Don't worry about Flossie's remark ....unlike Cannuck ...if he can't have the last word....he starts another thread....Psychology 101.....ben and jerry will sort it all out.
Don't worry about Flossie's remark ....unlike Cannuck ...if he can't have the last word....he starts another thread....Psychology 101.....ben and jerry will sort it all out.
How many have contracts tied to global warming specifically and a change in policy would affect their bottom line at this point of the 'game'. Hard to promote global warming when a blizzard is blowing through your hometown. Quite easy to promote climate change though and making a wise investment in what to do next takes some honest science rather than what makes for the easiest way to make billions. (with little effort)Nearly 400 companies and nonprofits signed a letter last week urging president-elect Donald Trump to stay in the Paris climate agreement and support policies that combat global warming. The list covers a wide range of industries and includes Ben & Jerry’s, Patagonia and Sierra Nevada Brewing. It also contains surprising signatories: companies that aren’t known to take part in environmental initiatives, such as Tiffany & Co, Monsanto and Staples.
https://www.theguardian.com/sustain...business-climate-change-paris-emissions-cop21
oh the cuck
Judging from what I see in political commentary and social media, one of the biggest anxieties Americans are stricken with is the size of the national debt. And when I say “anxiety,” many seem to be absolutely terrorized by it. That near $20 trillion number is just too much to get their heads around, and they see it as some sort of insurmountable challenge that can't be met without unending sacrifice.
A little perspective is in order. One, we don't really concern ourselves with debt in raw dollars, we compare it to the level of output, expressed by GDP. However, today that number is still quite high, historically. In any case, there's no danger of default.
The U.S.A. can expand its debt without a chance of sovereign default, unless someone in Congress wants to do something very destructive. The politician's stock comparison of your “family's budget” to the Federal debt is a construct useful only for the economically illiterate. There is no comparison to what a government with a national Treasury can do compared to a family.
Once in a billion says it all .Yes, I forgot a link once in the billion times I post one.
Funny, it doesn't bug you when petros does it deliberately.
Hmmrph!
Burnt out or sore from all the butt hurt?At least CDNBear made an effort before he burned out.
Was he banned? I just figured he finally cried uncle.How many times has he been banned now?