Phelim McAleer is the director and producer of “Not Evil Just Wrong” (2008), a feature length documentary that looks at how extreme environmentalism is damaging ordinary people from the ban on DDT to the current concerns over Global Warming.
He was the director and producer of “Mine Your Own Business” (2006), the first documentary that asks difficult questions of the environmental movement. “Mine Your Own Business” looks at campaigns by foreign environmentalists against large-scale mining projects in the developing world. The documentary reveals the exaggeration and misrepresentations that are behind many of these campaigns. It also reveals how many environmentalists mistake poverty for an idyllic way of life that they believe needs to be preserved.
Opponents compared “Mine Your Own Business” to pornography and Nazi propaganda and McAleer has received death threats from environmentalists because of the content of the documentary. However, the left-wing UK Guardian newspaper described “Mine Your Own Business” as a "A Michael Moore-style documentary…casts the green movement as the influential villain of a worldwide campaign to block development and deny people the chance of jobs and a decent life."
Newsweek says that the film has produced "quotes, observations and footage that cast environmental groups in a decidedly unflattering light."
Before “Mine Your Own Business,” McAleer was a second unit director, Associate Producer, and researcher on the documentary "Return to Sender," which aired on Canada's CBC in February 2005.
From 2000 to 2003 he was the Romania/Bulgaria Correspondent for the Financial Times. McAleer has also written for The Economist from the region. Previously, from 1998 to 2000 he worked for the UK Sunday Times in their Dublin office. He has also written for the UK Spectator magazine, the Los Angeles Times, Ottawa Gazette, and the Sunday Tribune in Ireland. McAleer started his career as a journalist working for the Crossmaglen Examiner a local Northern Ireland newspaper in Co. Armagh. The newspaper covered stories in the area, which was known as 'Bandit country' because of the ferocity of the IRA campaign in the area. McAleer then moved to the Irish News in Belfast. At the Irish News, Northern Ireland's largest selling daily newspaper, he worked as a journalist covering the Northern Ireland troubles and peace process before becoming night editor.
He devised and co-produced "The Search for Tristan's Mum," which was broadcast on RTE 1, the Irish state television station, in 2005. It featured the shocking case of the toddler Tristan Dowse who was adopted by an Irish couple at birth and then abandoned in an Indonesian orphanage two years later.
“The Search for Tristan's Mum” was selected for Input 2006, a showcase for the best programs from national public broadcasters from around the world.
McAleer is a much sought after public speaker and radio show guest. He has most recently spoken at conferences in New York (Heartland Institute), Salt Lake City (Sutherland Institute), Maine (State Policy Network), and interviewed on BBC and the US syndicated radio shows of “Dennis Miller” and “Randi Rhodes.”
Filmography:
“Not Evil Just Wrong” (2008), Director & Producer
“Mine Your own Business” (2006), Writer Director & Producer
“The Search for Tristan's Mum” (RTE, 2005), Co-Producer
“Return to Sender” (CBC, 2005), Associate Producer

Phelim McAleer
Earthquakes Don’t Kill Haitians – Underdevelopment Does
by Phelim McAleerIt is only a matter of time before Environmentalists and some scientists blame the Haiti earthquake and its massive death toll on Global Warming. They have already laid the groundwork with this Sept 2009 article in the UK Guardian newspaper. According to Professor Bill McGuire of University College London an upcoming scientific conference would show how “global warming threatens the planet in a new and unexpected way – by triggering earthquakes, tsunamis, avalanches and volcanic eruptions.” Despite these claims the earthquake in Haiti was not caused by Global Warming.

And the death and destruction was not because Haitians had made a pact with the devil.
The reason so many people died in Haiti is because its people live in poorly built houses and have not benefited from development which brings with it cities and houses which can withstand earthquakes.
But guess who are the most active opponents of cities and modern concrete housing?






Subscribe via RSS
Got a Tip?