some environmentalists and academics are arguing that companies and u.s. states that are most significantly contributing to the climate crisis should be made to compensate the people who are bearing the brunt of its impact. analysis published in one place concludes that some big oil company s $209 billion in annual climate reparations. what do you say to that? it is ridiculous. how far back are we going to go, right? the democrats on far left want to penalize energy companies for the last 2 1/2 years how oil prices are high and the companies are making billions of profits and returning it to shareholders. they don t take into account the fact that oil prices were quite low when president biden came into office the result of policies. that s why the prices went up and the companies are doing well. it is not about reparations, it is about taxing these companies
violent felony. that s the biggest critique here. gillian, the bottom line is here in los angeles county, you can stab somebody in the neck, almost kill them and not do a single day in prison. send it back to you. gillian: bill melugin in l.a. for yours this hour. thank you very much. look at this green activists now demanding the big oil and gas companies shell out for what they re calling climate reparations demanding quite astounding pile of cash. plus this. the tough sale to get the debt limit across the finish line. the deal is still unfolding i want to vote yes. this is something we get as part of the debt ceiling deal and there are other wins in there. gillian: to get enough votes on both sides of the aisle before the nation runs out of money to pay its bills. jackie deangelis from fox
The Swedish climate celebrity doesn’t take authorship or editorial credit because the book is a collection of the ramblings of predominantly hard-left political activists.
If we value human rights and the rule of law, then we must fight for climate justice, argue Vanuatu’s foreign minister and the Commonwealth’s secretary-general.