![]() Return to the Article |
Gore, a former American vice-president and failed presidential candidate, has reinvented himself as the “Goracle” with a rock star following after presenting last year’s Oscar-winning documentary An Inconvenient Truth, about the dangers of climate change.It is incomprehensible that the Nobel Committee could award the prize to Gore whose film An Inconvenient Truth has been widely debunked, even by scientists who support his theories on global warming. Couple that with his out of control rhetoric that most reputable scientists have asked him to tone down and what you have is a politician in a clown suit trying to scare people into making drastic changes in economic activity.
He was nominated for the Nobel prize jointly with Sheila Watt-Cloutier, a Canadian Inuit activist who has campaigned about the effect of climate change on Arctic peoples. “A prerequisite for winning the Nobel peace prize is making a difference and Al Gore has made a difference,” said Boerge Brende, a former Norwegian environment minister who nominated Gore and Watt-Cloutier.
“I think they are likely winners this year,” said Stein Toennesson, director of Oslo’s International Peace Research Institute. The winner will receive $1.5m (£750,000) in prize money.