guardian.co.uk,
Leo Hickman, Sunday 6 May 2012
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Ted Kaczynski was shown on a billboard alongside the caption: “I still believe in global warming. Do you?” Photograph: Elaine Thompson/AP |
Diageo, one
of the world's largest drinks companies, has announced it will no longer fund
the Heartland Institute, a rightwing US thinktank which briefly ran a billboard
campaign this week comparing people concerned about climate change to mass
murderers and terrorists such as Osama bin Laden, Charles Manson and Ted
Kaczynski.
On
Thursday, a billboard appeared over the Eisenhower Expressway in Illinois showing
a picture of Kaczynski, the Unabomber, who in 1996 was convicted of a 17-year
mail bombing campaign that killed three people and injured dozens. The caption
read: "I still believe in global warming. Do you?" A day later it was
withdrawn.
The London-based
drinks giant, which owns brands such as Guinness, Smirnoff, Johnnie Walker and
Moët & Chandon, said this year that it was "reviewing any further
association with Heartland" following the release online of internal
Heartland documents which revealed its corporate donors as well as a plan to
promote an alternative climate change curriculum in US schools. Following the
widespread outcry triggered by Heartland's billboards, a Diageo spokeswoman
told the Guardian: "Diageo vigorously opposes climate scepticism and our
actions are proof of this. Diageo's only association with the Heartland
Institute was limited to a small contribution made two years ago specifically
related to an excise tax issue. Diageo has no plans to work with the Heartland
Institute in the future."
In
February, a US scientist, Peter Gleick, admitted obtaining and publishing internal Heartland documents which showed that Diageo had given the thinktank $10,000 (£6,190) in 2010. The documents, one of which Heartland later claimed
was a fake, said the thinktank was expecting another $10,000 from Diageo this
year.
On Friday,
Heartland, which is trying to promote its annual conference for climate
sceptics, to be held in Chicago this month, said it was withdrawing the
billboard campaign. However, it refused to apologise, claiming the campaign was
an "experiment". Its website is still hosting the original press
release, which includes the claim that the "most prominent advocates of
global warming aren't scientists. They are murderers, tyrants, and
madmen." Microsoft, which has a policy of supplying free software to all
non-profit organisations in the US, posted a blog on its website on Saturday
distancing itself from Heartland. The thinktank received software from
Microsoft worth $59,908 in 2011. The blog said: "Microsoft believes
climate change is a serious issue that demands immediate, worldwide attention
and we are acting accordingly … The Heartland Institute does not speak for
Microsoft on climate change. In fact, the Heartland Institute's position on
climate change is diametrically opposed to Microsoft's position. And we
completely disagree with the group's inflammatory and distasteful advertising
campaign."
In March,
General Motors, the world's largest carmaker, said it was ending its funding of
Heartland after 20 years owing to the thinktank's hardline climate scepticism.
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Big donors ditch rightwing Heartland Institute over Unabomber billboard
Climate science attack machine took donations from Microsoft and GM
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