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  • Writer: Don Lichterman
    Don Lichterman
  • May 24, 2019
  • 2 min read

Updated: May 25, 2019

Jared Kushner: US will present long-awaited Middle East peace plan after Ramadan, and he will send immigration plan to Trump by next week.

Senior White House advisor Jared Kushner said Tuesday that the Trump administration will put forward its long-awaited plan for peace in the Middle East after the end of the Muslim holy month of Ramadan in early June.

Senior Advisor to the President Jared Kushner speaks during the Time 100 Summit event April 23, 2019 in New York.” -- Kevin Breuninger / @KEVINWILLIAMB

Kushner, who is also the son-in-law of President Donald Trump, provided few details about the plan to reconcile the disputes between Israelis and Palestinians. But he assured that the proposal itself is “very detailed” and will hopefully represent a “comprehensive vision” for peace.


“We were getting ready at the end of last year” to unveil the plan, but that rollout was interrupted by the Israeli election, Kushner said during an interview at the TIME 100 Summit in New York on Tuesday.


“Prime Minister [Benjamin] Netanyahu had a great victory, and he’s in the middle of forming his coalition, and once that’s done we’ll probably be in the middle of Ramadan, so we’ll wait until after Ramadan and then we’ll put our plan out,” Kushner said.


Asked whether the plan would call for a two-state solution between Israel and Palestine, Kushner declined to say, but added that “we are going to lay that out very clearly” in the report.


“There will be tough compromises for both,” Kushner said.


The strong alliance forged between Trump and Netanyahu, who won a record fifth term in a close Israeli election earlier in April, has reportedly put a strainon the prospect of achieving a two-state compromise.


Less than a month before the conservative prime minister’s reelection, Trump announced that the U.S. recognized the Golan Heights as a sovereign part of Israel — a controversial move that drew criticism from many of America’s international allies.


In a video posted Tuesday, Netanyahu said that he wants a “new community” in the Golan Heights to be named after Trump.


Kushner also said he would be sending an immigration plan to Trump by next week.

The White House advisor, who has been tasked by Trump with leadership roles on a range of issues including sentencing reform and criminal justice reform, noted that he had not originally gone to Washington, D.C., to work on immigration reform.


Kushner said that “probably at the end of this week, next week, we’ll present it [to Trump] again and he’ll make some changes, likely, and then he’ll decide what he wants to do with it.”

The main prongs of the plan touch on securing the southern border and working toward a merit-based immigration system, Kushner said.


The president congratulated his son-in-law in a tweet shortly following the interview.

  • Writer: Don Lichterman
    Don Lichterman
  • May 17, 2019
  • 6 min read

Trump did something unusual on the trade front: He removed a tariff


The United States agreed Friday to lift its tariffs on industrial metals from Mexico and Canada, clearing a major obstacle to congressional passage of President Trump’s new North American trade deal.


The bargain calls for Mexico and Canada to adopt tough new monitoring and enforcement measures to prevent subsidized Chinese steel from being shipped to the United States via their territory. In return, the United States will lift its tariffs in 48 hours.


In remarks to the National Association of Realtors, Trump said the tariffs deal should pave the way for lawmakers to ratify the new United States-Canada-Mexico Agreement. “That deal is going to be a fantastic deal for our country. Hopefully Congress will pass the USMCA quickly,” he said.

“The United States, Mexico and Canada have agreed to replace the North American Free Trade Agreement with a new plan that changes multiple industries”

Trump’s announcement, which came as U.S. negotiators try to revive stalled trade talks with China, capped a blur of action showcasing his trade policy revolution.

Few weeks have shown more clearly how the president rejects the “free trade” gospel long favored by both Democrats and Republicans.


“He thinks the government needs to be much more active in making decisions about cross-border trade flows, which is a departure from his predecessors,” said John Veroneau, deputy U.S. trade representative under President George W. Bush.


The businessman president, who rails against regulation and taxes, nonetheless backs the active use of government power to counter what he sees as market distortions caused by other nations’ trade barriers and industrial policies.


Even as Trump ended the metals tariffs, he secured agreement from Canada and Mexico to permit their return in the event of a meaningful “surge” in shipments “beyond historic volumes.”


If that occurs, Canada and Mexico have agreed to confine any retaliation to steel and aluminum, rather than the array of products from whiskey to motorboats they targeted over the past year.


Trump announced the tariffs plan only hours after directing Robert E. Lighthizer, his chief trade negotiator, to seek agreements with the European Union and Japan to limit their auto exports to the United States — a move toward what economists call “managed trade.”


Earlier in the week, he took the first step toward imposing tariffs on all Chinese imports — which is expected to raise the price of consumer goods including computers and televisions — and he put one of China’s most prominent companies on an export blacklist.


“It was a clarifying week on a number of fronts,” said Veroneau, a partner at Covington & Burling.


Citing national security considerations, Trump last year imposed tariffs on steel and aluminum in response to what the United States called a flood of Chinese commodities onto global markets. The administration blamed Chinese overproduction for depressing global steel and aluminum prices, driving many U.S. mills out of business.


[Trump scrambles to salvage NAFTA rewrite, courting Democrats and trying to tamp down GOP fury]


In talks over eliminating the tariffs, U.S. officials tried to get their North American partners to accept quotas on steel and aluminum shipments. But both Canada and Mexico, neighbors and close U.S. allies, had bristled at being labeled national security dangers and rejected that demand.


Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau spoke with Trump Friday, their third such call in about a week. They discussed the tariff issue, as well as the USMCA agreement, according to a Canadian readout of the call.


Appearing Friday at a steel plant in Hamilton, Ontario, Trudeau called the end of the U.S. tariffs “terrific news.”


Likewise, a statement from the office of Mexican President Andrés Manuel López Obrador said: “Mexico has reached a highly satisfactory agreement with the United States as a result of the dedication, will and vision of both countries.”


By avoiding quotas, the deal announced Friday marks a win for the two countries while also addressing Trump’s worries about Chinese steel and eliminating a major stumbling block to Congress approving the replacement to the North American Free Trade Agreement, the president’s signature trade deal.


Senate Republicans, including Sen. Charles E. Grassley of Iowa, the powerful Finance Committee chairman, had said they would not approve the deal while the tariffs were in place.


Iowa farmers were among the casualties of Mexican retaliatory tariffs, which cut deeply into U.S. agricultural exports. The Mexican tariffs, and similar Canadian levies, also are being eliminated.


The USMCA still faces an uphill road to ratification, with House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) insisting the deal be reopened to add tougher enforcement provisions for its labor requirements.


Announcement of the tariffs deal came hours after the president gave the European Union and Japan six months to agree to limit their auto shipments to the United States or face the threat of U.S. tariffs.


Trump’s decision followed a Commerce Department report that concluded rising imports of foreign autos and auto parts threatened U.S. automotive research and development capabilities and thus impaired national security.


“American-owned automotive R & D and manufacturing are vital to national security,” Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross found.


[Trump’s steel tariffs cost U.S. consumers $900,000 for every job created, experts say]


Some foreign auto companies said the president’s stance overlooked their U.S. factories and research centers. Toyota Motor North America employs 475,000 Americans at three research institutes and 10 plants.


“Today’s proclamation sends a message to Toyota that our investments are not welcomed, and the contributions from each of our employees across America are not valued,” the company said.


The president threatened last year to hit foreign cars and parts with a 25 percent tariff but agreed to defer a decision while negotiations proceeded. Those talks have made little headway.


Friday’s auto tariffs announcement sets the clock running on another key trade issue at a time when Lighthizer is engaged in trying to reset trade relations with China and secure congressional approval of the USMCA deal.


“If agreements are not reached within 180 days, the president will determine whether and what further action needs to be taken,” a White House statement said.


Trump’s claim that foreign autos represent a national security threat was greeted with derision by some Republicans on Capitol Hill as well as industry figures.


“Toyota Corollas and Volkswagen Beetles do not pose a national security threat,” said Sen. Patrick J. Toomey (R-Pa.).


The autos decision signals the president’s support for a system of managed trade, with the federal government setting limits on the amount of foreign products that American businesses and consumers may buy rather than allowing market forces to operate unfettered.


The approach harks back to the voluntary export restraints the U.S. negotiated with Japan during an earlier period of trade tension in the 1980s.


“I don’t think there is any more doubt about it, the president is far more attracted to managing imports than expanding exports,” said Rufus Yerxa, president of the National Foreign Trade Council. “The entire U.S. auto and auto parts sector understands why it needs a global strategy, but the president clearly prefers 1980s style protectionism.”


Unlike his confrontation with China, Trump is virtually alone in favoring tariffs on all imported cars. The Automotive Policy Council, representing the Big Three American automakers, said Friday that tariffs “would weaken global competitiveness and invite retaliation from our trading partners, which could harm jobs and investment in the U.S.”


[USMCA: Who are the winners and losers in the new NAFTA?]


John Bozzella, president of Global Automakers, representing foreign carmakers operating in the United States, added: “No automaker or auto parts supplier asked for this ‘protection.’ We are headed down a dangerous and destructive course.”


The industry’s major union, the United Auto Workers, has supported “targeted” tariffs. But with members in Canada, the union does not back the president’s global approach, which would interfere with border-crossing North American supply chains.


The United States imported passenger vehicles worth $191.7 billion last year, up 15 percent from 2014, according to the International Trade Administration.


Foreign companies supplied the U. S. with an additional $158.8 million of parts, up 9.4 percent over the same period.


The president last year rejected the E.U.’s offer to drop its auto tariffs to zero if the United States would do likewise. The United States maintains a 2.5 percent tariff on foreign cars, lower than the E.U.’s 10 percent levy.


But the United States imposes a 25 percent tax on imported light trucks, the most profitable market segment for American companies.


With the auto tariff decision deferred and a key USMCA obstacle defused, the president is free to concentrate on the stalled talks with China. One week after breaking down in a dispute over U.S. complaints that China had reneged on its commitments, no dates for the resumption of bargaining have been announced.


Courtesy of David J. Lynch, Emily Rauhala and Damian Paletta & Mary Beth Sheridan in Mexico City contributed to this report.

Let's examine this economic miracle we are supposedly seeing here in the United States. 


A Don Lichterman Post about Trump Administration's "Economic Miracle", the climate explained & of course that the Rams lose in that Super Bowl last week (feels like it was a month ago already)...

“The Trump Economy brought us the longest partial federal government shutdown in American history and even though that may be over, the economic consequences for people across the country endure.

First, President Trump promised over 3% growth, however, only two (2) quarters have exceeded 3% since he has been the POTUS. Plus, I doubt there was any study or science behind it and honestly, we will stay well under 3% throughout all of 2019 with that economic growth still declining to under the 2% mark according to JP Morgan, Goldman Sachs and all of those companies that do that work. 


This steep decline is in huge part because of this last Government shutdown. 

Further, President Obama had exceeded the 3% growth mark also two (2) times while he was the POTUS. 


Trump maintains they will hit the 3% mark this year in 2019 but that is either a bold faced lie or delusion.


Second, this decline if you will, are all consequences of Trump's policies. 


Second is our Budget Deficits. Look at budget deficits when that financial bubble and crises hit back in 2008/2009. It was at an all time high then under George Bush Jr, a Republican President and Administration. 


That growth levelled out almost fully during the Obama years and to where it was at during the Bill Clinton era but then boom, it starts to rise again when Trump, another Republican that is in place as the POTUS.


Because of Trump's tax cuts and because of what he has done with regard to entitlement programs, deficits will hit a trillion dollars next year. That will keep going to eventually exceed 2 Trillion Dollars in deficits by the next decade or after the next ten years. 


Moreover, we are literally not only doing nothing about the deficit problem, we are also making it worse every time a Republican is in office. 


The GOP talking points (Mick Mulvaney on yesterday's Meet The Press for instance) are all about how the Democrats are pulling the USA back when it's them doing just that.


I would also be the bet the house that Trump has no clue about what that all means unless again, he is lying because all he does is speak about Trade Deficit. That has nothing to do with the Trillion Dollar Budget Deficit we will have by the end of this year.


So again and overall after Bill Clinton, that budget deficit exploded under George Bush Jr. while levelling out during the Obama years only to explode through the roof now again under Donald J. Trump.


Do you see that trend here?




Third, manufacturing had dropped a lot since 2000 and through the financial bust in 2008/2009. Manufacturing levelled off but did decline a tiny bit under Obama's administration. However since 2016 and 2017, it has been declining to an all time low.


Trump and his administration has added about 500K manufacturing jobs but lost 5.5 million overall and so manufacturing is not doing much under Trump. It has declined a tad since the Obama era. 


Last, we have the Stock Market. Currently we are set at about a 19.2% increase in the two (2) years under Trump and his administration. That is not bad at all but it is not even close to what happened with regard to the stock market during the Obama years. 


There was a total increase of 19.7% under George Bush Sr. while Bill Clinton had a low increase at about 8.5% during his years. But then George Bush Jr. and Dick Cheney had an unprecedented -36.3% decrease or increase however it is supposed to be stated when doing negatives.


Then, under Obama and his administration, the markets increased 62.4%.

Which blows away Trump's 19.2%.


Trump keeps tweeting and boasting today or this year I should say about his stock market numbers and how the DOW is above 25K. When he tweeted the same exact numbers 13 months ago and so in essence it has done a thing basically in over a year. 


But he tweets about not going above what he did last year which I get because his followers are clueless. 


Lily Roberts and Andy Green from The Center for American Progress write: The Trump Economy brought us the longest partial federal government shutdown in American history and even though that may be over, the economic consequences for people across the country endure. 


Decades of conservative rhetoric about smaller government were tested in real time, with disastrous costs for individuals, families, and businesses. On Tuesday night, President Donald Trump will deliver a State of the Union address that is sure to pass the blame for his shutdown onto others while he takes credit for an economy that has been growing for nine years. In his two years in office, President Trump has done everything in his power to set American workers and families back and place the country on the road to a low-wage, high-cost economy in which a few hands hold all the economic power. The 35-day shutdown is just the latest in a series of actions that hurt everyone except the wealthy and those with political connections.


Trump’s shutdown cost American families

The shutdown is the latest example of the Trump administration’s disregard for American workers and families. The Congressional Budget Office calculated that the five-week shutdown cost the U.S. economy $11 billion, $3 billion of which will never be recouped. But for millions of Americans, the shutdown’s effect on their paychecks was more apparent. About 800,000 federal workers were furloughed or worked without pay, and as many as 1.2 million contractors felt the impact—and may not receive back pay. In addition, shutdowns have a disproportionate effect on black workers and families. In fact, the proportion of federal workers who are black women is twice as high in the federal government as it is in the greater civilian workforce. At the beginning of the shutdown, about half of all federal workers were still required to show up to work without pay; yet that number grew as the Trump administration played favorites with agencies in response to lobbying from some industries.


Beyond the shutdown’s effects on the nearly 2 million workers employed by the federal government or working as contractors, there are economic consequences that result from closing various parts of the government that help Americans in their everyday lives. For example, elderly renters in rural areas rely on the Department of Agriculture for rental assistance while homeless veterans rely on the Department of Housing and Urban Development for similar assistance. Moreover, as a result of the shutdown, community organizations that help families afford food or stay safe while fleeing domestic violence dealt with funding uncertainty and had to limit support or tap into emergency funds. Meanwhile, small-business owners who had planned to expand into new areas or hire new staff were unable to receive loans from the Small Business Administration. And delays in reports and forecasting about agricultural crops and fisheries have constrained farmers’ ability to prepare for the spring season. Larger businesses even suffered consequences: The Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) delayed initial public offerings (IPOs), limiting businesses’ ability to raise capital as planned. Government funding will expire again next week, and it is imperative that the president does not shut the government down this time.


Trump cherry-picks data to hide struggles of everyday Americans

In his State of the Union address, President Trump will tout carefully chosen data about the economy in order to make a case for his policies. Yet the statistics that the president uses to brag about the economy do not capture the full picture. Moreover, they hide where—and which—Americans continue to struggle. The overall unemployment rate has continued to go down this year, as it has since long before the Trump administration. But low unemployment has not translated into commensurate gains in wages or sufficient improvement in labor force participation. Typically, the low unemployment rates on which the president focuses would indicate that workers are in demand, which in turn raises salaries or leads to better jobs. Instead, wages have barely budged. The minimum wage has lost significant purchasing power in the decade since it was increased. Overall, real wages for workers without four-year college degrees have been essentially stagnant for decades.


Similarly, the overall participation of 25- to 54-year-old workers in the labor market is down from its 1999 peak level, an indicator of slack in the labor market. More and more Americans aren’t participating fully in the economy—meaning they have stopped looking for jobs or are unable to find full-time work when they look for it. As the Center for American Progress’ Blueprint for the 21st Century highlights, this reflects an economy that is not creating jobs that American workers need—especially jobs for non-college-educated Americans. Indeed, if the labor force participation rate for 25- to 54-year-olds were at its 1999 peak, the unemployment rate for this demographic would increase from 3.3 percent to 5.6 percent.


Furthermore, the employment numbers show that the employment and wage gaps that exist across America have not closed; these gaps persist between urban areas and rural communities, between white and black Americans, between white and Latinx Americans, and between women and men—as well as at the intersections of these groups. At the end of 2018, the unemployment rate for Latinx workers was 1.4 times that of white workers, and the unemployment rate for black workers was nearly double that of white workers. Earnings are also constrained by a person’s demographics: Women, black and Latino men, and white men without four-year college degrees earn significantly less each week than white men overall. Meanwhile, people with disabilities and members of the LGBTQ community face discrimination and barriers to participation in the labor market. Regional differences also remain pronounced, in some cases, reflecting years of systemic inequality—including anti-worker policies—while, in others, reflecting government failures to invest in workers and communities.

Trump’s economy continues to squeeze Americans who are struggling to make ends meet. As the costs of rent, child care, health care, and post secondary education continue to rise faster than wages, declining earnings and persistent wage and wealth gaps illustrate that, for many Americans, the ability to save for retirement or send children to college is out of reach. Since 2000, rent of primary residences has increased, on average, by 15 percent in real terms, while the median income of renter households has decreased by 2 percent. This trend makes it increasingly difficult for renters to afford other basic necessities and makes saving and building wealth nearly impossible. As the American middle class continues to decline as a share of total U.S. income, working families seeking to join or stay in the middle class face greater challenges than ever.


Americans can’t build wealth without wage growth and support systems

In the State of the Union, the president will likely brag about the stock market, claiming that it shows the strength of the economy. But for millions of Americans, the 2008 financial crisis and failure to fully recover from the Great Recession were major hits to wealth reserves. As families try to rebuild their wealth—the strongest indicator of their ability to weather a health crisis or period of unemployment—they are thwarted by stagnant working- and middle-class wage growth. Moreover, due to long-term structural inequality and discrimination, the wealth gap between black and white families persists regardless of education, marital status, age, or income. Today, 4 in 10 adults would not be able to afford a $400 emergency expense. Without targeted policies that address income as a means of building wealth, American families—particularly nonwhite families—will remain economically insecure.


Stagnant wages, low-quality jobs, and rising costs have created an economy in which 51 million American households struggle to afford basic necessities. Yet the Trump administration has launched repeated attacks on programs that help families put food on the table and send their kids to the doctor. It has pushed punitive so-called work requirement policies, which take food, health care, and housing away from workers who cannot find a job or get enough hours at work each month. Last December, on the day that Congress rejected a version of the Farm Bill that would have dismantled food assistance with work requirements, the Trump administration announced plans to sidestep Congress and impose these cuts unilaterally. Similarly, the administration has encouraged states to take away health care from unemployed and underemployed workers by imposing Medicaid restrictions, compounding the damage from its efforts to sabotage health care markets. The administration has also proposed such cuts for housing assistance, despite a spiraling homelessness crisis driven by a lack of affordable housing. These moves aren’t just cruel; evidence shows that stripping basic necessities away from workers won’t help them find a job any faster—and may actually be counterproductive. Moreover, there is no indication that the president will use his major annual address to roll out any major reversals to his harmful policies.


Trump’s tax tactics benefit the wealthy

Against this backdrop, concentration of economic power only gets worse. The Tax Cuts and Jobs Act (TCJA) of 2017 showcased the president’s true priorities: corporations, not American families. Despite the trends outlined above, the Trump administration made it a top priority to enact a tax cut heavily weighted toward large corporations and the wealthy, which the administration jammed through Congress at the end of 2017 despite strong public opposition. In his address, President Trump will likely repeat the claim that the tax cuts will soon trickle down to American workers in the form of a $4,000 wage increase for the typical family. But that promise has proven to be false. Instead, corporate profits have skyrocketed, while the gulf between these profits and wages continues to widen.

Trump administration officials have claimed that the tax cuts would spur a boom in new business investment. However, no such boom has materialized. Business investment grew in the first two quarters of 2018 but slowed dramatically in the third quarter. Instead of investing in real estate, purchasing machinery or tools from local businesses, increasing wages, or making other economic decisions that contribute to the growth of communities, businesses have simply put more money toward stock buybacks. Corporations have largely chosen to use their tax windfall to enrich shareholders and executives and to drive mergers and acquisitions across the economy.


Power is kept in the hands of the few

Despite campaign promises to look out for workers, the Trump administration has furthered this concentration of economic power by largely green lighting another wave of corporate consolidation. In sector after sector, America faces the growing threat of closed markets controlled by a small handful of dominant firms, which is stifling entrepreneurship, innovation, and consumer choice, while also imperiling democracy.


Concentrated economic power is further bolstered by a wave of deregulation being driven economy wide. From workplace safety protections to the environment, corporate power increases, while working families’ priorities are crushed. Furthermore, the administration and Trump-appointed financial regulators are rolling back the important financial stability safeguards and consumer protections put in place to keep American workers from facing another financial crisis. The fact that the shutdown further hamstrung the SEC’s ability to hold companies and financial market participants accountable is only the latest example of the administration’s clear preferences: It answers to Wall Street, not working families.


Conclusion

Trump’s low-wage, high-cost, power-concentrated economy is not the only choice America has. The vision of government and America that the president will provide in Tuesday’s address won’t present a suite of policies that could raise wages, lower costs, build wealth, or break up concentrated economic power to restore accountable government. Congress should pass a bold infrastructure package to create jobs and raise wages and to tackle the climate crisis. As CAP’s Jobs Blueprint lays out, government can improve lives and provide well-paid, dependable jobs by investing in child care, school construction, climate-focused retrofits, and long-term care, as well as by providing a partial job guarantee for communities facing the most severe challenges. Pairing these jobs with paid training; a $15 minimum wage; comprehensive and equitable paid family and medical leave; and tools to increase worker voice and power can meaningfully improve economic opportunities for workers and families across America.


The State of the Union will not introduce policies to increase wages; nor will it announce any intentions to rein in costs. Government, however, can address the cost burden facing working families by investing in bold new approaches to build affordable housing, taking further steps to ensure that all Americans have affordable health care, fighting for workers’ retirement savings, and standing with savers and retirees—rather than with Wall Street.

Economic power and political power reinforce and strengthen each other, and Trump’s vision of the economy concentrates these powers in the hands of the few. Government can and must stand for a democracy where economic and political power are broadly distributed. That means implementing key democracy reforms; reviving antitrust enforcement for industries from agriculture to technology; and ensuring that financial markets are oriented toward the long-term public interest. The state of the economy will only be strong when government is equipped and empowered to stand up for all Americans. Lily Roberts is the director of Economic Mobility at the Center for American Progress. Andy Green is the managing director of Economic Policy at the Center.


There are a lot of misconceptions when it comes to what are the causes and, most importantly, the effects of global warming and climate change. 


Here they are, explained....Global warming and climate change explained:

There is no denying that climate change is hurting New York. In the past few years the state has been pounded by superstorms, deluged with floods and scorched with record heat due to the advancing effects of a warming planet. Beyond the growing frequency and intensity of severe weather events, New Yorkers will be facing the economic and social costs of dying oceans, agricultural blight, rapid changes to ecosystems, and rising sea levels if we do not work together to significantly reduce carbon emissions. 

This groundbreaking legislation will put New York State on the path to 100% renewable energy and set benchmarks and reporting requirements to ensure we are meeting our goals along the way. In addition to systematically reducing greenhouse gas emissions across all sectors, the CCPA will guarantee good jobs and environmental protections for disadvantaged communities, which are often hardest hit by climate change.

The NYS Assembly has passed the bill for the past three years and Senate Majority Leader Stewart Cousins has declared that in 2019 “CCPA is the main vehicle through which we will address climate change…..” To this end, Senator Todd Kaminsky, the bill’s sponsor in the Senate, is holding three public hearings to determine how New York can lead on the fight against climate change through legislation.

We will be rallying outside of each hearing location to show our support for CCPA. Please come and join us!

The hearing schedule is as follows: (click on links for more information)


Leaders in Albany have to understand that the direction of the global economy favors those that embrace the financial benefits of renewable energy and efficiency technologies. Those that ignore climate science and adhere to fossil fuel dependency will suffer the adverse economic consequences. Ultimately, if we don’t act resolutely together, irreversible cycles will perpetuate temperature rise and cause out- of-control warming. 

And, overall, I was going to discuss the Super Bowl game but let's be real, everything in my head about it, you already know. I will say that it feels like it happened a month ago!

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