Trump, Climate Change
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Climate experts say any effort to present climate change as a good thing is dangerous and runs afoul of science.
From Rolling Stone
"Your average middle American says, ‘Why are you wasting your time worrying about Greenland? I can’t even find it on a map.’"
From Fox News
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Weather-Fox on MSN21h
Trump Administration Halted Funding for Climate Health ResearchTrump Administration halts funding for climate health research The post Trump Administration Halted Funding for Climate Health Research appeared first on weather-fox.com.
The president wants to weaken limits on tailpipe pollution. Scientists say it’s driving climate change and taking human lives “every day.”
The Trump Administration is enacting the Project 2025 goals for targeting environmental regulations and climate action.
8hOpinion
The National Interest on MSNHow Donald Trump is Undermining the Intelligence CommunityThe recently published Annual Threat Assessment reflects the administration’s political priorities and biases and the intelligence community’s willingness to defer to them.
Republicans are undoing years of climate progress under the second Trump administration using an unlikely progressive tool: antitrust law. Their antitrust strategy, which may pose the next great threat to climate organizing in the U.
The US is at risk of losing an entire generation of scientists as a result, the signatories warn. More than 1,200 scientists are already thinking about leaving the US because of the Trump administration’s drastic actions, making up 75 percent of respondents in a separate poll by the journal Nature.
For energy-related companies that hope to get their businesses off the ground with an assist from grants or incentives from Washington, the next four years look grim, according to one industry insider.
A letter from the U.S. State Department canceled the grant, citing "changing priorities of the administration."
1don MSN
Erin McGuire spent years cultivating fruits and vegetables like onions, peppers and tomatoes as a scientist and later director of a lab at the University of California-Davis. She collaborated with hundreds of people to breed drought-resistant varieties,