![]() Senators Marco Rubio and Rick Scott voted against last year’s bipartisan infrastructure law, which devotes some $50 billion to help states better prepare for events like Ian, because they said it was wasteful. But the state’s top elected leaders opposed the most significant climate legislation to pass Congress - laws to help fortify states against, and recover from, climate disasters, and confront their underlying cause: the burning of fossil fuels. Hurricane Ian’s wrath made clear that Florida faces some of the most severe consequences of climate change anywhere in the country. īasically the media spin is that if you don’t support massive spending bills proposed by Democrats (with the support of a few Republicans in this case) then you got what was coming to you in the form of a hurricane: Pretty sure you can’t regulate mother nature. The and I am being extremely generous here, might be experiencing a bit of a downturn in the quality of their journalism. That could be but the competition is always fierce for that particular distinction. ![]() This might be the most stupid and idiotic tweet in the entire history of Twitter. So hurricanes are caused by too few “climate laws”? This just REEKS of “science”! ![]() Ron DeSantis and other Florida Republicans rejected major climate laws. How’s this for a journalistic stretch to “own DeSantis” and other Florida Republicans? The New York Times’ contribution to that effort is something else. Ron DeSantis telling the truth about some in the “national regime media” who were essentially rooting for Hurricane Ian for political purposes.
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