Here the Heritage Foundation presents a synopsis of the coming fire storm of insanity that Mr Objma has, on his own, along with the United Nations, decided America must fund developing nations as a 'payback' for out past history of taking the wealth of the world for our own prosperity.
Heritage combats UN-Obama climate change deal
by Michael Gribov
There's a storm brewing at the UN climate conference in Paris where all the nations have descended in their carbon-spewing motorcades and turned this beleaguered city into a world circus to stop global warming.
Resurrecting the Clinton-era Kyoto Protocol, this time the UN wants to add a massive wealth transfer to developing nations to convince them to cut affordable, reliable energy. This comes on top of the usual carbon reduction targets and onerous environmental regulations. Obama has already committed the U.S. by imperial decree to foot a $3 billion bill to bankroll the likes of Bangladesh, Fiji, and Malawi.
Heritage knew that Congress needed to prepare for this issue. After
spreading the news through the Daily Signal,
publishing op-eds, and
working with Congress, we now have a strong
Senate resolution with 37 original cosponsors, a House resolution with 46 original cosponsors, a public letter from the Senate with 37 senators, and a House letter with 110 representatives all opposing funding for the Paris agreement.
Congress is back in the game.
Our analysts are now in Paris to spread the real story behind the charade for climate change.
Steve Groves is helping developing nations see that Obama is promising checks they cannot cash. Nick Loris will present sensible energy policies at an
alternative conference in Paris, and Nolan Peterson is
reporting about the summit.
Obama wants to do all he can to avoid Congressional review of the agreement because Congress knows that this is a terrible deal for us: all we get are bills and regulations. Thanks to the support of Heritage members, our analysts are promoting better policies of free markets and deregulation, and we are making an impact. Reductions in carbon won't come from bribing developing nations with American taxpayer dollars. They’ll come when those nations are rich enough to move away from smokestack industries. Free trade and less government interference can help them get there.
No comments:
Post a Comment