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hatrack

(59,593 posts)
Wed Jun 30, 2021, 09:51 AM Jun 2021

Oops! Carlos Giminez (R-FL) Who Talked Good Game On Climate, Deploys Trumpy Talking Points On Hill

He was a rare Republican who acknowledged climate change, warned about sea-level rise and wondered just last month, "What are we willing to do to confront the changing climate that is destroying our planet?" But Rep. Carlos Giménez of Florida seemed to upend years of climate advocacy in five minutes yesterday when he sharply questioned a Biden administration official and cast doubt on the link that he himself had drawn recently between climate change and intensifying disasters.

Sounding prosecutorial at times, Giménez challenged Federal Emergency Management Agency Administrator Deanne Criswell at a hearing on her testimony that climate change is intensifying the damage caused by hurricanes, floods and wildfires. Giménez started by taking aim at Criswell's statement that climate change is making storms more frequent and more severe. He asked her to give him records on the number and severity of hurricanes that have hit the United States since 1900 so "I can look at that data and see if it's in fact true." "Yes, representative, we can get you that information," Criswell replied, speaking remotely during a virtual hearing of the House Homeland Security Committee.

Moving to wildfires, Giménez noted that both he and Criswell have been firefighters — he was a firefighter and fire chief in Miami, and she was a firefighter and deputy fire chief with the Colorado Air National Guard. Criswell became FEMA administrator in April after nearly two years as New York City's emergency management commissioner. "You being a firefighter, you know that fire needs three things," Giménez said holding up three fingers. "It needs oxygen. It needs an ignition source. And it needs fuel. So how does climate change factor into those three things?" "For the wildfire season, the increase in the number of wildfires that we're seeing is the fact that the vegetation is more dried out than it has been in the past, which increases its ability to have the ignition source more quickly," Criswell said.

"OK. But it could also be that there's lax management of those forests and that they're not being cleared the way they should be," Giménez replied, drawing on a familiar talking point used by President Trump, "because you and I both know as firefighters that if you take away the fuel, you won't have these kinds of fires, right?" "Exactly," Criswell said, adding that forest management is a mitigation strategy that can reduce potential wildfire damage. "In the end, it's always about the fuel," Giménez said. "And the fuel is the vegetation. And if we start clearing that out, we may actually start to see a lessening of these devastating forest fires.

EDIT

https://www.eenews.net/stories/1063736127

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Oops! Carlos Giminez (R-FL) Who Talked Good Game On Climate, Deploys Trumpy Talking Points On Hill (Original Post) hatrack Jun 2021 OP
The Slobfather's slobbering points -- someone get a towel Blue Owl Jun 2021 #1
Forest fires all over the west, and we are supposed to remove vegetation? patphil Jun 2021 #2

patphil

(6,225 posts)
2. Forest fires all over the west, and we are supposed to remove vegetation?
Wed Jun 30, 2021, 10:37 AM
Jun 2021

The whole western 1/3 of the nation has been experiencing widespread forest fires. We are talking millions and millions of acres. Where do you put the vegetation you clear from all that land? It's an impossible task.
Unfortunately, nature's way of forest management is through fire.
We could do more to manage the extent of the fires, but as long as the drought continues there will be a renewed supply of tinder-dry vegetation. Add to that the rising temperature in the region, and it can only get worse.
Climate change is real.
How is it that Republicans are not able to see this? The building collapse in Florida may well have had its foundation weakened by the encroachment of seawater.
Does this guy take stupid pills, or what?

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