As a candidate,The Relic Of My Sister Next Door Donald Trump said climate change was a hoax, and made fun of Democrats who ranked it as a top tier threat to national security.
On Thursday, during a speech announcing that the U.S. is withdrawing from the Paris Agreement on Climate Change, President Trump managed to do the impossible: Discuss a global warming agreement without ever mentioning whether he believes the problem exists.
There wasn't a single statement devoted to the reality and seriousness of the issue. Instead, he repeatedly cited his support for a "clean environment," which could mean clean air, clean water, or any number of things other than climate change.
SEE ALSO: Trump flips the middle finger to the world, your futureFrom his diatribe against the voluntary climate agreement -- he said it would hamstring the U.S. economy and allow others to pollute more -- one can infer that he still eyes climate science warily at best, but most likely rejects it in large part.
“The United States, under the Trump administration, will continue to be the cleanest and most environmentally friendly country on Earth,” Trump said during the speech. “We’ll be the cleanest. We’re going to have the cleanest air. We’re going to have the cleanest water. We will be environmentally friendly…”
International leaders should realize at this point that the U.S. is being led by a climate denier who has little idea of how international agreements are negotiated, let alone renegotiated on a whim.
Much of the speech sounded eerily similar to media appearances by Environmental Protection Agency Administrator and well-known climate denier Scott Pruitt.
Pruitt told CNBC in March that rising amounts of carbon dioxide from burning fossil fuels is not the main cause of recent global warming.
Climate scientists, on the other hand, almost uniformly say it is. One can infer from the similarity to Pruitt's comments, and the fact that Trump invited Pruitt to the podium to finish the Rose Garden announcement, that Trump agrees with him on global warming.
The U.S. is being led by a climate denier who has little idea of how international agreements are negotiated, let alone renegotiated on a whim.
"I think that measuring with precision human activity on the climate is something very challenging to do and there's tremendous disagreement about the degree of impact, so no, I would not agree that it's a primary contributor to the global warming that we see," Trump told the host of CNBC's "Squawk Box."
"But we don't know that yet, as far as... we need to continue the debate and continue the review and the analysis," he said. The question CNBC asked Pruitt was: "Do you believe that it's been proven that [carbon dioxide] is the primary control knob for climate? Do you believe that?"
In Thursday's Rose Garden speech, Trump talked about the way the agreement treats China and India compared to the U.S.
"China will be able to increase these emissions by a staggering number of years, 13," Trump said.
"India makes its participation contingent on receiving billions and billions of dollars in foreign aid from developed countries," Trump said. "There are many other examples, but the bottom line is that the Paris Accord is very unfair at the highest level to the United States."
Compare that to what Pruitt told ABC Newsin late March:
"What was wrong with Paris was ... that China and India, the largest producers of [carbon dioxide] internationally, got away scot free. They didn't have to take steps until 2030."
"So we penalized ourselves through lost jobs, while China and India didn't take steps to address this issue internationally," Pruitt said.
In reality, under the Paris Agreement (the White House kept calling it the "Paris Accord," which is under a different category in international law), the United States, the world's second-largest emitter after China, pledged to reduce emissions by 26-28 percent by 2025, compared to 2005 levels.
China, meanwhile, agreed to peak its carbon emissions by 2030 and make best efforts to peak earlier.
More recent analyses show China's emissions could peak closer to the middle of the decade than 2030. The world's top carbon emitter also pledged to increase use of non-fossil fuel-based energy to 20 percent of its energy consumption within the same time frame.
To put that into everyday terms, that renewable energy increase in China would be equivalent to replacing the entire electrical grid in the U.S.
Yet that's not enough for Pruitt and Trump, who have now proven themselves ready to lead the U.S., and the world, off a climate precipice together.
Amazon Go cashierResearchers find evidence that Europa's ocean erupts water into spaceJapanese railway company apologises for train leaving 25 seconds earlyInstagram adds feature to monitor time spent in the app'This Is America' x 'Call Me Maybe' is a meme. Let's talk about that.Loads of delicious cookie dough spilled onto a North Carolina highwayDonald Trump tweets support for ZTE and now everyone's confusedSnoop Dogg surprises guests at multiple blockchain partiesMan gets hilarious response after pitching astroturfed window boxes to garden showElaine proposes to Jerry in genuinely good 'Seinfeld' parodyLoads of delicious cookie dough spilled onto a North Carolina highwayUnited stopped serving tomato juice on flights and people were FURIOUSThe original Yanny vs. Laurel audio will finally settle this once and for allGoogle just slashed the price on its massive storage plans with Google One upgradeIn audit update, Facebook says it has suspended 200United stopped serving tomato juice on flights and people were FURIOUSThandie Newton's dress takes Star Wars fandom to the next levelMusk says latest Tesla crash isn't 'front page news,' but it is because of AutopilotMusk says latest Tesla crash isn't 'front page news,' but it is because of AutopilotTwitch streams 48 Target's new swimwear campaign is completely Photoshop Google Maps adds location sharing so you can keep track of late friends Once and for all, people: Stop bringing snakes on planes, because stuff like this happens Critical LastPass security hole would allow hackers to steal your passwords This wildly incorrect guess on 'Wheel of Fortune' will leave you screaming Twitter finally finds a way to silence Piers Morgan — and for a good cause Lyft is being mighty elusive about whether it'll finally come to Australia The Earth is round. It's your problem if you believe it isn't. It's terrifyingly easy to delete all your 'Zelda: Breath of the Wild' saves Artist makes amazingly realistic miniatures of old buildings Drake just shattered his Spotify record with an Apple Music record Supreme Court nominee Neil Gorsuch was just tripped up by a horse The new air travel device restrictions have arrived—here's what you need to know Durex is launching jeans and people are majorly amused 7 features to look forward to in Android O #DeleteUber campaign inspired 500,000 to delete accounts in one week: NYTimes The GOP is terrible at playing 'Dungeons & Dragons,' if you believe the internet A woman apologizes to a drive There are too many damn iPads to choose from now 'D*ckhead' escape dog somehow knows how to catch trains all over town
1.6888s , 10138.09375 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【The Relic Of My Sister Next Door】,Charm Information Network