Climate denier to Pope Francis: Environmental regulations are like Aztec human sacrifices
Climate Depot publisher Marc Morano gives a presentation at The Heartland Institute's climate science and policy event outside the Vatican (Screenshot)

A prominent climate change denier compared Pope Francis' calls to protect the environment to pagan human sacrifices at a recent event.


"Aztec priests encouraged people to sacrifice blood to the gods to end severe drought," Marc Morano said at the event, which was aimed at convincing the pope to not support United Nations action on the environment.

"Today we are told we need a fundamental transformation of our lives in order to end bad weather," he said. "We are told we need EPA regulations and UN treaties in order to spare us from more hurricanes and floods and droughts and all this bad weather."

The event in Rome was hosted by the Heartland Institute late last month. The group describes itself as "the world's leading think tank promoting scientific skepticism about man-caused global warming" and said they held the event because they were worried the pope was being misled by United Nations officials.

During his speech, Morano described climate change as deadly cult.

"In the past, pagans sacrificed animals and even humans in vain attempts to placate capricious and cruel gods. Today they demand a reduction in CO2 emissions," he said, quoting Australian cardinal George Pell.

Morano, the executive editor of ClimateDepot.com, noted that UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon had said "science and religion are not at odds on climate change" after meeting with Pope Francis.

"If science and religion are united, what are they united on?" Morano said. "Well, actually, the new climate commissioners gave us a clue. It's not about science. Even if the science is wrong, the policy is right."

Morano argued that people who talked about climate change were not really worried about the environment -- they only used the issue to push for socialist policies. He said climate science was like astrology, because "no matter what climate event happens, it is always exactly what the models predicted."

He compared Pope Francis' acknowledgement of climate change to the medieval Pope Innocent VIII, who remarked "it is reasonable to conclude that, just as easily as witches raise hailstorms, so they cause lightning and storms at sea; and so no doubt at all remains on these points."

"There was 99 percent consensus in the middle ages that witches caused bad weather and now we are told there is a 99 percent consensus that every storm and every bad weather is [linked to climate change]."

Morano concluded by calling on Pope Francis "to listen to science, listen to logic, don't let science and religion become united."

Watch video below:

(Note: A previous version of this article described the event as a "Koch-funded event." The Heartland Institute has received donations from the Charles G. Koch Charitable Foundation in the past, but the event was not directly funded by the any of the Koch foundations.)