questions to ask. but house of lords will have a lot of questions to ask. house of lords will have a lot of questions to ask. but if you can t describe it questions to ask. but if you can t describe it to questions to ask. but if you can t describe it to people, questions to ask. but if you can t describe it to people, how - questions to ask. but if you can t describe it to people, how are i describe it to people, how are people who are going to be impacted by this policy going to know what on earth is happening to them? well. earth is happening to them? well, let s be clear. earth is happening to them? well, let s be clear, this earth is happening to them? well, let s be clear, this is earth is happening to them? well, let s be clear, this is being - earth is happening to them? well, let s be clear, this is being put - earth is happening to them? -ii let s be clear, this is being put in the commons and the legislation has to come to the house of lords. the house of lords
send it out. which is not good either. ., . ., either. but we need to agree on something either. but we need to agree on something here. either. but we need to agree on something here. the either. but we need to agree on something here. the problem i either. but we need to agree oni something here. the problem is something here. the problem is not the source of energy. the problem is emissions. so if we find a way to mitigate or eliminate the emissions from coal, then we should be ok, and we have carbon capture and storage, so for example, as part of the transition in colombia, and i have discussed this with kwasi, when we took blue hydrogen, which is using blue hydrogen, which is using blue colbert capturing all the c02 that blue colbert capturing all the co2 that is emitted during the process, that should be fine. and when we think about what are we going to do with the families that depend on this coal, we need to think about a transition. because i cannot eliminate cold ove
deputyize our residents to sue anybody that walks through the door, isn t that what you re saying? that put the pin in it. if the texas law gave people $1 million for suing people to block their constitutional rights even when they re not harmed in any way, let s be clear, anybody, any stranger off the street can say i d love to make $10,000 and i won t have to pay any lawyers because i ll get my legal fees. i m going to court. i mean, that s the kind of constitutional lawlessness that we fought a civil war over and i say that because what we were hearing from texas today was plain and simple, there is a republic, there is no konls constitutional. nobody can tell us what to do. elie, it feels like that s where it s going. the south africa model in full elect.
lose the infrastructure bill. and actually, what i said to all of our members is i know you don t love the infrastructure bill but listen, we got to vote for that and if we, you know, we tie it to the build back better act, let s everybody vote for all of these things. there may be things we don t like in infrastructure, there are other people that don t like things in build back better. let s deliver this because if we don t energize our black and brown voters that delivered us these majorities and indigenous voters, if we don t energize with a significant investment in climate and if we don t energize women with an actual investment in care, let s be clear, those infrastructure jobs are great but the build back better act actually produces more jobs and while 90% of the jobs in infrastructure are for men, primarily white men, the jobs in the build back better act are many of them are for women and
that is not the case for this storm. and this storm, let s be clear, is not nearly as intense. but they ve had crews out trying to fix some of the problems that they saw back with hurricane ida, including on the streets, clearing out gutters. they brought in water pumps here in this area in queens. 11 people died in their basements during the remnants of hurricane ida. they want to make sure that never happens again. the mayor warning people who live in basement apartments for this storm to get out, to seek higher ground. in new jersey, as well, they ve been dealing with issues of flooding with hurricane ida. so far, it seems like there hasn t been flooding with this steady rain. now once it moves out of here, you re going to be dealing with high winds, 25 to 35 miles an hour here in the city. up to 50 miles an hour in long island. and all of that is going to start to push through into the northeast, where you re going to have maine and massachusetts,