John Fund, this morning:

Tonight, PBS will air “Gold Futures,” a film by Hungary’s Tibor Kocsis. The film focuses on residents in Romania’s Rosia Montana, a rural Transylvanian town, who are divided over the benefits of a proposed gold mine. It also features Gabriel Resources, the Canadian mining company trying to convince them to relocate so it can dig for a huge gold deposit estimated at 14.6 million ounces, worth almost $10 billion. PBS describes the film as a “David-and-Goliath story.”

The other side to the controversy is told in a new film that will never be shown on PBS, but is nonetheless rattling the environmental community. “Mine Your Own Business” is a documentary by Irish filmmakers Phelim McAleer and Ann McElhinney. They conclude that the biggest threat to the people of Rosia Montana “comes from upper-class Western environmentalism that seeks to keep them poor and unable to clean up the horrific pollution caused by Ceausescu’s mining.” Mr. McAleer, a former Financial Times journalist who has followed the mine battle for seven years, says he “found that everything the environmentalists were saying about the project was misleading, exaggerated or quite simply false.”

Gee… the Environmental cases would LIE to us? Who’d have figured on that?

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