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by Kerrick
2512 days ago
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I decided to delve into their public policy (https://www.gop.com/platform/americas-natural-resources/), and I found this: > Climate change is far from this nation’s most pressing national security issue. That is an admission by the Republican Party, in its public policy, that climate change is not a myth. It just means they've decided not to care about it in regards to national security. I also found this: > Information concerning a changing climate, especially projections into the long-range future, must be based on dispassionate analysis of hard data. Again, that is an admission that the climate is changing and that scientific research and data can give us information about it. So as said elsewhere in this thread, we're back to politics determining decisions about what to do about climate change; the Republican Party's official platform doesn't seem to deny that the climate is changing. |
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I am guessing from their admission that they acknowledge climate is changing, but refusing to list it as a priory is that where the difference in opinion between Democrats/Republicans lie.
When it comes to the root cause of the climate change, how much humans are accelerating/impacting the change and how we can reduce the impact are all topics where the different political party's opinions differ.