since it's your premise, wouldn't that onus be on you?
Not really.
The Black Hole of Global Warming Spending | FrontPage Magazine
In 2011, your federal government
will spend $10.6 million a day on climate change. Annual expenditures will be about $4 billion on global warming research—now called climate change–despite the fact that there has been
no global warming since 1998, says the Global Warming Policy Foundation (GWPF), a British educational think tank.
How much of your money has been spent on Global Non-Warming? | EPA Abuse
The U.S. government has spent over
$72 billion to combat climate change since 2008.
Government to Spend Twice as Much on Global Warming Than Border Security
Estimates reveal that the federal government will spend more money on fighting global warming than it will on tightening border security. Global-warming spending is estimated to cost approximately $22.2 billion this year, twice as much as the $12 billion estimated for customs and border enforcement.
According to the White House, there are currently 18 federal agencies engaged in activities related to global warming. Those agencies fund programs that include scientific research, international climate assistance, renewable energy technology, and subsidies for renewable energy producers.
Republicans have criticized the administration for its global-warming efforts and have demanded more transparency. The online Daily Caller reported, “Republicans on the Energy and Commerce Committee have been calling on the heads of major federal agencies to testify on global warming activities.”
The efforts to acquire testimony have been mostly unsuccessful, however, with just the heads of the Energy Department and Environmental Protection Agency agreeing to testify in front of the House of Representatives.
“With billions of dollars currently being spent annually on climate change activities, Congress and the public should understand the scope of what the federal government is doing, how the billions of dollars are being spent, and what it will accomplish,” said Kentucky Republican Rep. Ed Whitfield. “Anyone who believes the committee ought to be focusing its attention on climate change related issues should be standing with us to get these answers.”
I think . . . should be adjusted.
It's called speaking with a forked tongue. (and job creation)