Los Angeles Times

Dealing Trump in

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Re “Climate politics loom over 2020 race,” Feb. 8

Listening to Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-N.Y.) and others talk about the particular­s of their Green New Deal reminds me of a scene from one of the Austin Powers movies.

In the year 1969, Dr. Evil has built a laser on the moon and is threatenin­g to destroy major cities. He is speaking via video link to the president (played by Tim Robbins) and demands $100 billion in ransom. The president bursts out laughing, pointing out that much money doesn’t even exist in 1969.

When I hear of replacing the airline industry with high-speed rail, abolishing the internal combustion engine, passing living-wage proposals and renovating every building in the U.S., I see a toddler promising to make her mom the “bestest cake ever.”

The best news for Republican­s is that it looks like Democrats are going to craft their 2020 strategy around this lunacy, and I’m going to be handing out cigars and brandy to celebrate President Trump’s reelection. David Pohlod Oak Park

The Green New Deal calls for carbon emissions to be quickly eliminated and for a multitude of social and economic injustices to be addressed.

This bold statement of good intentions has not been seriously vetted economical­ly or politicall­y. Opponents are already defining it as a “job-killing, socialist wish list.” To address the dangerous effects of climate change, we need a bipartisan solution now.

HR 7173, the Energy Innovation and Carbon Dividend Act, is a welldesign­ed national carbon pricing policy that has been vetted by conservati­ves, liberals and independen­ts, and by economists, businesses and environmen­tal organizati­ons. In the first 12 years, this policy would reduce U.S. greenhouse gas emissions by 40%, and more than 2.1 million new jobs would be created. John D. Kelley Santa Barbara

The Green New Deal is unworkable? That is also what was claimed about putting a man on the moon within the decade, and to a lesser extent about the Interstate Highway System and the Tennessee Valley Authority.

We can do it by using the same government support that those projects required, and our economy will grow in the years to come.

All we have to do is go back to the tax code of Richard Nixon. An additional benefit would be to hire the Appalachia­n coal miners to build solar panels and wind turbines. Larry Severson Fountain Valley

 ?? Shawn Thew EPA/Shuttersto­ck ?? R E P. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez called the Green New Deal proposal “a major watershed moment.”
Shawn Thew EPA/Shuttersto­ck R E P. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez called the Green New Deal proposal “a major watershed moment.”

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