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Total Members Voted: 99

Author Topic: Strawman  (Read 161491 times)

Straw Man

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Re: Strawman
« Reply #925 on: April 17, 2021, 05:45:42 PM »
.....when you can't refute anything I've posted.

you're a fucking moron

what else is there to say

Actually there is one more thing.  We've known for a long time that right wingers are genetically incapable of comprehending irony or hypocrisy so I'm sure this will make no sense to you but it's pretty fucking funny that Trumptards have recently been complaining non-stop about so called "cancel culture" and then you decide to make a thread trying to cancel me for what exactly.....?  Because you don't like my posts or I don't pay enough attention to you or what?

I post facts, such as "Biden won the election" or "MLB is moving the All Star game in protest of racist election laws" and your broken brain thinks those are lies.

I can't help it that reality trolls you on a daily basis

Stop whining you little bitch


Soul Crusher

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Re: Strawman
« Reply #926 on: April 17, 2021, 06:12:22 PM »
Nope.


He’s had all day to clean the pig pen.   Nope.  Arguing w coach.

AbrahamG

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Re: Strawman
« Reply #927 on: April 17, 2021, 08:16:21 PM »
you're a fucking moron

what else is there to say

Actually there is one more thing.  We've known for a long time that right wingers are genetically incapable of comprehending irony or hypocrisy so I'm sure this will make no sense to you but it's pretty fucking funny that Trumptards have recently been complaining non-stop about so called "cancel culture" and then you decide to make a thread trying to cancel me for what exactly.....?  Because you don't like my posts or I don't pay enough attention to you or what?

I post facts, such as "Biden won the election" or "MLB is moving the All Star game in protest of racist election laws" and your broken brain thinks those are lies.

I can't help it that reality trolls you on a daily basis

Stop whining you little bitch

Ouch!

The Scott

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Re: Strawman
« Reply #928 on: April 17, 2021, 08:34:02 PM »
you're a fucking moron

what else is there to say

Actually there is one more thing.  We've known for a long time that right wingers are genetically incapable of comprehending irony or hypocrisy so I'm sure this will make no sense to you but it's pretty fucking funny that Trumptards have recently been complaining non-stop about so called "cancel culture" and then you decide to make a thread trying to cancel me for what exactly.....?  Because you don't like my posts or I don't pay enough attention to you or what?

I post facts, such as "Biden won the election" or "MLB is moving the All Star game in protest of racist election laws" and your broken brain thinks those are lies.

I can't help it that reality trolls you on a daily basis

Stop whining you little bitch

You're the Yoko Ono of Getbig. No one likes you.  No one.   Your bucket is filled with self-loathing and you are the paintbrush with which you and you alone have made this illusion your reality.  You've painted yourself into a corner from which you can never leave.

Yoko.

You are ugly.

Coach is Back!

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Re: Strawman
« Reply #929 on: April 17, 2021, 08:45:06 PM »
You're the Yoko Ono of Getbig. No one likes you.  No one.   Your bucket is filled with self-loathing and you are the paintbrush with which you and you alone have made this illusion your reality.  You've painted yourself into a corner from which you can never leave.

Yoko.

You are ugly.

So eloquently put 😂

Straw Man

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Re: Strawman
« Reply #930 on: April 17, 2021, 09:25:38 PM »
You're the Yoko Ono of Getbig. No one likes you.  No one.   Your bucket is filled with self-loathing and you are the paintbrush with which you and you alone have made this illusion your reality.  You've painted yourself into a corner from which you can never leave.

Yoko.

You are ugly.

I'm ugly?

LOL - damn you sound like a jilted teenage girl

Why so cranky....did you get your period?

BTW - serious question...are you schizophrenic

Pathetic, last ditch albeit moronically cumbersome attempt at making lite of my handicaps.  I don't mind. I faced worse than your pussy-assed B.S. in the real world.   My reading comprehension far outstrips anything you are capable of as does my ability to write.  I will admit that sometimes I fail at understanding some stuff here that is colloquial and if my family is around I will seek their help or just ask for an explanation/definition from others here.  There is no shame in not knowing but in your case there is blame, not shame.

But then, every one here already knows this. You however shiver at the stark reality of it all. 

You're a fucking chimp in comparison to me.  But I would hazard you can run faster and are probably better built and better looking . A man's got to know his limits.

But chimps like you just...Well...They just chimpout.

Coach is Back!

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Re: Strawman
« Reply #931 on: April 17, 2021, 09:46:20 PM »
I'm ugly?

LOL - damn you sound like a jilted teenage girl

Why so cranky....did you get your period?

BTW - serious question...are you schizophrenic

You were saying ?


https://www.toddstarnes.com/crime/breaking-dc-police-attacked-with-fireworks-statues-desecrated/?fbclid=IwAR3kaWqrU2zBvWE_GNYS3lQR75xntaompbbXrmOAoIwaktFrakyKSJNe0uU

The Scott

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Re: Strawman
« Reply #932 on: April 17, 2021, 10:20:22 PM »
I'm ugly?

LOL - damn you sound like a jilted teenage girl

Why so cranky....did you get your period?

BTW - serious question...are you schizophrenic

I have never said I am genuinely handsome so, chances are you are better looking than me.  Call it damning you with faint praise if you must.  I have a physical handicap and have no doubt that you can run faster as I cannot run at all and you could well be better built than I but that really is not that difficult a challenge, believe me.  Again, I realize that I am kinda-sorta damning you with faint praise but I am honest.  I know...You have difficulty with honesty, elsewise why would you be a liberal? 

Answer:  You wouldn't.

But you are still a chimp and as such, tend to chimpout. 

You are most definitely cursed and deservedly so. Cursed.

Primemuscle

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Re: Strawman
« Reply #933 on: April 18, 2021, 01:04:04 AM »
Us "Trumptards" are patiently waiting

It is good to know that some of  you 'Trumptards' are patient, because even when the answers slap you in in face, you don't get it. But hey, nobody is perfect. Some day you may be able to call some folks 'Bidims', should you get your wish.

Primemuscle

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Re: Strawman
« Reply #934 on: April 18, 2021, 01:07:29 AM »
.....when you can't refute anything I've posted.

Give it up already. When your posts are refuted, you ignore it or change the subject. God help the right wing conservatives who conduct themselves like you do.

Primemuscle

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Re: Strawman
« Reply #935 on: April 18, 2021, 01:12:52 AM »
No, every vote shouldn't count. However, every LEGAL vote should. That's not what happened by a long shot and again, that's not even getting into the voter laws that were broken.

Are you trying to tell me something I haven't already said? You can't show me where I ever suggested illegal votes should count, because that never happened. Help me out here by listing what voter laws were broken, where that happened and why nobody has been able to prove it....well, except maybe in your mind.

Zillotch

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Re: Strawman
« Reply #936 on: April 18, 2021, 01:27:59 AM »
God help

enjoy your torment, phaggot

funk51

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Re: Strawman
« Reply #937 on: April 18, 2021, 03:57:06 AM »
Sure you have, repeatedly, constantly and currently still do, why lie about it ??? You're here daily stroking Joe Bitem off while bashing Trump, everyone can see that.
As far as calling you names, it's getbig Nancy-boy, I thought you were part of the toughest generation?
    I've never called you a derogatory name or any other getbig member without being provoked first. now there's a new one nancy boy. it's pretty easy to call someone a name when you're a faceless person on the computer isn't it. you called me a senile piece of shit, what are you like 12 years old. time to grow up don't you think.
F

B_B_C

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Re: Strawman
« Reply #938 on: April 18, 2021, 07:33:53 AM »
When I’m not at the warehouse at work about 90% from my phone

You are an Amazon shelf stacker?
I thought you were an elite athlete coach 
c

LurkerNoMore

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Re: Strawman
« Reply #939 on: April 18, 2021, 07:38:23 AM »
Give it up already. When your posts are refuted, you ignore it or change the subject. God help the right wing conservatives who conduct themselves like you do.

Exactly.  I, Straw, You, Abraham, Agnostic, etc..  have all answered his questions multiple times.  Instead he ignores it and keeps asking over and over.  When you link to where it has been answered, he just ignores that and starts in with different questions.

Between this thread and the More Fraud thread, what we are witnessing is the daily deterioration of Coach's mental state.  But since it was a molehill and not a mountain to start with, there isn't much to lose.

LurkerNoMore

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Re: Strawman
« Reply #940 on: April 18, 2021, 07:45:27 AM »
Coach whenever he finds a new "fact" on some obscure internet op-ed site that he is going to use against the "libs".

tom joad

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Re: Strawman
« Reply #941 on: April 18, 2021, 08:27:21 AM »
wow, 30 crybabies want to cancel Straw Man?

this thread cements his getbig hall of fame legacy.

chaos

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Re: Strawman
« Reply #942 on: April 18, 2021, 08:33:48 AM »
    I've never called you a derogatory name or any other getbig member without being provoked first. now there's a new one nancy boy. it's pretty easy to call someone a name when you're a faceless person on the computer isn't it. you called me a senile piece of shit, what are you like 12 years old. time to grow up don't you think.
Time to grow up says the 80 year old man scouring youtube for anti-Trump videos all day. ::)
Liar!!!!Filt!!!!

AbrahamG

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Re: Strawman
« Reply #943 on: April 18, 2021, 09:28:02 AM »
wow, 30 crybabies want to cancel Straw Man?

this thread cements his getbig hall of fame legacy.

Ultimate backfire thread if ever there was one.

tom joad

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Re: Strawman
« Reply #944 on: April 18, 2021, 09:33:32 AM »

Grape Ape

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Re: Strawman
« Reply #945 on: April 18, 2021, 09:53:48 AM »
wow, 30 crybabies want to cancel Straw Man?

this thread cements his getbig hall of fame legacy.

Two things:

1.  I am in charge of data, lists, record keeping, awards, HoF inductees, and getbigger status records.  Please refrain from these type of statements.

2.  When is Pearson getting called up, and will he start?
Y

funk51

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Re: Strawman
« Reply #946 on: April 18, 2021, 10:22:16 AM »
Time to grow up says the 80 year old man scouring youtube for anti-Trump videos all day. ::)
   hey, I'm experiencing my second childhood what's your excuse junior.
F

funk51

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Re: Strawman
« Reply #947 on: April 18, 2021, 10:25:50 AM »
So you're saying Trump has done nothing for the environment?
  15 ways the Trump administration has changed environmental policies
For the past three years, National Geographic has been tracking how this administration's decisions will influence air, water, and wildlife.

BYSARAH GIBBENS
PUBLISHED FEBRUARY 1, 2019
• 8 MIN READ

Since the Trump administration took office, it has been fighting what they call an “anti-growth” agenda put in place by the Obama administration. Regulations that required businesses to spend time and money to meet the former administration's environmental standards were swiftly reviewed and, in many cases, rolled back.

National Geographic has been tracking the decisions that will impact America's land, water, air, and wildlife. What started with curtailing information when the president took office in 2017 has evolved into actions like executive orders that open public land for business.

States, municipalities, and NGOs have responded to these changes by filing lawsuits to block the administration. Some, like lawsuits against the Keystone XL pipeline, have successfully kept public land closed to additional development.

Below are 15 influential decisions made by the Trump administration that could impact the future of our nation.

Clean air
1. U.S. pulls out of Paris Climate Agreement
This is perhaps the decision that set the tone for the Trump administration's approach to the environment: when he moved to withdraw from the Paris Climate Agreement in June of 2017. To many, it signaled less U.S. leadership in international climate change agreements. (Read more about this decision.)

2. Trump EPA poised to scrap clean power plan
The Clean Power Plan was one of the Obama's signature environmental policies. It required the energy sector to cut carbon emissions by 32 percent by 2030, but in October 2017 it was rolled back by Trump's EPA. Among the reasons cited were unfair burdens on the power sector and a “war on coal.” (Read more on why Trump can't make coal great again.)

3. EPA loosens regulations on toxic air pollution
This regulation revolved around a complicated rule referred to as “once in, always in” or OIAI. Essentially, OIAI said that if a company polluted over the legal limit, they would have to match the lowest levels set by their industry peers and they would have to match them indefinitely. By dropping OIAI, the Trump EPA forces companies to innovate ways to decrease their emissions, but once those lower targets are met, they're no longer required to keep using those innovations. (Read more about air pollution.)


4. Rescinding methane-flaring rules
Under the Affordable Clean Energy rule issued in August 2018, states were given more power over regulating emissions. In states like California, that means regulations would likely be stricter, whereas states that produce fossil fuels are likely to weaken regulations. The following month, the EPA announced they would relax rules around releasing methane flares, inspecting equipment, and repairing leaks. (Read more about methane.)

5. Trump announces plan to weaken Obama-era fuel economy rules
Under the Obama administration's fuel economy targets, cars made after 2012 would, on average, have to get 54 miles per gallon by 2025. In August 2018, the Trump Department of Transportation and EPA capped that target at 34 miles per gallon by 2021. The decision created legal conflict with states like California that have higher emission caps. (Read more about speed bumps in the way of super-efficient cars.)

Water
6. Trump revokes flood standards accounting for sea-level rise
In August 2017, President Trump revoked an Obama-era executive order that required federally funded projects to factor rising sea levels into construction. However, in 2018, the Department of Housing and Urban Development required buildings constructed with disaster relief grants do just that. (Read more about how rising sea levels may imperil the internet.)

7. Waters of the U.S. Rule revocation
What are the “waters of the U.S.?” President Trump issued an executive order in 2017 ordering the EPA to formally review what waters fell under the jurisdiction of the EPA and Army Corps of Engineers according to the 1972 Clean Water Act. The proposed change narrowed the definition of what's considered a federally protected river or wetland. (Read more about Trump's plans to roll back the Clean Water Act.)


Wildlife
8. NOAA green lights seismic airgun blasts for oil and gas drilling
Five companies were approved to use seismic air gun blasts to search for underwater oil and gas deposits. Debate over the deafening blasts stem from concerns that they disorient marine mammals that use sonar to communicate and kill plankton. The blasts were shot down by the Bureau of Energy Management in 2017 but approved after NOAA found they would not violate the Marine Mammal Protection Act. (Read more about how scientists think seismic air guns will harm marine life.)

Learn what it means to be an endangered species
This critically endangered South China tiger lives at the Suzhou Zoo in China. This is a species that may be gone from the wild now. As of 2015 there were only 100 in captivity.
This is a central Bornean orangutan. Bornean orangutan numbers have been more than halved in the past 60 years, mainly due to humans encroaching on its habitat.
Giant panda numbers increased enough for the IUCN Red List to downlist it from endangered to vulnerable 2016.
Hawksbill sea turtles are listed as critically endangered on the IUCN Red List. The tortoiseshell trade, collection of their eggs for food, and destruction of coral reefs have all contributed to their declining numbers.
Asian elephants are listed as endangered on the IUCN Red List, threatened by habitat loss and poaching.

1 / 5
This critically endangered South China tiger lives at the Suzhou Zoo in China. This is a species that may be gone from the wild now. As of 2015 there were only 100 in captivity.
This critically endangered South China tiger lives at the Suzhou Zoo in China. This is a species that may be gone from the wild now. As of 2015 there were only 100 in captivity.
PHOTOGRAPH BY JOEL SARTORE, NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC PHOTO ARK

9. Interior Department relaxes sage grouse protection
The uniquely American sage grouse, a bird resembling a turkey with spiked feathers, has become the face of the debate between land developers and conservationists. In both 2017 and 2018, the Trump administration Department of Interior eased restrictions on activities like mining and drilling that had been restricted to protect the endangered bird. (Read more about how the sage grouse become caught in the fight over who owns America's west.)

10. Trump officials propose changes to handling the Endangered Species Act
In July of 2018, the Trump administration announced its intention to change the way the Endangered Species Act is administered, saying more weight would be put on economic considerations when designating an endangered animal's habitat. (Read more about the rollbacks facing endangered animals.)

11. Migratory Bird Treaty Act reinterpretation
Companies installing large wind turbines, constructing power lines, or leaving oil exposed are no longer violating the Migratory Bird Treaty Act if their activities kill birds. This controversial change was declared by the Trump administration in December of 2017. (Read more about why legally protecting birds is important.)

Opening public lands for business
12. Trump unveils plan to dramatically downsize two national monuments
Unlike national parks, which have to be approved by Congress, national monuments can be created by an executive order, which the president said means they can be dismantled just as easily. Such was the case for Bears Ears and Grand Staircase-Escalante in Utah, which President Trump reduced and opened for mining and drilling companies in 2017. Tribes and environmental groups are challenging that interpretation in court. (Read more about the impacts of downsizing these two monuments.)


13. Executive order calls for sharp logging increase on public lands
Just a day before the longest government shutdown in U.S. history, President Trump issued an executive order that called for a 30 percent increase in logging on public lands. The decision was billed as wildfire prevention, though environmental groups say it ignores the role climate change plays in starting wildfires. (Read more about California's historic wildfires.)

Security & Enforcement
14. Trump drops climate change from list of national security threats
The Trump administration's decision to delist climate change from national security threats in December of 2017 meant less Department of Defense research funding and a nationalistic viewpoint on the potential impacts of wildfires, droughts, hurricanes, and other natural disasters. (Read more about how climate change is forcing migration in Guatemala.)

15. EPA criminal enforcement hits 30-year low
The size and influence of the EPA has shrunk under the Trump administration, and it's illustrated by their diminished prosecuting power. Criminal prosecutions are at a 30-year low, and many violations that would have been prosecuted in the past are now being negotiated with companies. The administration says this is streamlining its work, but environmentalists have warned it could lead to more pollution. (Read more about the scientists pushing back against President Trump's environment agenda.)    NOTHING FOR BUT A LOT TO THE ENVIROMENT.
F

chaos

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Re: Strawman
« Reply #948 on: April 18, 2021, 10:30:53 AM »
   hey, I'm experiencing my second childhood what's your excuse junior.
I'm just entering the grumpy old man stage.
Liar!!!!Filt!!!!

Coach is Back!

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Re: Strawman
« Reply #949 on: April 18, 2021, 11:02:37 AM »
  15 ways the Trump administration has changed environmental policies
For the past three years, National Geographic has been tracking how this administration's decisions will influence air, water, and wildlife.

BYSARAH GIBBENS
PUBLISHED FEBRUARY 1, 2019
• 8 MIN READ

Since the Trump administration took office, it has been fighting what they call an “anti-growth” agenda put in place by the Obama administration. Regulations that required businesses to spend time and money to meet the former administration's environmental standards were swiftly reviewed and, in many cases, rolled back.

National Geographic has been tracking the decisions that will impact America's land, water, air, and wildlife. What started with curtailing information when the president took office in 2017 has evolved into actions like executive orders that open public land for business.

States, municipalities, and NGOs have responded to these changes by filing lawsuits to block the administration. Some, like lawsuits against the Keystone XL pipeline, have successfully kept public land closed to additional development.

Below are 15 influential decisions made by the Trump administration that could impact the future of our nation.

Clean air
1. U.S. pulls out of Paris Climate Agreement
This is perhaps the decision that set the tone for the Trump administration's approach to the environment: when he moved to withdraw from the Paris Climate Agreement in June of 2017. To many, it signaled less U.S. leadership in international climate change agreements. (Read more about this decision.)

2. Trump EPA poised to scrap clean power plan
The Clean Power Plan was one of the Obama's signature environmental policies. It required the energy sector to cut carbon emissions by 32 percent by 2030, but in October 2017 it was rolled back by Trump's EPA. Among the reasons cited were unfair burdens on the power sector and a “war on coal.” (Read more on why Trump can't make coal great again.)

3. EPA loosens regulations on toxic air pollution
This regulation revolved around a complicated rule referred to as “once in, always in” or OIAI. Essentially, OIAI said that if a company polluted over the legal limit, they would have to match the lowest levels set by their industry peers and they would have to match them indefinitely. By dropping OIAI, the Trump EPA forces companies to innovate ways to decrease their emissions, but once those lower targets are met, they're no longer required to keep using those innovations. (Read more about air pollution.)


4. Rescinding methane-flaring rules
Under the Affordable Clean Energy rule issued in August 2018, states were given more power over regulating emissions. In states like California, that means regulations would likely be stricter, whereas states that produce fossil fuels are likely to weaken regulations. The following month, the EPA announced they would relax rules around releasing methane flares, inspecting equipment, and repairing leaks. (Read more about methane.)

5. Trump announces plan to weaken Obama-era fuel economy rules
Under the Obama administration's fuel economy targets, cars made after 2012 would, on average, have to get 54 miles per gallon by 2025. In August 2018, the Trump Department of Transportation and EPA capped that target at 34 miles per gallon by 2021. The decision created legal conflict with states like California that have higher emission caps. (Read more about speed bumps in the way of super-efficient cars.)

Water
6. Trump revokes flood standards accounting for sea-level rise
In August 2017, President Trump revoked an Obama-era executive order that required federally funded projects to factor rising sea levels into construction. However, in 2018, the Department of Housing and Urban Development required buildings constructed with disaster relief grants do just that. (Read more about how rising sea levels may imperil the internet.)

7. Waters of the U.S. Rule revocation
What are the “waters of the U.S.?” President Trump issued an executive order in 2017 ordering the EPA to formally review what waters fell under the jurisdiction of the EPA and Army Corps of Engineers according to the 1972 Clean Water Act. The proposed change narrowed the definition of what's considered a federally protected river or wetland. (Read more about Trump's plans to roll back the Clean Water Act.)


Wildlife
8. NOAA green lights seismic airgun blasts for oil and gas drilling
Five companies were approved to use seismic air gun blasts to search for underwater oil and gas deposits. Debate over the deafening blasts stem from concerns that they disorient marine mammals that use sonar to communicate and kill plankton. The blasts were shot down by the Bureau of Energy Management in 2017 but approved after NOAA found they would not violate the Marine Mammal Protection Act. (Read more about how scientists think seismic air guns will harm marine life.)

Learn what it means to be an endangered species
This critically endangered South China tiger lives at the Suzhou Zoo in China. This is a species that may be gone from the wild now. As of 2015 there were only 100 in captivity.
This is a central Bornean orangutan. Bornean orangutan numbers have been more than halved in the past 60 years, mainly due to humans encroaching on its habitat.
Giant panda numbers increased enough for the IUCN Red List to downlist it from endangered to vulnerable 2016.
Hawksbill sea turtles are listed as critically endangered on the IUCN Red List. The tortoiseshell trade, collection of their eggs for food, and destruction of coral reefs have all contributed to their declining numbers.
Asian elephants are listed as endangered on the IUCN Red List, threatened by habitat loss and poaching.

1 / 5
This critically endangered South China tiger lives at the Suzhou Zoo in China. This is a species that may be gone from the wild now. As of 2015 there were only 100 in captivity.
This critically endangered South China tiger lives at the Suzhou Zoo in China. This is a species that may be gone from the wild now. As of 2015 there were only 100 in captivity.
PHOTOGRAPH BY JOEL SARTORE, NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC PHOTO ARK

9. Interior Department relaxes sage grouse protection
The uniquely American sage grouse, a bird resembling a turkey with spiked feathers, has become the face of the debate between land developers and conservationists. In both 2017 and 2018, the Trump administration Department of Interior eased restrictions on activities like mining and drilling that had been restricted to protect the endangered bird. (Read more about how the sage grouse become caught in the fight over who owns America's west.)

10. Trump officials propose changes to handling the Endangered Species Act
In July of 2018, the Trump administration announced its intention to change the way the Endangered Species Act is administered, saying more weight would be put on economic considerations when designating an endangered animal's habitat. (Read more about the rollbacks facing endangered animals.)

11. Migratory Bird Treaty Act reinterpretation
Companies installing large wind turbines, constructing power lines, or leaving oil exposed are no longer violating the Migratory Bird Treaty Act if their activities kill birds. This controversial change was declared by the Trump administration in December of 2017. (Read more about why legally protecting birds is important.)

Opening public lands for business
12. Trump unveils plan to dramatically downsize two national monuments
Unlike national parks, which have to be approved by Congress, national monuments can be created by an executive order, which the president said means they can be dismantled just as easily. Such was the case for Bears Ears and Grand Staircase-Escalante in Utah, which President Trump reduced and opened for mining and drilling companies in 2017. Tribes and environmental groups are challenging that interpretation in court. (Read more about the impacts of downsizing these two monuments.)


13. Executive order calls for sharp logging increase on public lands
Just a day before the longest government shutdown in U.S. history, President Trump issued an executive order that called for a 30 percent increase in logging on public lands. The decision was billed as wildfire prevention, though environmental groups say it ignores the role climate change plays in starting wildfires. (Read more about California's historic wildfires.)

Security & Enforcement
14. Trump drops climate change from list of national security threats
The Trump administration's decision to delist climate change from national security threats in December of 2017 meant less Department of Defense research funding and a nationalistic viewpoint on the potential impacts of wildfires, droughts, hurricanes, and other natural disasters. (Read more about how climate change is forcing migration in Guatemala.)

15. EPA criminal enforcement hits 30-year low
The size and influence of the EPA has shrunk under the Trump administration, and it's illustrated by their diminished prosecuting power. Criminal prosecutions are at a 30-year low, and many violations that would have been prosecuted in the past are now being negotiated with companies. The administration says this is streamlining its work, but environmentalists have warned it could lead to more pollution. (Read more about the scientists pushing back against President Trump's environment agenda.)    NOTHING FOR BUT A LOT TO THE ENVIROMENT.

Are you ready for your daily beating much like Straw, Prime and Lurker? here we go....(not a cut and paste)


1. Trump signed the Save our Seas act in 2018. This act grants $10 million from 2018-2022 for the NOAA and other agencies to reduce debris in oceans and coastal areas. This act also authorizes $2 million annually fir the USCG to enforce laws related to discarded  refuse from ships. Irt requires NOAA to respond to severe marine debris events. This act expresses support for the Great Lakes land-based Marine Action Plan as well.

2. Trump signed the Great American Outdoors Act which would provide $900 million annually in oil and gas revenues for the Land and Water Conservation Fund (LWCF) which helps secure land for trails and parks.

3. in 2019, the third year of the Trump Presidency, the US reduced it's greenhouse gas emissions by 2.1%

4. Emissions from electric power generation dropped by 10% In 2019. Thats because of the switch from coal to natural gas renewables in the electric power sector.

5. Trump signed legislation designating 1.3 million new acres of wilderness- the largest public lands legislation in a decade.

6. Trump proposed the Affordable Clean Energy Rule to reduce greenhouse gasses to empower states, promote energy independence, economic growth and job creation.

7. Trump administration created a Superfund task force designed to streamline the Superfund cleanup program.

8. Under the Trump Administration, EPA has deleted 82 sites from the NPL in four years equaling the number of deletions between 2008-2016. The attention and focus the Trump Administration has put on the Superfund program is making a real difference in the lives of people living in communities near Superfund sites across the country

9. For the first time, we are Energy independent

This is the short list. Good for him for pulling out tax grabbing BS.