The House GOP added a provision to a military funding bill passed a few months ago (but it has failed so far in the Senate) to defund some military support of alternative energy.
https://www.congress.gov/bill/114th-con ... -bill/5293 https://www.govtrack.us/congress/bills/ ... rack/popup
Reporting at the time
http://www.politico.com/agenda/story/20 ... lan-000149
The coal industry (and to some extent natural gas industry) are terrified of further scientific study of the global climate, and of further advances in alternative energy, with separately or together could wipe billions of dollars of value off their books.
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Obviously top level active-duty military personnel aren’t going to wade into this kind of political fight in a public way.
Active military personnel are all walking on eggshells w/r/t public statements even tangentially related to this topic, and even about their statements made in classified briefing papers. Congressional hearings and other harassment can make their lives miserable, and most GOP congressmen and senators obtain significant campaign contributions from the Koch brothers and other fossil fuel donors in return for public adherence to a staunch climate denial position. Defectors are punished; for instance Kelly Ayotte lost out on millions in contributions after voting for a purely symbolic statement that man-made climate change is a real thing.
https://theintercept.com/2016/11/05/rep ... te-change/ (Note the biggest spending went to the campaigns of Toomey, who has been a very reliable climate denialist, and Heck, where the Koch’s took personal interest in trying to beat Reid’s preferred successor – Reid has been viciously attacking the Kochs in public statements for years, and they’re furious about it because one of their goals is to keep a low profile.)
One would hope that internally the DOD has war-gamed out scenarios of severe droughts, civil unrest, massive displacements of people, etc. that will come of continuing rises in global temperatures. If e.g. the Indian subcontinent experiences a serious famine for a few years and hundreds of millions of people start trying to move, it would create a global crisis.
notice how a quick reading of the above quotes would suggest that every single general is telling Trump to take global warming seriously.
In context (for anyone who hasn’t been living under a rock) that is not even a remotely plausible inference to take from my snarky one-liner. I was obviously making a joke, playing on Trump’s “I know more about ISIS than the generals” comments
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Q26ikbTlQn0.
If I thought you couldn’t read and understand what the story at the posted link said, I wouldn’t have bothered posting a link at all. If I wanted to write a completely accurate short summary of the link, I would have spent at least 4–5 sentences on it.
But here, let me rephrase my hastily written joke for you in a clearer way, which more properly expresses my intended sarcasm:
“Good thing Trump knows more than ‘the generals’, because ‘the generals’ are telling him to take global warming seriously.”
Does that make it sufficiently obvious that the joke wasn’t intended as a precise literal summary of the link, and that literally all generals don’t perfectly agree about anything?