There was an area of Ocean that was designated as Protected. From what I read 2 awhile back is Trump lifted the Protection. Now it will be a free for all with Fishing fleets.
I agree we do need SOME environmental protections - mostly to protect the planet against the 3rd world who literally don't give a shit about anything at all.
But I think we can all agree that the current state of govt & regulations has gone way, WAY too far.....
My guess would be that you'd not only have to get all the stars re-aligned to get the proper people into the right roles at EPA (or any agency, re: any similar situation), but you'd have to go through the entire rule-making process again - which I doubt is easy, nor fast (think typical government bureaucracy.)
The next big lift I see is:
THEN you'd have to go about re-imposing it on the country.
Rules & regulations don't take effect overnight (generally). You have to give people time to comply.
And if you DO try to rush out the imposition of a new rule / regulation too fast, then you get hit with even MORE of my next point:
THEN the biggest issue to re-enactment (as I see it); is your new rule / policy has to survive another huge litany of lawsuits challenging it. And this time there will probably be all different judges hearing your cases (for better or for worse.)
Can anyone correct me if I'm off?
It's amazing what can happen when you think through something for a moment. ππΈπ€£
Can anyone please explain like Iβm a golden retriever?
Exactly what impact does this have?
Off to ask aiβ¦.
ETA:
Here's a nice little summary I found:
"The Endangerment Finding is a determination by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) that greenhouse gases, such as carbon dioxide and methane, pose a threat to public health and welfare, which allows the government to regulate these emissions under the Clean Air Act. This finding has been crucial for establishing federal limits on climate pollution and has been the basis for various environmental regulations since its introduction in 2009."
What kind of impact will 1.3T in slashed regulations have?
Cheaper energy, cheaper food, better quality of life due to less retarded legislation such as mandating that new cars shutdown when at a red light
Cheaper energy is the biggest one, with ripple effects likely to effect every single industry. Shipping goods is cheaper, as is making them. This will drive down the cost of everything.
Less regulation in things like the car industry mean less complexity and less beauracracy, leading to cheaper cars.
This is a very solid step towards deflation - it would be very hard to reverse all of the inflation without significantly removing all of the hurdles that have been methodically put into place over the past couple of decades
Great!
Now get rid of the Obongo IRS mandate that killed countless families... and still are.
It's sickening...how appropriate
End of the carbon hysteria??????? This is huge huge huge!!!
Shit is not even Valentine's Day and already he's sending some loving our way.
POTUS promised to cut 10 regulations for every one added.
Is this what's going to end car manufactures requirement to make cars that shut off at stop lights?
Yes
https://truthsocial.com/@rapidresponse47/116059128030337732
Very good news
He should have left the Ocean sanctuary alone.
Can you expound on what exactly that is & what you mean? Why you think it should have been left in place?
There was an area of Ocean that was designated as Protected. From what I read 2 awhile back is Trump lifted the Protection. Now it will be a free for all with Fishing fleets.
Gotcha.
I agree we do need SOME environmental protections - mostly to protect the planet against the 3rd world who literally don't give a shit about anything at all.
But I think we can all agree that the current state of govt & regulations has gone way, WAY too far.....
Save America act includes saving it from liberal retardation.
Not retardation; malice.
Genuine question: what is to stop a future admin from re-enforcing the regulations?
The save act, for starters
These are rules & regulations created by a govt bureaucracy; not anything that is voted on by the people in specific. No?
Great question.
My guess would be that you'd not only have to get all the stars re-aligned to get the proper people into the right roles at EPA (or any agency, re: any similar situation), but you'd have to go through the entire rule-making process again - which I doubt is easy, nor fast (think typical government bureaucracy.)
The next big lift I see is:
THEN you'd have to go about re-imposing it on the country.
Rules & regulations don't take effect overnight (generally). You have to give people time to comply.
And if you DO try to rush out the imposition of a new rule / regulation too fast, then you get hit with even MORE of my next point:
THEN the biggest issue to re-enactment (as I see it); is your new rule / policy has to survive another huge litany of lawsuits challenging it. And this time there will probably be all different judges hearing your cases (for better or for worse.)
Can anyone correct me if I'm off?
It's amazing what can happen when you think through something for a moment. ππΈπ€£
Now end propaganda.
And the ATF.
But then who will shoot all our puppies...?
For that, you'd have to end all communists.
That's one Final Solution I'd absolutely support!
Can anyone please explain like Iβm a golden retriever? Exactly what impact does this have?
Off to ask aiβ¦.
ETA: Here's a nice little summary I found:
"The Endangerment Finding is a determination by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) that greenhouse gases, such as carbon dioxide and methane, pose a threat to public health and welfare, which allows the government to regulate these emissions under the Clean Air Act. This finding has been crucial for establishing federal limits on climate pollution and has been the basis for various environmental regulations since its introduction in 2009."
Please people, attempt thinking for yourself π«©
What kind of impact will 1.3T in slashed regulations have?
Cheaper energy, cheaper food, better quality of life due to less retarded legislation such as mandating that new cars shutdown when at a red light
Cheaper energy is the biggest one, with ripple effects likely to effect every single industry. Shipping goods is cheaper, as is making them. This will drive down the cost of everything.
Less regulation in things like the car industry mean less complexity and less beauracracy, leading to cheaper cars.
This is a very solid step towards deflation - it would be very hard to reverse all of the inflation without significantly removing all of the hurdles that have been methodically put into place over the past couple of decades
I guess I should have been more clear;
My question in specific was related to what I though the focus was on; this "endangerment finding."
Obvi I can see that less regulation is almost always a HUGE positive for everything.
I thought the focus was on this "endangerment finding" specifically; whatever it is.
But the focus is on the outcome; the reduction of all the rules & regs?
Woot! That is great news!
Also; do you never make mistakes? Never have too little or too much coffee?
Give people some grace. Esp. here; we're all supposed to be on the same side.π