2/23/19: Another ordinary weekend in Trumpistan, which means extraordinary lunacy on display.
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Almost
every scientist in the world knows it’s a serious subject.
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Cow farts are in the news. “Cow farts” is the new “death panels for granny” phrase which the right will trot out to stupefy the uninformed and banish complex thought from right-wing craniums. After all, you can’t expect Trump fans to read a lengthy NASA report or count all the countries that believe climate change is a threat. You’re not going to hear Sean Hannity talk about the gaping hole in the Thwaites Glacier. You’re going to hear Fox News pundits boil down the Green New Deal to the God-given right of Americans to own flatulent bovines, instead.
At that point it’s not a serious discussion, whereas almost
every scientist in the world knows it’s a serious subject.
Cow farts...really, that's the level of discussion? |
What we must do is unclear. So, you could discuss detailed scientific reports related to climate change, from NOAA or the Department of Defense. Or you could do what President Trump just did.
Having nominated Heather Nauert, a former Fox News babe, to serve as the next U.S. ambassador to the United Nations, he was forced to try again after she withdrew from consideration.
Oh, please, please, tell me there’s an illegal immigrant in her story! Not exactly, but close! Nauert had long employed a nanny who was in the United States legally, but lacked papers required to work. That meant if Nauert filed tax documents the truth would out. So Nauert decided not to file the documents or mention the nanny while serving as spokeswoman for the State Department for two years.
Once the promotion to ambassador was offered the back taxes were paid, but the damage was done. And there it was again: A Trump official undercutting American wages by hiring immigrant help.
Just like Trump.
Trump nominates climate change denier as U.N. ambassador.
So Nauert was out and, ta da! Kelly Knight Craft was in! The new nominee is qualified for the U.N. post based on two criteria. First, she and her husband Joseph Craft III are big donors to the GOP. Second, she’s a climate change denier and Mr. Craft owns a big coal company in Kentucky. Asked in 2017, if she thought climate change was an issue, Ms. Craft did not reply, “Well, yes, because 2017, 2016 and 2015 have been the three hottest years ever recorded.”
She did not say, “Nearly 200 countries agree climate change is a threat and under this president we are the only nation in the world to withdraw from talks on the issue.”
Instead, she gave the: my-husband-sells-coal-and-so-I-will-give-you-a-cow-farts-type-of-response. “I believe there are scientists on both sides [emphasis added] that are accurate,” Ms. Craft said. “I think that both sides have their own results, from their studies, and I appreciate and I respect both sides of the science.”
That is exactly the kind of answer you’d expect from the ill-informed, unqualified-for-her-post-wife of a coal baron.
Mr. Craft isn’t just a coal baron. He’s a really powerful coal baron. If he cares about the future of the planet, he cares about being rich far more. Last year, he earned $1,361,390 for his work at Alliance Holding GP. He is “a former Chairman and current Board member of the National Coal Council, a Board Member of the National Mining Association, and a Director and current Chairman of American Coalition for Clean Coal Electricity.” Craft was, until 2012, a billionaire. A divorce from his first wife knocked him off the billionaire pedestal and left him a pauper with a paltry $625 million. You figure he needed the fat tax cuts he got under the Trump Tax Plan.
You might imagine that this story about Ms. Craft would be the only time you heard about climate deniers all week. With the Trump administration you would be wrong. The New York Times acquired a memo indicating that a Presidential Committee on Climate Security will soon be impaneled, consisting of 12 individuals, including William Happer, who is to head the team.
As Newsweek explains, Happer is, shall we say, “out there” when it comes to the topic of climate change:
[The] Princeton physicist
is a known climate change denier, who once compared the “demonization of carbon
dioxide” to the “demonization of poor Jews under Hitler.”
In 2015, Happer made news after
undercover members of the environmental campaign group Greenpeace posed
as oil company representatives and persuaded him to write a scientific
paper, The New York Times reported. He
assured them it would be an unpaid “labor of love.”
Happer told the Greenpeace
members, whom he believed were from an unnamed oil company: “More CO2
will benefit the world. The only way to limit CO2 would be to stop
using fossil fuels, which I think would be a profoundly immoral and irrational
policy.”
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