chris
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Posts: 175
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Post by chris on Jan 31, 2016 10:57:06 GMT -7
Using wood as a primary source of heating our homes, shops, cabins and campsites is a time-honored practice, and a means toward greater self-sufficiency. Many people who use other forms of energy for primary heating also have a wood stove or fireplace to heat their living spaces in times of emergency when the primary source is no longer functional. Wood is a renewable resource when properly managed, and it even warms you twice: Once when you process it and again when you burn it. This is a practical solution which some government agencies are attempting to eliminate, under the mandates of the nefarious United Nations' Agenda 21 program. This when they are also trying to eliminate the production and use of coal, a fuel that has seemingly gone out of favor for home heating but is still widely used to generate electricity. The reduction in the mining of coal due to "environmental" regulations has had a severe negative impact on certain Montana communities and regions, as well as the shipping of coal by rail. Everyone should educate themselves on the evils of the UN's Agenda 21 and their latest incarnation Agenda 2030. A good resource is americanpolicy.org/Another is the book " Behind the Green Mask- UN Agenda 21" by Rosa Koire.
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chris
Full Member
Posts: 175
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Post by chris on Jan 31, 2016 11:10:14 GMT -7
Wood-burning stove bans already common in the U.S.
Bans are already becoming commonplace in the United States. And although the U.S. bans are not directly issued by the EPA, the agency has issued stricter emissions guidelines that make compliance with local wood-burning restrictions nearly impossible to meet without either expensive modifications or investment in expensive new EPA-approved stoves and fireplaces. In Canada, the government has already begun. In a blatant attack on those who prefer living as self-sufficiently as possible, citizens of Montreal have been ordered to first register their wood-burning stoves, and then ultimately get rid of them within three years, unless they meet rigid air quality standards. The deadline to register wood-burning stoves and fireplaces in Montreal was December 22, 2015, and the new emissions regulations will be implemented in 2018. Those who refuse to comply will be subject to fines, and those who are willing to adjust will be forced to pay for expensive modifications to their wood-burning stoves and fireplaces. Click here for the full story. This egregious activity will be enforced in our own community sometime in the future if we don't take a stand against Agenda 21, Agenda 2030, and the bureaucrats attempting to control every aspect of our lives.
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