Well, in most votes, belief in Doing Something about anthropogenic climate change hasn’t driven people to the polls, except to vote against Doing Something. I doubt 2020 will be any different, but, the Cult of Climastrology can always hope
More voters than ever say the climate crisis is their top priority
A growing share of voters list climate and the environment as their top priority, according to a new poll from the Environmental Voter Project.
Of the registered voters surveyed, 14 percent named “addressing climate change and protecting the environment†their No. 1 priority over all other issues, compared with 2 to 6 percent before the 2016 presidential election.
Climate and environment voters are also the most motivated to vote in 2020, saying they are willing to wait in line an average of an hour and 13 minutes at the polls.
“There are almost 30 million climate voters out there who are already registered to vote. That’s a huge constituency,†said Nathaniel Stinnett, the founder of the project, which aims to identify inactive environmentalists and turn them into consistent activists and voters.
“That’s like four times the number of NRA members. It’s enormous, and a lot of that growth has happened over the last two to three years.â€
ZOMG! More than the NRA!!!!!!
The poll compared survey responses to public voter file records and found that infrequent voters are more likely than frequent ones to assign a higher importance to climate and the environment.
That suggests environment advocates could benefit from getting more climate-minded voters to the polls with some easy fixes, such as awareness campaigns for early and absentee voting. A quarter of infrequent voters were not aware they could vote early, and 29 percent weren’t aware they could vote absentee. Voting by mail could also increase environment voter turnout.
Of course, when you explain to these infrequent voters that they’d be voting to raise their cost of living, cost of energy, take more money out of their pockets, and limit their freedom, liberty, and choice, that could change the dynamics. Because the Warmists pushing this stuff keep forgetting that ‘climate change’ is popular in theory, not in practice. And, if they think this is going to help defeat Donald Trump, well, good luck with that!
Read: While More Voters Say They Care About Hotcoldwetdry, Will They Go To The Polls? »
A growing share of voters list climate and the environment as their top priority, according to a new poll from the Environmental Voter Project.
Despite the threat climate change poses to human health, very few medical schools have made it a part of their coursework.
(many many paragraphs attempting to defend the way the House held it’s impeachment theater)
A giant parasol that hovers high in orbit to block the sun. Refreezing the melting poles by making submarine-sized ice cubes. Pumping extra carbon dioxide deep underground for indefinite storage. Spraying sulfur dioxide into the atmosphere to form clouds to artificially cool the Earth.
Under the new law SB 104 California will offer government subsidized health benefits for undocumented immigrants under the age of 26.
But few are discussing one key aspect of California’s crisis: Yes, climate change intensifies the fires—but the ways in which we plan and develop our cities makes them even more destructive. The growth of urban regions in the second half of the 20th century has been dominated by economic development, aspirations of home ownership, and belief in the importance of private property. Cities and towns have expanded in increasingly disperse fashion, fueled by cheap energy. Infrastructure has been built, deregulated, and privatized, extending services in more and more tenuous and fragile ways. Our ideas about what success, comfort, home, and family should look like are so ingrained, it’s hard for us to see how they could be reinforcing the very conditions that put us at such grave risk.
With the help of Senate Republicans, Donald Trump spent the first three years of his presidency remaking the federal judiciary in his own image. The president has appointed 133 district court judges, 50 appeals court judges, and two Supreme Court justices—meaning about one-fifth of the nation’s federal trial judges, and one-fourth of its federal appellate judges, are Trump appointees. These jurists are leading a conservative revolution that will upend decades of precedent and enshrine reactionary policies into the law. The transformation has only just begun. But for a glimpse of where the judiciary is heading if Trump wins a second term, Americans can look to the 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals. A traditionally conservative bench, the court has been newly reshaped by Trump—and quickly got to work translating right-wing priorities into legal doctrine that will govern generations.
Obesity is complicating the climate-change fight, researchers say, especially as the Earth’s population adds roughly 83 million people of all shapes and sizes every year.

