at the time he had that ability to do that. she actually broke servers, she broke phones. it seems like it appears to average day folks that there is two lines of justice seems like they are going after donald trump for political reasons. were you like the guy or not is irrelevant. ainsley: that s what s causing the uproar. double standard. one for one party and something totally different for another party. at least that s how a lot of people feel. thank you so much, lawrence. lawrence has a great show. cross-country every saturday night at 10:00 p.m. he is crossing the country during the week and doing all of these stories for all of you was and his own show saturday. so proud of you, lawrence. off to florida. see you all. ainsley: see, packing your bags again. thank you. coming up, $3.8 trillion, this is how much democrats have spent since inauguration day with pricy plans like the so-called inflation reduction act. fox news contributor brian brenberg on the spending free
added $5 trillion, with a t, to their fortunes during the pandemic. $8.6 trillion in march 2020 to $13.8 trillion as of november. that s a bigger jump than in the previous 14 years combined. now, that s all billionaires. let s look at the combined wealth of just the world s richest ten men. that includes elon musk, amazon founder jeff bezos, facebook s mark zuckerberg. you see them there. their wealth more than doubled during the pandemic, jumping by $1.3 billion a day. every day. all told, their total worth is six times greater than the world s wpoorest 3.1 billion people. it is almost mind-boggling. how did this happen? central banks pumped trillions into the economy, setting off a stock market boom, lining the pockets of billionaires. this inequality is not by chance but by choice. governments should tax the gains and use the money to fund health
wall street journal 3.98 trojan horse. all of the provisions of 8 bill except green energy tax cuts new spending increase by $3.8 trillion while the tax revenue would stay at $1.55 trillion over 10 years. this means the real cost of the sanders, biden pelosi budget is $4 trillion and putt the u.s. on a path to european. that s what these moderates are saying we need to see the score. yeah. i mean, this is the third or fourth time they have tried to do this? look, if they had brought up this infrastructure bill back in september, and nancy pelosi had simply said we are holding a vote on it, it probably would have passed. but i think that those numbers you just read out go to the weakness of the progressive democratic position. they know that the rest of their party is very uncomfortable with this. they know this isn t necessarily popular in big parts of the country so they deliberately tied it to that more popular bill to try to force both of them through now we are seeing
environmental action group stand.earth in toronto. thanks for being on the programme. thanks to having me. so know this financial backing is crucial to any energy sector we are talking about. we have seen money going into renewables but your argument is that still too much is going into fossil fuels? , , ,, . fuels? definitely. since the paris agreement fuels? definitely. since the paris agreement was - fuels? definitely. since the| paris agreement was signed fuels? definitely. since the - paris agreement was signed five years ago, nearly six years ago now, nearly $3.8 trillion have gone into fossil fuel gone into fossilfuel companies, that s coal, oil and gas companies, from just 60 banks are clearly the money is blowing in the wrong direction. we need to be stepping up our investments in renewables and climate solutions and quickly phasing out investments in fossil fuels and the energy systems of the old. i think there is a lot of banks and other financial institutions that want to
to cut down on coal and oil and this year the world is on track to record the second largest increase in emissions in history. it comes as energy prices hit record highs and there are warnings of further price hikes to come. since the paris agreement was signed nearly since the paris agreement was signed nearly six since the paris agreement was signed nearly six years since the paris agreement was signed nearly six years ago since the paris agreement was signed nearly six years ago now, since the paris agreement was signed nearly six years ago now, nearly - nearly six years ago now, nearly $58 nearly six years ago now, nearly $58 trillion nearly six years ago now, nearly $3.8 trillion has nearly six years ago now, nearly $3.8 trillion has gone nearly six years ago now, nearly $3.8 trillion has gone into - nearly six years ago now, nearly $3.8 trillion has gone into fossilj $3.8 trillion has gone into fossil fuel companies, $3.8 trillion has gone into fossil fuel compan