Neil Gorsuch Might Be Bad For ‘Climate Change’ Because His Mother Tried To Kill The EPA Or Something

So, Mr. Trump has picked Neil Gorsuch as his Supreme Court nominee. We can be assured that Democrats will give him a fair shake caterwaul and carry on to the point Mitch McConnell implements the nuclear option. We already have Nancy Pelosi saying that he’s a “very hostile appointment.” I wonder if she realizes her vote is meaningless?

Democrats already had their pre-printed “grassroots” signs made, and ABC News rushed to print the DNC’s talking points. On thing that might concern is that Neal K. Katyal, an acting solicitor general in the Obama admin, says that Liberals should back Gorsuch.

…he brings a sense of fairness and decency to the job, and a temperament that suits the nation’s highest court.

I have no doubt that if confirmed, Judge Gorsuch would help to restore confidence in the rule of law.

Well, those are antithetical to the beliefs of Liberals, so, maybe not so great for him. But, hey, don’t worry that the NY Times printed the op-ed, because the Editorial Board is being totally calm and rational

Neil Gorsuch, the Nominee for a Stolen Seat

Or not. The butthurt is strong. And David Leonhardt provides the reason Liberals should oppose him. Salon goes Salon by noting Gorsuch is GASP pro-life.

But, you know what’s worse?

Remember that time when Neil Gorsuch’s mother tried to dismantle the EPA?

Anne Gorsuch — whose son has just been nominated by President Trump for the Supreme Court — was administrator of the EPA from 1981 to 1983, under Ronald Reagan. And much like Scott Pruitt, Trump’s EPA nominee, she wanted to rip the agency apart.

Anne Gorsuch slashed EPA’s budget by 22 percent and aggressively rolled back clean air and clean water rules and other protections. A lawyer herself, she apparently did not like to see the legal system used to protect the environment: “In the first year of the Reagan administration, there was a 79 percent decline in the number of enforcement cases filed from regional offices to EPA headquarters, and a 69 percent decline in the number of cases filed from the EPA to the Department of Justice,” a House staffer told Grist in 2004. Anne Gorsuch resigned less than two years into the job over a scandal involving mismanagement of the Superfund program.

Like mother, like son? During his decade as a federal appeals court judge, Neil Gorsuch has not ruled on notable environmental cases, so he doesn’t have much of a track record to assess. He is a staunch conservative like his mom, though, and that’s enough to have environmentalists very worried.

Obviously, he’s a bee and polar bear hater in waiting, a guy who wants to cover the world in fossil fuels and coal, causing the seas to cover all the land. The is being repeated around the Left-o-net, by places such as Salon’s baby transgender Slate, Yahoo News, and Heavy, among others. Heavy also notes

Many are worried about Neil Gorsuch’s views on environmentalism and clean energy. As President Donald Trump’s nominee to replace former Justice Antonin Scalia on the Supreme Court, his viewpoints could make a big difference in the future of clean energy. Some are concerned that his opinions might echo those of his mother, Anne Gorsuch Burford. However, at least one of his rulings may bode well for environmentalists.

Here’s what you need to know.

A ruling from 2015 in Colorado might show that Gorsuch could be favorable toward environmental laws. In 2015, on a three-judge panel, Gorsuch affirmed that Colorado’s renewable energy law would remain in place and did not violate the Constitution. The law required that utilities get 30 percent of the electricity they sell to Colorado customers from renewable resources. The plaintiff had advocated for a free market approach to environmentalism and argued that the law violated the Commerce Clause and unfairly hurt out-of-state businesses, such as coal producers.

The big takeaway on that ruling?

He also noted that even if the law raised electricity prices, Colorado residents had voted overwhelmingly in support of the mandate, so they apparently were “happy to bear” the higher costs. Think Progress touted the ruling as a win for all environmental groups who wanted to promote renewable energy in Colorado. Conservation Colorado said in a statement about the ruling:

So, he’s willing to let Warmists be hoist on their own petard. Good, good.

Inverse whined about his mother a week a go, being the first that I can find to do so. They are also Very Concerned that he is a man of faith. But, then, Liberals are always concerned when people have a moral bedrock. At CNN we see

Greenpeace USA Executive Director Annie Leonard said that Gorsuch would do nothing to preserve environmental regulations needed to fight climate change.

“There is no evidence in Gorsuch’s track record that indicates he would be a champion for these legal protections,” she said.

There’s virtually no evidence in his track record that he isn’t. He has almost no rulings. But, that’s of little consequence in Liberal World, where they would block anyone Trump picked. He could have picked Merritt Garland and Democrats would be against.

Crossed at Right Wing News.

Read: Neil Gorsuch Might Be Bad For ‘Climate Change’ Because His Mother Tried To Kill The EPA Or Something »

When It Comes To Canadian Mosque Shooting, The Whole Country Is To Blame Or Something

Now, look, it appears as if the alleged mosque shooter, Alexandre Bissonnette, is a beyond right wing nutjob, at least from early indications. They are, of course, trying to tie him into Trump and Marine Le-Pen, but, here’s the real fun one from the NY Times, as Haroon Siddiqui attempts to blame all Canadians

The Bigotry That Armed the Quebec Mosque Attacker

An incurably optimistic Canadian, I long believed that Canada would be immune to anti-Muslim hysteria. I was mistaken. This attack has been a long time coming.

The first inkling came after Sept. 11. Until then, I was just another Canadian journalist. After that, I was seen only as a Muslim, my identity reduced to my religion. The confusion, or deliberate conflation, of terrorist extremists with ordinary, law-abiding Muslims meant laying a collective guilt on all Muslims.

“What do you, Siddiqui, have to say about this or that horrible act of terrorism?” It was as if I were personally responsible.

Siddiqui goes on and on and on, ending with

I remain an incurably optimistic Canadian, and I want to believe that Canada is still not the United States. But as Sunday’s attack showed, we face the challenge of undoing the damage of years of suspicion and bigotry.

See? It’s the fault of every Canadian! When it’s a Muslim attacker, well, they’re just a lone wolf/wolvesz, and it has absolutely nothing to do with Islam in the least! You can’t even say that these people are radicals, extremists, in an attempt to separate them from the rest of Muslims. Nope. Nothing to do with Islam, even as they scream Allahu Ackbar. You aren’t allowed to make any generalization.

If only these same people, and the politically correct politicians, and the Credentialed Media, had the same concern for the people killed and harmed by Muslim terrorist attacks. Which, interestingly, tend to kill and harm more Muslims than westerners.

Read: When It Comes To Canadian Mosque Shooting, The Whole Country Is To Blame Or Something »

If All You See…

…is an evil plastic water bottle, you might just be a Warmist

The blog of the day is A View From The Beach, with a post on country mice vs city mice.

BTW, regardless of ‘climate change,’ you should still recycle for the environment.

Read: If All You See… »

Bummer: Renewables Won’t Stop Climate Doom

Well, that puts a wrench in the monkey works

Renewables can’t deliver Paris climate goals: study

Expansion of renewable energy cannot by itself stave off catastrophic climate change, scientists warned Monday.

Even if solar and wind capacity continues to grow at breakneck speed, it will not be fast enough to cap global warming under two degrees Celsius (3.6 degrees Fahrenheit), the target set down in the landmark 2015 Paris climate treaty, they reported in the journal Nature Climate Change.

“The rapid deployment of wind, solar and electric cars gives some hope,” lead author Glen Peters, a researcher at the Center for International Climate and Environmental Research in Oslo, Norway, told AFP.

“But at this stage, these technologies are not really displacing the growth in fossil fuels or conventional transportation.”

Can you guess whats’ really needed?

“Politician seem happy to support wind, solar and electric vehicles through subsidies. But they are not willing to put prices”—a carbon tax, for example—”on fossil fuels.”

Funny how it always comes down to a few things for these leftists, one of them being a big tax that will end up hurting the lower and middle classes.

Read: Bummer: Renewables Won’t Stop Climate Doom »

Poll: Majority Support Trump’s Temporary Ban

Um, oops?

From Rasmussen

Most voters approve of President Trump’s temporary halt to refugees and visitors from several Middle Eastern and African countries until the government can do a better job of keeping out individuals who are terrorist threats.

A new Rasmussen Reports national telephone and online survey finds that 57% of Likely U.S. Voters favor a temporary ban on refugees from Syria, Iraq, Iran, Libya, Somalia, Sudan and Yemen until the federal government approves its ability to screen out potential terrorists from coming here. Thirty-three percent (33%) are opposed, while 10% are undecided. (To see survey question wording, click here.)

Similarly, 56% favor a temporary block on visas prohibiting residents of Syria, Iraq, Iran, Libya, Somalia, Sudan and Yemen from entering the United States until the government approves its ability to screen for likely terrorists. Thirty-two percent (32%) oppose this temporary ban, and 11% are undecided. (snip)

The refugee ban is supported by 82% of Republicans and 59% of voters not affiliated with either major party. Democrats are opposed by a 53% to 34% margin. The numbers are nearly identical for the temporary ban on visas from these seven terrorist-plagued nations.

Perhaps those who approve of it would be willing to take the rapeugees, er, refugees, into their own homes and neighborhoods? They should talk to people in Europe for guidance first.

Along these same lines, the NY Times provides the names of companies who are putting these refugees, who probably do not even speak the language, over US citizens. The biggest among them making a splash is Starbucks, which has stated it will hire 10,000 refugees. I have a couple questions

  1. How many of the 18,000 already let in by Obama have they hired?
  2. If they haven’t hired any, why not?
  3. Why didn’t the NY Times ask Starbucks how many they hired?
  4. Will Starbucks make sure no pork products are served?
  5. Will Starbucks stop dogs from coming in stores?
  6. Will Starbucks require women, both employees and customers, to cover up so as not to incite being sexually assaulted, as they’ve been told in Europe?

Tech companies are big on being opposed to the temporary ban, because they love displacing their citizen workers and hiring foreigners at lower salaries. Of course, they tend to hire people who can speak the language and understand the tech, not those who can put bombs together.

Media and Telcom are rather neutral. It’s retail that’s more vocal. Nike, Coca Cola, Walmart, Target, and Proctor and Gamble are all mentioned. How many have hired the refugees? Or, do they prefer to be all talk and no actiom?

Among the automakers, Ford took the most outspoken stance, coming out against the executive order. Ford has its headquarters in Dearborn, Mich., a suburb of Detroit that has a large Muslim population.

In a joint statement, William Clay Ford Jr., Ford’s executive chairman, and Mark Fields, the company’s chief executive, said: “Respect for all people is a core value of Ford Motor Company, and we are proud of the rich diversity of our company here at home and around the world. That is why we do not support this policy or any other that goes against our values as a company.”

General Motors said it would support its employees who might be affected. Fiat Chrysler said it had no comment.

If they’re here, they aren’t affected. If they’re from those areas, why were they hired over Americans? Was GM and Ford planning on importing refugees with no skills and whom do not speak English to build cars? Does Ford respect women? How about the LGBT community? Because the refugees sure don’t, as we’ve seen from the things going on in Europe.

Read: Poll: Majority Support Trump’s Temporary Ban »

Liberals Seem Surprised That Private Sector Guy Acts Like Government Is The Private Sector

Love Trump or loathe him, he’s looking at this whole “government sector” thing like he would the private sector, just like you’d expect a guy who has worked in the private sector his whole life. And, things like massively defying the head of the organization has consequences.

It’s a great picture of Sally Yates looking stunned, wouldn’t you say? From the article

President Trump fired his acting attorney general on Monday night, removing her as the nation’s top law enforcement officer after she defiantly refused to defend his executive order closing the nation’s borders to refugees and people from predominantly Muslim countries.

In an escalating crisis for his 10-day-old administration, the president declared in a statement that Sally Q. Yates, who had served as deputy attorney general under President Barack Obama, had betrayed the administration by announcing that Justice Department lawyers would not defend Mr. Trump’s order against legal challenges.

Crisis? Really? Ms. Yates learned a valuable lesson: if you want to take this type of “principled” stand, you should resign. Like it or not, Trump is POTUS. And the rest of the federal employees, especially those in higher positions, where provided an abject lesson in what happens when you’re not part of the team. In the private sector, if you don’t like the things your boss does, you can discuss them with that person, and, if they won’t change to your satisfaction, you can either get along, or quit. Work somewhere else. It’s not your company.

Ms. Yates’s order was a remarkable rebuke by a government official to a sitting president, and it recalled the so-called Saturday Night Massacre in 1973, when President Richard M. Nixon fired his attorney general and deputy attorney general for refusing to dismiss the special prosecutor in the Watergate case.

First, she could have gone in and asked to talk with Mr. Trump or a main advisor. Instead, she played a dangerous game with her statement. And then, again, she learned what happens in the private sector. A sacking. Second, the situations mentioned are totally different. But, we know how objective the media is.

Ms. Yates said her determination in deciding not to defend the order was broader, however, and included questions not only about the order’s lawfulness, but also whether it was a “wise or just” policy. She also alluded to unspecified statements the White House had made before signing the order, which she factored into her review.

That’s not her job. Welcome to the private sector, Ms. Yates.

Interestingly, nowhere withing the article is it noted that Trump is utterly within his right to fire her.

Excitable Taylor Marsh is yammering on about the Saturday Night Massacre, and is calling the White House the Kremlin on the Potomac.

Above The Law writes that “So Ms. Yates gets to leave with her honor intact.” She would have had she resigned, not been canned.

Boing Boing is having a meltdown, as is Alan Colmes and The Atlantic. And Lawyers, Guns, And Money.

Ann Althouse picks out a great quote from the Times’ article: “These career bureaucrats have a problem with it?” Mr. Spicer said. “They should either get with the program or they can go.” Bingo.

Crossed at Right Wing News.

Read: Liberals Seem Surprised That Private Sector Guy Acts Like Government Is The Private Sector »

Update On Threaded Comments

Have spent a little time working on the comments, finally found the right combo using some info from here where the page doesn’t refresh and have the reply showing at the end. When you press reply, the AJAX kicks in and you can reply immediately below the initial comment. It’s set to nest 5 deep.

Still having issues with the mobile theme. I think there’s a little conflict between the caching plugin and the latest WordPress.

Anyhow, anyone see any issues?

Read: Update On Threaded Comments »

Supposedly, Trump Is Definitely Pulling Out Of Paris Climate Accord

You know, that HISTORIC super crazy awesome accord that will lower the world’s fever by, charitably, just .05C

From the link

A former climate change adviser to Donald Trump has said the US President will pull America out of the landmark Paris agreement and an executive order on the issue could come within “days”.

Myron Ebell, who took charge of Mr Trump’s Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) transition team, said the President was determined to undo policies pushed by Barack Obama to restrict greenhouse gas emissions.

He said the US would “clearly change its course on climate policy” under the new administration and claimed Mr Trump was “pretty clear that the problem or the crisis has been overblown and overstated”.

We can only hope that this will be done shortly. Still, it might be more fun to submit it to the Senate, and make the Democrats defend damaging our economy and hurting lower and middle class citizens. And making the Media Industrial Complex fall all over themselves with unhinged news and opinion pieces.

Read: Supposedly, Trump Is Definitely Pulling Out Of Paris Climate Accord »

If All You See…

…are evil condiment bottles brought in from far away, you might just be a Warmist

The blog of the day is Ice Age Now, with a post noting that school kids won’t know what onions look like.

Read: If All You See… »

Climate Thought Of The Day

Via Meso.

I know quite a few liberals are in apoplexy over the Canadian mosque shooting, looking to blame white people, Christians, gun owners, Trump and his “Muslim ban,” but, as we learn new information

(Fox News) One of two gunmen who shouted ‘Allahu akbar!’ as they opened fire at a mosque in Quebec City was of Moroccan origin, a witness and local media reported Monday, revealing the first details about the attackers in the massacre that killed six men.

The terror suspects were identified as Mohamed Khadir and Alexandre Bissonnette, the CBC reported. The two men were arrested soon after the shooting at the Quebec Islamic Cultural Centre Sunday night and were expected to appear in court later Monday, police told reporters.

The narrative is most likely collapsing. And, if you don’t trust Fox, how about the CBC, which reports the same?

I’m sure they were just worried about all the fossil fuels coming from Muslim nations causing climate change.

Read: Climate Thought Of The Day »

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