President Obama turned their own argument against
Republicans by suggesting that we must act against climate change to
protect the nation’s God-given natural wonders, and our children from
disaster and harm.
The President said:
Wednesday is Earth Day, a day to appreciate and
protect this precious planet we call home. And today, there’s no
greater threat to our planet than climate change.
2014 was the planet’s warmest year on record.
Fourteen of the 15 hottest years on record have all fallen in the first
15 years of this century. This winter was cold in parts of our country –
as some folks in Congress like to point out – but around the world, it
was the warmest ever recorded.
And the fact that the climate is changing has very
serious implications for the way we live now. Stronger storms. Deeper
droughts. Longer wildfire seasons. The world’s top climate scientists
are warning us that a changing climate already affects the air our kids
breathe. Last week, the Surgeon General and I spoke with public experts
about how climate change is already affecting patients across the
country. The Pentagon says that climate change poses immediate risks to
our national security.
And on Earth Day, I’m going to visit the Florida
Everglades to talk about the way that climate change threatens our
economy. The Everglades is one of the most special places in our
country. But it’s also one of the most fragile. Rising sea levels are
putting a national treasure – and an economic engine for the South
Florida tourism industry – at risk.
So climate change can no longer be denied – or
ignored. The world is looking to the United States – to us – to lead.
And that’s what we’re doing. We’re using more clean energy than ever
before. America is number one in wind power, and every three weeks, we
bring online as much solar power as we did in all of 2008. We’re taking
steps to waste less energy, with more fuel-efficient cars that save us
money at the pump, and more energy-efficient buildings that save us
money on our electricity bills.
So thanks in part to these actions, our carbon
pollution has fallen by 10 percent since 2007, even as we’ve grown our
economy and seen the longest streak of private-sector job growth on
record. We’ve committed to doubling the pace at which we cut carbon
pollution, and China has committed, for the first time, to limiting
their emissions. And because the world’s two largest economies came
together, there’s new hope that, with American leadership, this year,
the world will finally reach an agreement to prevent the worst impacts
of climate change before it’s too late.
This is an issue that’s bigger and
longer-lasting than my presidency. It’s about protecting our God-given
natural wonders, and the good jobs that rely on them. It’s about
shielding our cities and our families from disaster and harm. It’s
about keeping our kids healthy and safe. This is the only planet we’ve
got. And years from now, I want to be able to look our children and
grandchildren in the eye and tell them that we did everything we could
to protect it.
Republicans reflexively invoke God and the children
to justify virtually every single one of their unpopular positions. Some
extremists on the right invoke God as a reason nothing can be done
about climate, or they argue that the planet will fix itself.
The President cleverly turned the Republican
argument around. Human beings have a duty to protect the natural wonders
that were given to them by God. To neglect this duty would be akin to
abusing a gift from Almighty.
Republicans never mention “the children” while
discussing climate change. Conservatives only worry about “the children”
while legislating morality or trying to take away women’s rights. The
children don’t have a say in the Republican plan to let the planet be
destroyed in the name of corporate profits.
Science
denial is a losing argument for Republicans, and it looks like even God
and “the children” are on the side of Democrats when it comes to
protecting our planet.
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