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GOP Lawmaker Says Climate Change Is 'The Greatest Deception In The History Of Mankind'

Posted: 06/30/2014 7:17 pm EDT Updated: 4 hours ago
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Louisiana state Rep. Lenar Whitney (R) is accusing liberals, such as former Vice President Al Gore, of advancing "the greatest deception in the history of mankind" -- man-made climate change -- in a scheme to empower the executive branch and increase taxes.

“A specter is haunting America,” Whitney, who is running for Congress in Louisiana’s 6th Congressional District, warned in a campaign video released Wednesday. “It is perhaps the greatest deception in the history of mankind.”

Mocking Gore’s 2006 Academy Award–winning climate change documentary, "An Inconvenient Truth,” Whitney claimed that the planet "has done nothing but get colder each year since the film’s release.”

“Quite inconveniently for Al Gore, and for the rest of the politicians who continue to advance this delusion, any 10-year-old can invalidate their thesis with one of the simplest scientific devices known to man: a thermometer,” Whitney said, citing record sea ice in the Antarctic sector.

Numerous GOP lawmakers and climate change contrarians have pointed to below-zero temperatures and seasonal snowfall as evidence against the legitimacy of human-induced climate change, despite numerous scientific reports debunking their claims.

Although many parts of the U.S. witnessed record-low temperatures this past winter, atmospheric carbon dioxide concentrations are still rising, winters have become increasingly warmer over the past century and Arctic sea ice is still melting.

Whitney’s own state is one of the most vulnerable regions in the country to climate change, with rising coastal sea levels estimated to submerge the Louisiana coastline by 2100.

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Ted Cruz: Amendment threatens 'SNL'

Sen. Ted Cruz says the comedy of NBC’s “Saturday Night Live” is at risk and creator Lorne Michaels could be thrown in jail if a proposed constitutional amendment on campaign finance is passed.

“Congress would have the power to make it a criminal offense; Lorne Michaels could be put in jail under this amendment for making fun of any politician. That is extraordinary. It is breathtaking, and it is dangerous,” the Texas Republican argued on the Senate floor on Tuesday, with a board of stills from the late-night sketch show displayed behind him.


Cruz said the proposal, which will face a vote Wednesday, gives Congress the authority to prohibit corporations from engaging in political speech.

“Well, NBC, which airs ‘Saturday Night Live,’ is a corporation,” said Cruz, who gave his own impression of Dana Carvey as President George H.W. Bush.

“I grew up watching ‘Saturday Night Live’; I love ‘Saturday Night Live.’ ‘Saturday Night Live,’ over the years, has had some of the most tremendous political satire,” the senator said. “Who can forget, in 2008, ‘Saturday Night Live’s’ wickedly funny characterization of the Republican vice presidential nominee, Sarah Palin?”

“It was wickedly funny and also [had] a profoundly powerful effect on people’s assessment of Gov. Palin, who’s a friend of mine, ” he added.

Cruz said he asked Minnesota Sen. Al Franken, a former “SNL” actor and writer, whether he believed Congress should prohibit the show from making fun of politicians.

(QUIZ: Do you know Sen. Cruz?)

“Now, the good senator promptly assured me he had no intention of doing any such thing,” Cruz said. However, Cruz added that the debate was not about intentions but the impact of the amendment.

Cruz, who has been lampooned on “SNL” himself, slammed Democrats for supporting what he called an “abominable provision.”

The Democrat-led measure aims to reform campaign finance laws, including giving states more control over fundraising and campaign spending. However, it is not expected to pass. Rather, Democrats are putting the issue of campaign finance and big spending in the forefront ahead of November’s midterms. But top Republicans, such as Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell, who penned an op-ed for POLITICO, have come out swinging. Like Cruz, McConnell said the amendment is an assault on free speech.

playing to the dumbshit demographic....and they believe ....

There just too many dumb shit out there.

maybe that's why certain groups are against planned parenthood. if the dumbasses breed more, eventually the dumbass vote will outnumber the intelligent voters. for an example, look at texas...

LOL, P'a, too true!

...I thought Texas was hang'n them faster then they can breed?

not if they have mitigating circumstances...like being in favor of guns, gawd and footbawl and of course being white and republican. them's keepers and not guilty

No Bombing until after the election (Just say NO! to Obama) but send weapons to "Good" Terrorists.

What could possibly go wrong?  Again?

oh you mean like the people who were advocating that we should be shipping tons of arms to  the rebels in syria, and then wondering where isis gets their arms?

Yep ... that's them.  


Republicans' belief in evolution plummets, poll reveals


Fewer Republicans today than in 2009 believe in evolution, according to new analysis from the Pew Research Center.
A poll out Monday shows that less than half – 43 percent – of those who identify with the Republican Party say they believe humans have evolved over time, plunging from 54 percent four years ago. Forty-eight percent say they believe “humans and other living things have existed in their present form since the beginning of time,” up from 39 percent in 2009.
At 67 percent and 65 percent, respectively, the numbers of Democrats and independents who believe in evolution have remained more or less the same since 2009. They’re also in step with the population nationally: Six-in-10 Americans say they believe humans have evolved.  evolution_poll.jpg
CBS News / Pew Research Center

 The gaping partisan disparity remains, the analysis states, even when accounting for “differences in the racial and ethnic composition of Democrats and Republicans or differences in their levels of religious commitment.” But the dip from 2009 is a telling indicator of the growing influence in the GOP of the oft-yoked tea party-type ideologues and the “religious right.”
According to the survey, a majority of white evangelical Protestants and half of black Protestants reject evolution. Overwhelming majorities of white Catholics and white mainline Protestants say they do believe in evolution, but among those half say a “Supreme being” guided it, rather than natural processes.
It’s a subject whose nuances saw some play in the 2012 presidential election. While former candidate Gov. Rick Perry, R-Texas, brushed off evolution as “a theory” with “some holes in it,” former Gov. Jon Huntsman, R-Utah, on the left side of the GOP field famously posted on Twitter: “To be clear. I believe in evolution and trust scientists on global warming. Call me crazy.”
Mitt Romney, a devout Mormon and the Republican Party’s ultimate nominee in 2012, has publicly stated his support for evolution – as guided by God.
“I’m not exactly sure what is meant by intelligent design,” he told the New York Times during his 2008 presidential bid. “But I believe God is intelligent and I believe he designed the creation. And I believe he used the process of evolution to create the human body.”

sooooo lemme get this straight...he is running for office but the doesn't think you have to go thru any process legally to get what you want.....maybe something is mentally wrong with him. he should fit just perfect in the clown car

A Republican Minnesota House Candidate Is Being Sued After Allegedly Sawing His Neighbor's Garage In Half

Business Insider

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A candidate for Minnesota's House of Representatives is being sued by his neighbor after he allegedly sawed the neighbor's garage in half, according to court documents obtained by the Duluth News Tribune.

Roger Weber, a Republican running for a seat in Minnesota's District 6A, allegedly used a power saw to cut  Mark Besemann's garage in half, according to a lawsuit filed by Besemann.

The case stems from a longstanding grudge going back to 2012, when Weber's father died. Robert Weber, Roger's father, owned about 40 acres of land in the region, including the house and the garage. He transferred ownership of 39 of those acres to Roger, but he kept the house, garage, and one acre. After he died, ownership of the house, garage, and acre passed to his daughter, Ann Anderson.

Roger Weber allegedly told his sister that, when his father died, he was going to remove any part or structures that were on his side of the property line. He insists half the garage is on his side of the property line. Anderson sold the house to Besemann, who  came back a little more than a week later to find his garage destroyed.

"I live a half-hour away, so I’m not over there every day. About a week after I closed on it, I drove in to see that half the garage was gone," Besemann said, according to the paper. "I had a pretty good hunch who did it, but I waited a few days to call him. Someone who does something like that isn’t thinking properly. I didn’t want to get him any angrier. I didn’t know what else he might do ... It was a pretty rough way to greet your new neighbor."

Besemann is seeking $20,000 in damages for the garage and $20,000 in punitive damages in the case. He is also seeking more of the land owned by Weber to establish a "buffer" area.

Weber couldn't immediately be reached for comment by Business Insider.


Oops: Republican super PAC misidentifies source of massive donation


Center for Public Integrity

Republican super PAC American Crossroads misidentified its second-largest donor last month in paperwork filed Friday with the Federal Election Commission.

The group, co-founded by GOP strategist Karl Rove, listed the Glenmede Trust Company as giving it $300,000 on Aug. 29, part of the $1.7 million American Crossroads raised in August.

But Glenmede spokeswoman Melissa Stonberg says the wealth management firm — which manages more than $25 billion for wealthy individuals, families and foundations — didn’t give American Crossroads a penny.

"The Glenmede Trust Company, N.A. did not make any donations to American Crossroads," Stonberg told the Center for Public Integrity. "We have contacted American Crossroads to let them know of the misreporting."

Paul Lindsay, the spokesman for American Crossroads, did not respond to questions about the apparent discrepancy Monday morning.

Several hours later, however, American Crossroads filed an amended report to the FEC that now identifies the $300,000 as coming from Thomas and Sandra Sullivan, the parents of U.S. Senate candidate Dan Sullivan of Alaska. Lindsay confirmed the super PAC changed its report but declined additional comment.

A representative of RPM International, the family business where Thomas Sullivan currently serves as chairman emeritus of the board of directors, did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

The Center for Public Integrity first raised questions about the six-figure super PAC contribution because the address American Crossroads listed for Glenmede seemed odd: It wasn't the location of the company's corporate headquarters in Philadelphia but that of a beachside condo in Florida.

Thomas Sullivan is the owner of the $3 million, 2,850-square-foot condo, according to Miami-Dade County records.

For their parts, Thomas and Sandra Sullivan have previously donated $250,000 to an Alaska-based super PAC known as "Alaska's Energy/America's Values,” which supports their son.

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