so it sounds like that piece of shyt mcconnel just embarrassed the dems on thishes bringing it to a vote but they're like "well..uhh..maybe some of it shouldn't really be....real
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That's not at all what they said, they said he's rushing it to a vote to avoid giving everyone time to discuss the resolution and consult experts. It's just going to be votes based on preconceived notions instead of an actual robust discussion about the ideas in the bill.
ok, but we know that some of what's in there is fukking retarded![]()
lowkey?@Barnett114 was right. Most of you dudes are running around low key like republicans
would you agree it's a bad look to write a bill and then complain when the majority leader allows a vote on your billThe entire point of Mcconnell doing this is so that people with zero expertise can look at a vague list of goals, ignore that they haven't seen any models to know if the goals are attainable, and then dismiss the entire document. As the Dems discussed what is and isn't attainable within that vague list of promises, we'd get to see models and analysis that might make us realize something we took for granted as dumb is actually plausible (think the Fight for Fifteen, marijuana legalization or Universal Healthcare for examples of this happening in our recent history). The GND probably is too pie in the sky, but rushing to a vote makes sure you never differentiate which portions were reaches and which portions could be folded into a national platform for 2020.
would you agree it's a bad look to write a Non-binding Resolution and then complain when the majority leader allows a vote on your Non-binding Resolution![]()
The resolution being introduced by Ocasio-Cortez and Markey clarifies the scope and scale of the Green New Deal and paves the way for legislation that would lay out explicit projects and policies. Ocasio-Cortez plans to begin crafting that legislation immediately.
Energy researchers and policymakers previously told CNBC that trying to achieve the climate goals in 10 years could create unintended consequences that undermine progress towards decarbonization. Some of the revisions released on Thursday appear to acknowledge the potential complications from a rapid energy transition.
Ocasio-Cortez also clarified that under the plan, the U.S. will not invest in new nuclear power plants, but existing generation stations would be allowed to continue operating at the end of the 10-year time frame. Nuclear power plants generate 20 percent of the nation's electric power and 63 percent of its zero-carbon power.
"The goal is to use the expansion of renewable energy sources to fully meet 100% of our nation's power demand through only renewable sources in 10 years, but since no one has yet created a full plan to hit that goal, we are currently unsure if we will be able to decommission every nuclear plant that fast," Ocasio-Cortez's office said in an FAQ.
i still don't see the problemTouched that up for you for accuracy. I'd agree that to a person who didn't follow this closely, that this situation would be a bad look. If you know that this was intended as a non-binding framework of goals and targets for supporters to design legislation around though; then this just looks like political theater aimed at fooling people who pay more attention to headlines than context. Just to be clear here, this isn't revisionist in any way either, here's what was said upon the release of the resolution.
Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez just released her massive Green New Deal — here's what's in it
They were pretty clear about the goals of this whole concept out the gate.
i still don't see the problem
maybe it's things like getting every building in america up to new code in ten years that could present problems![]()
Half the fukking deficit is from government issued savings bonds and other investitures too, it's like people just hear the word debt and freak out without realizing that to have debt, that means someone or something else has the money.There are multiple things being ignored there.
For example, current health care spending is $3.5 trillion a year. If Medicare for all is $3.2 trillion, that's a $300 billion savings. Thus you'd actually SAVE money off of current health care spending. In fact, with improved health/productivity, the savings would increase.
A jobs guarantee would lead to increased tax payments and increasing consumer spending, leading to even more taxes.
Infrastructure changes to achieve carbon neutrality could be expensive. But every study shows that responding to climate change is more expensive than preventing it. So what's the game-plan if you're not going to do that, avoid paying a lot now but pay far more later?
The funniest thing is complaining about deficit spending. Wake me up when deficit spending on the military and rich people's tax breaks finally becomes a concern for the right and center.
Isn't the entire article ignoring the fact that people will be working, paying taxes, and therefore keeping inflation down?
The entire point of Mcconnell doing this is so that people with zero expertise can look at a vague list of goals, ignore that they haven't seen any models to know if the goals are attainable, and then dismiss the entire document. As the Dems discussed what is and isn't attainable within that vague list of promises, we'd get to see models and analysis that might make us realize something we took for granted as dumb is actually plausible (think the Fight for Fifteen, marijuana legalization or Universal Healthcare for examples of this happening in our recent history). The GND probably is too pie in the sky, but rushing to a vote makes sure you never differentiate which portions were reaches and which portions could be folded into a national platform for 2020.