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Tuesday, February 26, 2019

Green New Deal Cost Revealed







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Price tag of Green New Deal put at $93 trillion

by Josh Siegel





 The "Green New Deal" resolution introduced by progressive Democrats would cost up to $93 trillion over 10 years. 

The American Action Forum, led by Douglas Holtz-Eakin, former director of the nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office, said in a report the proposal would cost between $51 trillion and $93 trillion over 10 years. 

In comparison, total government spending over the next 10 years is projected to total less than $60 trillion, according to the Congressional Budget Office. 

The American Action Forum analysis says the Green New Deal's call to eliminate carbon emissions from the power and transportation sectors would cost between $8.3 trillion and $12.3 trillion. 

It estimates a federal job guarantee proposed in the resolution would cost $6.8 trillion to $44.6 trillion. Universal healthcare, another component of the Green New Deal resolution, would cost $36 trillion over 10 years, the report found. 

Republicans jumped on the report. 

“The American Action Forum’s analysis shows that the Green New Deal would bankrupt the nation,” said Sen. John Barrasso, R-Wyo., the chairman of the Senate Environment and Public Works Committee. 

Barrasso said government policy to combat climate change should emphasize promoting innovation through investments in new technologies like advanced nuclear power and carbon capture on fossil fuels plants. 

But supporters of the Green New Deal say those targeted investments are insufficient. Sponsors of the resolution also said the American Action Forum report is intentionally misleading. That’s because sponsors intended the Green New Deal to be a broad vision to combat climate change, with details to be filled in later through various pieces of legislation after debate through relevant congressional committees. 

“Any so-called 'analysis' of the #GreenNewDeal that includes artificially inflated numbers that rely on lazy assumptions, incl. about policies that aren’t even in the resolution is bogus,” tweeted Sen. Ed Markey, D-Mass., who co-introduced the Green New Deal resolution. “Putting a price on a resolution of principles, not policies, is just Big Oil misinformation.” 

More Democratic mumble-jumble horse shit.









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I was watching “In Pursuit With John Walsh” last night





They did a story on a guy who committed a murder 14 years ago.





Wonder if he's a Muslim? 












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Monday, February 25, 2019

First photograph of the backdated, $3,500 check Smollett paid Nigerian brothers 'to beat him' emerges





On Monday, Chicago Police Superintendent Eddie T. Johnson appeared on Good Morning America to say he had more proof the actor lied 





They should tack on 5 more years for stupidity!


This is the check Jussie Smollett paid Abimbola 'Abel' Osundairo to allegedly beat him on January 29. He backdated it to January 23, according to police. Smollett labeled it '5-week nutrition/workout program' but the brothers say it was for the attack





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The world in which we live:



Article fresh off the press:

Is it cruel to have kids in the era of climate change?


Wonder what they call killing your kid right after birth... right and just!?! 

What are these people?

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Some argue that bringing children into a decaying world is immoral.

In one of his early works, the nineteenth-century German philosopher Friedrich Nietzsche relayed an Ancient Greek legend about King Midas pursuing the satyr Silenus, a wise companion of the god Dionysus. When Midas finally captures Silenus, he asks him what “the best thing of all for men” is. “The very best thing for you is totally unreachable,” Silenus replies: “not to have been born, not to exist, to be nothing.”

27-year-old Raphael Samuel from Mumbai offered an echo of this argument to the BBC this month. Samuel plans to sue his parents for bringing him into a world of suffering without his consent. “Why should I suffer? Why must I be stuck in traffic? Why must I work? Why must I face wars? Why must I feel pain or depression? Why should I do anything when I don’t want to? Many questions. One answer,” Samuel wrote on his Facebook page: “Someone had you for their ‘pleasure.’”

Once, such thoughts might have seemed far-fetched or even self-indulgent. Today, however, similar reasoning—known as “antinatalism—seems to be spreading as potential future parents contemplate bringing children into a world climate change is likely to devastate. “Why did you have me?” Samuel asked his parents as a child. If the bleak scenarios about the planet’s future come to fruition, will parents have a satisfying answer to such questions?

The basic antinatalist argument is simple, albeit easily misunderstood. As philosopher David Benatar argued in a 2006 antinatalist treatise, life is full of suffering and strife, the moments of pleasure and happiness few, transitory, and elusive, and ultimately it all ends in death. This is not the same as saying that life is not worth living, if you happen to be alive—for one thing, living and then facing death can involve its own physical and emotional pain. The argument is rather that it would have been better never to have been born in the first place. Some lives can indeed be rather satisfactory, even rewarding. But as a potential future parent, you are taking a risk on your child’s behalf, because, Benatar kindly reminds us, “there is a wide range of appalling fates that can befall any child that is brought into existence: starvation, rape, abuse, assault, serious mental illness, infectious disease, malignancy, paralysis.”

Which brings us to a risk unique to the twenty-first century: climate change. According to the 2018 report by the UN’s Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, humanity has only 12 years left to prevent global warming from reaching levels that would result in the poverty of millions and the greatest displacement of people in the history of humanity as they flee extreme drought and floods. Such events also tend to involve violent conflict. The political community’s tepid response to climate change so far, with world leaders like Donald Trump and Jair Bolsanarorefusing to acknowledge global warming as real, let alone as urgent, makes it hard to be optimistic. Given the very real possibility that life will be much worse for the next generation as a result of the global instability, some, recent trend pieces report, are thinking twice about becoming parents. 

One might argue that, like Benatar’s catalog of human suffering, this response is overly pessimistic. Hardship is nothing new. Life can be meaningful despite it, and sometimes even because of it. Strife gives you something to work towards, purpose; it’s what gives life meaning, not what makes it meaningless.

But if climate change causes wars to break out, would one still choose to birth children into a high likelihood of violent death? And if the looming 12-year deadline is missed, and further temperature increases become statistically inevitable, what purpose could life have in the face of an unavoidable, collective downfall? At least people living today still have the agency to change things. But bringing children into a decaying world, without even the opportunity to do something about it, seems a cruel fate to inflict on someone, especially your own child.

The great question is whether that fate is inevitable. During the Cold War, there was an existential fear about a possible nuclear war between America and the USSR, which would have brought about mass death and suffering. Instead, political history and fortune took a turn that made nuclear annihilation less likely—even though the risk of a nuclear war may since have risen. Going further back, around the turn of the nineteenth century the English economist Thomas Malthus was warning that the pending overpopulation of the planet would lead to inevitable food shortages. That didn’t happen either. Technological advances have allowed the planet to feed a population many times its nineteenth-century tally of one billion. So, even if we can’t see it from our current vantage point, there is hope that politics, technology, or a combination of the two might retrospectively render our current anxieties exaggerated. But, of course, there is no guarantee of that—hope comes with its own risks.

Having children, some could argue, is a way of making that hope more realistic. For while some environmentalists have suggested lowering birth rates to reduce greenhouse emissions for those who remain, there is also another side to the issue: Young people today care deeply about the environment and their activism is needed as political pressure. Young people will also be the future scientists and engineers that we need in order to come up with technological solutions to global warming that are still unavailable. Both these “greater good” arguments for and against procreation, unfortunately, amount to using future children as a means to an end, thinking about how they can contribute to our overall welfare, rather than thinking of their own individual well-being.
Most people don’t have children after doing a risk assessment of the possible problems that could threaten their children’s well-being in the future.

What unsettles with all of these justifications for having children in the face of potential adversity is that they portray this decision as the result of a calculation. Most people don’t have children after doing a risk assessment of the possible problems that could threaten their children’s well-being in the future. Philosophers like Benatar, of course, think that’s a mistake, unreflectively surrendering to our animal instinct to procreate—but arguably if our decision to bring a new person to life resulted from spreadsheet analysis, that would come with its own dystopian overtones, and somewhat compromise the inherently audacious nature of the act.

Nietzsche, ultimately, did not give in to Silenus’s pessimistic message that it would have been better never to have existed. Instead, he emphasized the life-affirming side of Dionysus’s outlook, an affirmation in full knowledge of life’s propensity for tragedy. This affirmation embraces life in its totality, its high points as well as its low points, without entering into a petty calculus of which side amasses a greater score. For Nietzsche, this was not a rational argument or a religious belief, but more of an attitude towards things. Nietzsche called it “the will to live,” or “a triumphant Yes”: the “affirmation of life even in its strangest and sternest of problems.” While future parents may not want to respond to the question, “why did you have me?” by handing a child the complete works of Nietzsche, they may yet find this attitude inspiring in the era of climate change.




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Sunday, February 24, 2019

Lara Logan former correspondent for CBS news




Lara Logan worked at CBS for 16 years. Here she discusses the media bias from the left and the negative media coverage on President Trump. 





Video 487


Bet that Navy Seal had a hard time looking at her eyes.






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