army slaughtered around 30 percent of the 115 million people they encountered on their advance, resulting in the regrowth of 142,000 square kilometers (55,000 square miles) of forest. This sudden increase in vegetation would have removed 684 million tonnes of carbon from the atmosphere, leading to a global reduction of 0.183 ppm.
In contrast, the Black Death would only have reduced atmospheric carbon by 0.026 ppm, while the conquest of the Americas and the fall of the Ming Dynasty removed 0.013 and 0.048 ppm respectively.
Perhaps this discovery by a British psychedelic researcher, promoted by the popular media, aims to motivate modern climate warriors to follow in the footsteps of their more successful Mongolian predecessor.
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