Slashdot Mirror


Trump's Officials Suggest Re-Negotiating The Paris Climate Accord (msn.com)

Slashdot reader whh3 brings surprising news from the Wall Street Journal. "Trump administration officials said Saturday the U.S. wouldn't pull out of the Paris Agreement, offering to re-engage in the international deal to fight climate change, according to multiple officials at a global warming summit." Today an anonymous reader writes: Even an official White House statement in response to the article insisted only that the U.S. would withdraw "unless we can re-enter on terms that are more favorable to our country." On Sunday White House National Security Adviser H.R. McMaster "said President Donald Trump could decide to keep the U.S. in the Paris Climate Accord if there is a better agreement that benefits the American people," according to ABC News, while CNBC reports that Secretary of State Rex Tillerson also "said the United States could remain in the Paris climate accord under the right conditions. 'The president said he is open to finding those conditions where we can remain engaged with others on what we all agree is still a challenging issue.'"

244 comments

  1. Remember NAFTA! by cdreimer · · Score: 2, Funny

    How's that NAFTA renegotiation?

    1. Re:Remember NAFTA! by ShanghaiBill · · Score: 5, Insightful

      NAFTA and the Paris Climate Change Accord are not really comparable. NAFTA is a legally binding treaty with enforceable obligations on all parties. PCCA is symbolic, and countries can set their own goals, with no consequences for failure to abide by them. So "pulling out" of PCCA just means that America will no longer need to make up fake goals. I can't even imagine what there could possibly be to "renegotiate" since there is (almost) nothing there.

    2. Re:Remember NAFTA! by jsherma2 · · Score: 1

      This. What are we trying to renegotiate in a voluntary, unenforced accord?

    3. Re:Remember NAFTA! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Don't forget the Iran agreement, which was the worst deal in history.

    4. Re:Remember NAFTA! by fustakrakich · · Score: 1

      Ah, but the propaganda value is priceless.

      And everybody will have to fly in again and stay at those horrible hotels and eat that terrible food.

      --
      “He’s not deformed, he’s just drunk!”
    5. Re:Remember NAFTA! by Lisandro · · Score: 5, Insightful

      it is a huge fuck you to the world though. The Paris Accord is the first time in history when all countries in the planet acknowledged climate change as real and proposed measurable goals to fight it. Until the US dropped out there were exactly two countries outside the accord - Syria, undergoing civil war, and Nicaragua, who claims the accord doesn't do enough to fight climate change.

      But still - the line about "renegotiating" the accord was uttered by Trump himself when he announced the decision: "I don't want anything to get in our way. The US will withdraw from the Paris climate accord, but begin negotiations to reenter either the Paris accord or a really entirely new transaction on terms that are fair to the United States, its businesses, its workers, its people, its taxpayers. (...) We're getting out, but we will start to negotiate, and we will see if we can make a deal that's fair," Trump said. "If we can, that's great. And if we can't, that's fine."

    6. Re:Remember NAFTA! by gtall · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Last I heard on NAFTA, the U.S. representative floated the idea of having the pact reaffirmed every 5 years. The Canada and Mexico officials, once they stopped laughing, very kindly and carefully, as though explaining to a 5 year old, told the Americans that an economic pact that was only guaranteed to last 5 years would cause businesses to assume there was no pact they could count upon and it was an idea with no legs.

      So there you have it, the U.S. position is silly. The others countries are starting to move their agricultural agreements to other countries. Mexico has already started replacing American corn, wheat, and soybeans with the grains from other Latin American countries, primarily Brazil, which thinks the American position is absolutely fabulous and wishes the Administration to please do more to make America Great Again...or was it White Again, the Administration appears confused on this point.

    7. Re: Remember NAFTA! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Troll

      Yeah, great, all the globalist got together and decided to tax the fuck out of everyone who isn't them to stuff their own pockets while gaining ever greater control of the plebes' daily lives.

      I'm sooooo glad we have such an agreement and I fear what will ha[pen if the US withdraws.. the globalists might not afford as many new mansions and private jets this year! Heavens forbid!

      Oh yeah. And uhm. Something in the accord about the weather or something, too. Yeah....

    8. Re:Remember NAFTA! by AmiMoJo · · Score: 5, Insightful

      It's kind of appalling that the US is only willing to do anything if it is forced to with punishments for failure beyond just naming and shaming.

      I think people misunderstand what Paris was about, what it managed to do. The idea was to build political capital for governments to implement climate change reduction. Responsible countries have done that, setting goals and often exceeding them. China and many EU countries are leading the way, and profiting from it too. There is a massive boom in renewable, clean energy at a time when the US is trying to build up coal again.

      By not joining the PCCA the US has screwed itself. Screwed itself out of an opportunity to create jobs and technology, screwed itself out of trade that will instead go to countries which are helping each other meet their environmental commitments. If a company can buy a part from the US or from Germany, but the German one has a smaller CO2 footprint and this the final product will too, which has various benefits like tax breaks and lower environmental levies, which one are they going to pick?

      Of course, in reality many US companies will be forced to adopt things like RoHS 2 regardless of what the US government does, or lose a lot of sales.

      --
      const int one = 65536; (Silvermoon, Texture.cs)
      SJW, n: "Someone I don't like, and by the way I'm a fuckwit" - AC
    9. Re:Remember NAFTA! by alvinrod · · Score: 5, Insightful

      What's the point of having measurable goals if there's obligation to meet any of them. I can intend to solve world hunger by next Thursday and ask you to contribute money to help me do so, but I can't see how you would trust me with any money if I were also to say that all of my proposed goals or targets are non-binding and I'm not technically obligated to spend any of the money on solving world hunger in the first place.

      Nicaragua is probably the only country who is on the money in all of this. The Paris Accord won't actually accomplish anything beyond being some feel-good self-masturbatory act that serves as a good photo op. It's just Kony 2012 on a worldwide stage. Get a group of countries to agree to some binding resolutions that might make a difference. They don't even need to be difficult ones either. Something as simple as a binding promise to stop all government subsidies or tax breaks to oil companies would help make alternative energy sources more economical even if the government does nothing to fund them.

      I mean I'm sure that letting the universe know that we as a planet stand united against global warming or some shit like that is sure going to stop climate change in its tracks. Probably get it just shaking in its boots to the point that the temperatures recede a good half degree or so.

    10. Re: Remember NAFTA! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      So we can stop subsidizing corn soon? And therefore stop selling that same corn (and wheat and everything else) to the rest of the world at below cost values made up for by the American tax payer? Gosh! Big agricultural mega corps will actually have to turn a profit without subsidies from US tax payers! This is horrible!!!!@@@@

      Oh no, wait, it isn't. This is good. Free n fair markets all the way.

    11. Re:Remember NAFTA! by fahrbot-bot · · Score: 2, Insightful

      So "pulling out" of PCCA just means that America will no longer need to make up fake goals.

      Then what will Trump and the Republicans do? Fake goals are, apparently, all they're good at.
      You can't, honestly, expect them to actually govern? </politically-biased-rant>

      --
      It must have been something you assimilated. . . .
    12. Re:Remember NAFTA! by Joce640k · · Score: 1

      Admitting there's a problem is always the first step towards a solution.

      --
      No sig today...
    13. Re:Remember NAFTA! by TimothyHollins · · Score: 0

      Are they Trump hotels? Cause that could certainly explain the 180.

    14. Re:Remember NAFTA! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      So "pulling out" of PCCA just means that America will no longer need to make up fake goals.

      Then what will Trump and the Republicans do? Fake goals are, apparently, all they're good at. You can't, honestly, expect them to actually govern? </politically-biased-rant>

      That's why they're now talking about reentering, but with "better terms" negotiated by the master negotiator in chief... No doubt that the loyal trumpanzees will lap it up and rave about how much better the new terms are for the US.

    15. Re: Remember NAFTA! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      5 years is a long time for any business agreement to stand. I say this as my 2 year cell agreement ends, I'm midway through a car payment plan, and complaining that my college team switched from Adidas to Nike for merchandise. Markets change and economic agreements need to be flexible enough to adapt. A framework can be binding, but the specific planks should at least be reaffirmed to align with the interest of the parties involved. All three parties to NAFTA can improve their relative positions and should do so.

    16. Re:Remember NAFTA! by alvinrod · · Score: 2

      There are already a lot of people who do though and there are plenty of individuals and companies in the U.S. that are already taking more action of their own accord than anything the Paris Accord would do. The Paris Accord does absolutely nothing to move towards a solution.

      Imagine for the sake of argument that we were on some other timeline (whether this one or that one is the darkest is really up to you) where Clinton had won and we aren't even having this conversation because she just goes along for the photo op and only Syria and Nicaragua are left out, or maybe they even join for the sake of argument. In four years Clinton loses reelection and the Republican president probably pulls us out just states that we're not going to do whatever non-binding things we didn't have to actually do anyways, so even if we couldn't actually withdraw, we had effectively done just that.

      The Paris Accord does absolutely nothing, because joining doesn't mean that all of the countries are fully on board on that the politics can't shift. Realistically, most of them just don't do anything that they weren't going to do already regardless of what non-binding promises they made. Even if some politician gets called out for not sticking to them, they only need point at everyone else not sticking to them either and that it's unfair to impose the agreement in a non-unilateral way. It's really just a prisoner's dilemma where there's almost no penalty for defecting and very little immediate rewards for not playing greedy.

      The end result is exactly what we have now where no one is under any obligation, but there are plenty of individuals and corporations doing good things regardless because they actually want to. We as consumers are then free to reward them with our business or avoid companies that we don't feel are doing enough. Beyond that this isn't much different than creating a Facebook group called the Paris Accord and having people like it. Hell, that might even be more effective since you're at least getting individuals to commit and potentially face scorn from their peer groups if they behave hypocritically.

    17. Re:Remember NAFTA! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      He's still "negotiating" with the military over his transgender ban lol. The obese orange idiot can't get anything done at all, he might as well quit life now before he gets fired.

    18. Re:Remember NAFTA! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      US has already recognized the problem and has been taking steps toward the solution. The oil and gas industry have been the largest investors in the renewable and alternative energy technologies. US carbon emissions are declining every year for the past 10 years. There are more jobs tied to the renewable and alternative energy industry than the coal industry. The use of solar power has been increasing for the past 10 years. The Paris Climate Treaty did not contain a single concrete action item about how countries should or would achieve their "goals". There were no penalties specified if a country failed to meet it's promised goals. The people making all these promises will not be around 10. 20, or 30 years to make sure their promises were met. And anytime the US joins the "international community " they end up paying the lions share of any associated costs. The only positive thing the US government has already done is encourage alternative energy is provide the substantial tax breaks to anything having to do with alternative energy growth. But by all means lets sign a piece of paper that does absolutely nothing to effect the climate.

    19. Re:Remember NAFTA! by AK+Marc · · Score: 1

      If the goals in PCCA are "fake", why bother to pull out? Simply ignore it and move on. Done. But doing the smart thing is something Donnie John has never been accused of.

    20. Re:Remember NAFTA! by morethanapapercert · · Score: 3, Interesting
      The problem is, ending the subsidies for the entire petroleum industry is FAR from simple or easy. Sure there is the immediate problem of having to go against the powerful Oil and Gas lobbyists which is indeed a big hurdle to try to overcome. But there are several less immediately obvious hurdles as well.

      1) For such a thing to work, every major oil producing nation would have to end subsidies by the same relative amount and at the same time. To do otherwise would be to allow petroleum producers in one country to maintain a significant competitive advantage. If (for example) Canada stops subsidies and tax breaks etc on its petroleum industry but Russian doesn't, everyone will be buying the much cheaper Russian oil, leaving little market for Canada. Canada would likely still sell lots to the US of course, the logistics of shipping gives Canada a small advantage there. But since the US, by law, doesn't sell the majority of its petroleum output on the common market, instead consuming it at home and re-selling Canadian oil, the US would be also adversely affected by the Canadian policy change.

      2) Ending subsidies would mean that many alternative sources (such as oil sands and shale) would simply go out of business. That reduces the worldwide output, in turn driving up the cost per barrel. Research and development of extraction from such sources would likely languish compared to the pace it now has.

      3) Petroleum products are sold on international commodity markets and one of the subtle effects of most commodity markets is that they are more influenced by the perception of changes in supply and demand than the actual numbers justify. If ending subsidies on say Western Canada Intermediate means an increase in cost of X/barrel, speculation is likely to drive that still higher by some unknown own amount.)

      4) This may be my cynicism talking, but it seems to me that, historically, the oil and gas industry has always been very quick to jump on opportunities to raise prices and slow to drop them. (absent competitive reasons to do so) Someone sneezes in the Middle East and everyone everywhere jacks up the price at the pump in anticipation of shortages. But when cheaper supply becomes available, consumers must wait until that cheaper supply actually reaches the pumps. Ending government subsidies would mean every company from the well-head to the pump would have an excuse to increase their profit margins slightly while the government gets all the blame.

      5) This would make alternative energy sources more competitive sure, but it would take time for the various industries to scale up to meet that increased demand. As far as I know, Tesla is already selling cars as fast as they can make them and it takes time to increasing hiring, tooling and so on. Even GM would be hard pressed to start selling millions of electric cars per year without 2-5 years to revamp vast sections of their supply chain and tooling.

      6) All of the above factors mean that I wouldn't be surprised if the effective price at the pump doubles. That would entail an enormous political cost. People are already angry about the cost to fill up at the pumps, to heat their homes in winter and so on. Lets not forget that the poor have far fewer options when it comes to energy consumption. In Canada and the US, two of the richest nations in the world, there are a lot of people driving second and even third hand cars because that's all they can afford. World wide, there are a lot of small farmers using single cylinder gas or kerosene powered equipment that flat do not have the choice to abandon that equipment and obtain new electric or propane powered stuff. Here in North America, I don't think any of the big players in the agri-equipment field are even looking at electric powered tractors, harvesters, balers and so on. So the price of food will also go up. And if you think doubling the price of fuel provokes a shit storm, that's nothing compared to the fallout from huge increases in the cost of groceries.

      --
      I need a wheelchair van for my son. Help me get the word out. https://www.gofundme.com/wheelchair-van-for-jj
    21. Re:Remember NAFTA! by Lisandro · · Score: 1

      What's the point of having measurable goals if there's obligation to meet any of them.

      ...yet. We're getting there eventually; not everything gets done by putting a gun to someone's head. The main greenhouse emitting countries are doing arguably good: India, for example, became the world's 4th wind power producer, has over 9GW of solar, is cutting 15GW of coal power and is, in fact, posed to exceed their own goals by 2020. China is on track to reduce its greenhouse emissions 70% by 2030.

      It is impossible to understate the harm the US has done in that regard. Do you grasp how hard it is to have everyone, from Australia to North Korea, to agree on anything?

    22. Re:Remember NAFTA! by AmiMoJo · · Score: 2

      The point is that someone will be marking your homework and publicly shaming you in front of the class if you don't do a good job.

      The Paris Agreement puts in place a framework for monitoring progress. More importantly, it says "the whole world thinks this is a problem", which strengthens politician's cases for doing things domestically. For example, it could be used to justify setting up a fund to invest in clean tech, and then you get Tesla and a nice profit out of it.

      --
      const int one = 65536; (Silvermoon, Texture.cs)
      SJW, n: "Someone I don't like, and by the way I'm a fuckwit" - AC
    23. Re:Remember NAFTA! by jader3rd · · Score: 2, Informative

      What's the point of having measurable goals if there's obligation to meet any of them.

      You don't improve what you don't measure. So by measuring, and being informed, provides incentive for improvement.

    24. Re:Remember NAFTA! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ISIS has claimed responsibility for climate change. ae911truth dot org

    25. Re: Remember NAFTA! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      5 years is a long time for any business agreement to stand.[e.g. cell phone plan, car payment]

      That's on a personal level. Many business projects have payback times far longer than 5 years. For example, nuclear power plants, wind farms, solar towers, electric high-speed trains. If you add political risk every 5 years on top of all the other risks, projects like these will never get started.
       

    26. Re: Remember NAFTA! by Cyberax · · Score: 1

      Nope, they'll get even more subsidies to "compete" with Latin America.

    27. Re:Remember NAFTA! by TeknoHog · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Of course, in reality many US companies will be forced to adopt things like RoHS 2 regardless of what the US government does, or lose a lot of sales.

      On a side note, isn't it great how a "reduction of hazardous substances" directive (or at least the part about lead-free solder) makes electronics more likely to malfunction and harder to repair? I guess it's good for sales, though.

      --
      Escher was the first MC and Giger invented the HR department.
    28. Re:Remember NAFTA! by phantomfive · · Score: 1

      By not joining the PCCA the US has screwed itself. Screwed itself out of an opportunity to create jobs and technology,

      Well, you're talking like a politician now. All you have to do is add, "and it will help the children! Please think of the children!" and you'll have the standard political argument.

      Seriously, anytime someone says, "you should do this to create jobs, technology, for the environment, the children, and you'll get a pony [add your own thing here]" you know they are full of bullshit.

      --
      "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
    29. Re:Remember NAFTA! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Screw "the world", they don't get to vote.

      This whole farrago is for the benefit of Trump's faithful, who see that he's getting tough with foreigners, renegotiating an unfair treaty and you know what? - those wimpy foreigners are going to agree/let him do it, because Obama was such a wimp that he gave away everything upfront. That's Trump's narrative as it will be told on Twitter and Brietbart.

      The fact that there's actually been no change - will only be mentioned in FAKE NEWS from the liberal MSM, and therefore the people Trump actually cares about will never know it.

    30. Re:Remember NAFTA! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I missed where you responded to the parent's actual argument. Oh right, you're just trolling.

    31. Re:Remember NAFTA! by quetzalblue · · Score: 1

      > The Paris Accord won't actually accomplish anything beyond being some feel-good self-masturbatory act that serves as a good photo op probably not. I'm fearing its going to be the camels' nose in the tent: just like the EU itself wasnt supposed to be what it morphed into. It will start with the Paris "accord" but there will be a clamour for more tangible goals and eventually penalties. All the while the hypocrites will be raking in the bucks for supposed weather influence ? gimme a break. Remember folks, the weatherman cant predict 7 days accurately but we are to believe they can model the worlds' weather for the next 10, 20 or 50 years ? how about predicting where your money will go: that'll be more accurate.

    32. Re:Remember NAFTA! by quetzalblue · · Score: 1

      You're right: admitting there are hidden motives is the problem. Not the screwy weather.

    33. Re:Remember NAFTA! by ShanghaiBill · · Score: 2

      If the goals in PCCA are "fake", why bother to pull out?

      Because it is great symbolism, it makes his supporters think he is "doing something", and it pisses off the greenies because they also care more about symbolism than reality. Pulling out is silly and meaningless in a practical sense, but is a smart move politically.

    34. Re: Remember NAFTA! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The Paris Accord does nothing material. But it does indicate to the world what your stance is.

    35. Re: Remember NAFTA! by Chromium_One · · Score: 2, Funny

      0/10

      You're not even trying to emulate a goddamned moron, hell, you're barely above emulating a Markov chain. Might wanna stop before you hurt yourself again.

      --
      When you live in a sick society, just about everything you do is wrong.
    36. Re: Remember NAFTA! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Infrastructure upgrades are different if you are talking the bond market support or major investment, which isn't what NAFTA is. We are talking short term markets for selling commodities and finished goods that cross the border with little to no import duties. Think physicians selecting which insurance providers to accept as a result of tumultuous politics every 2 to 4 years. In a more ideal world, a long term agreement would keep everyone happy and focused on providing goods and services rather than supply chain and back office support, but the reality is that with finite resources, every country needs to be able to adjust mid-course and maintain competition that benefits the total economy. All around it is probably good to maintain a better relation between the respective commerce departments as good neighbors to keep deals fair over the long term.

    37. Re: Remember NAFTA! by DRJlaw · · Score: 1

      Infrastructure upgrades are different if you are talking the bond market support or major investment, which isn't what NAFTA is.

      Because power, water supply, and wastewater systems supporting factories are not infrastructure. Because the factories manufacturing those goods are not themselves infrastructure. Because the transportation systems involved in import and export are not infrastructure.

      We are talking short term markets for selling commodities and finished goods that cross the border with little to no import duties.

      We're talking about myopic anonymous cowards with little business experience extolling things that simply are not true.

      Think physicians selecting which insurance providers to accept as a result of tumultuous politics every 2 to 4 years.

      Think physicians building hospitals and purchasing diagnostic equipment.

      In a more ideal world, a long term agreement would keep everyone happy and focused on providing goods and services rather than supply chain and back office support, but the reality is that with finite resources, every country needs to be able to adjust mid-course and maintain competition that benefits the total economy.

      The total economy, you say?

      "Some jobs are lost due to imports, but others are created, and consumers benefit significantly from the falling prices and often improved quality of goods created by import competition. A 2014 PIIE study of NAFTAâ(TM)s effects found that about 15,000 jobs on net are lost each year due to the pactâ"but that for each of those jobs lost, the economy gains roughly $450,000 in the form of higher productivity and lower consumer prices."

    38. Re: Remember NAFTA! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I can intend to solve world hunger by next Thursday and ask you to contribute money to help me do so, but I can't see how you would trust me with any money if I were also to say that all of my proposed goals or targets are non-binding and I'm not technically obligated to spend any of the money on solving world hunger in the first place.

      Duh. Thursday isn't enough time to do the Kickstarter. You need like 30 days.

    39. Re: Remember NAFTA! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Climate isn't weather.

    40. Re: Remember NAFTA! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I can't argue against the fact that removing lead from solder makes soldering more difficult and failure prone, just like you can't argue against the fact that removing lead from your diet would have led to an adequate IQ.

    41. Re:Remember NAFTA! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The oil and gas corporations are not run by a bunch of idiots. They have been the leading investors in alternative energy research for over 20 years. They know fossil fuels are on their way out. They leaders of the oil and gas industry want to make sure will be a dominate the alternative energy market.

      No body living today will see a world where fossil fuel use will all but disappear. The only thing that could speed up the time table is new or improved technologies. We will need an electric car that can go further than 300 miles. We will need a charging infrastructure. Look at the number of gas stations you pass on your way to work. The car recharging stations would need just as many recharging stations. Recharging times will need to rival the time it takes to fill up a car.

    42. Re:Remember NAFTA! by pots · · Score: 1

      Good news! This will help the children, along with everyone else, so all of your bases are covered.

    43. Re:Remember NAFTA! by phantomfive · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Good news! This will help the children, along with everyone else,

      That's what you want me to believe. You haven't done deep economic analysis on the topic, and you probably haven't even investigated it enough to figure out what mitigations will actually hurt the children more than they'll help them.

      Every mitigation has a cost: at what point is the cost more expensive than the problem it fixes? You don't know, and your comment was entirely made from ignorance. You'd be a good politician though, so keep it up.

      --
      "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
    44. Re:Remember NAFTA! by pots · · Score: 1

      Thank you! You would make a terrible politician, but you would probably somehow still get elected anyway.

    45. Re:Remember NAFTA! by phantomfive · · Score: 1

      Thank you! You would make a terrible politician,

      Best compliment I've had all day.

      --
      "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
    46. Re:Remember NAFTA! by Barsteward · · Score: 1

      it gets embarrassing when you are at the bottom of the league for getting things done

      --
      "The hands that help are better far than lips that pray." - Robert Ingersoll (1833-1899)
    47. Re:Remember NAFTA! by Barsteward · · Score: 2

      Fortunately there are plenty of sensible politicians in the US like Mayors etc that are still going to do things towards the Accord in spite of idiots like Trump.

      --
      "The hands that help are better far than lips that pray." - Robert Ingersoll (1833-1899)
    48. Re:Remember NAFTA! by jandersen · · Score: 1

      What's the point of having measurable goals if there's [no] obligation to meet any of them.

      (I assume you meant no measurable goals?) The point is that it has been very difficult to reach agreement on even the most basic principles until the Paris agreement - now there is agreement globally that climate change is real, that it has alot to do our CO2 emissions, and that something can and must be done. This is hugely important, politically; and as far obligations and binding agreements - who is going to punish those who violate the agreement? When the political agreement is a fragile as this, there is little sense in adding the aggravation of "binding obligations", however symbolic, to the equation.

      Reaching any global, political agreement is a very slow, frustrating process, and the joyful surprise is that China are taking this very serious and seem to be taking the lead. Another very positive surprise is how American industry and individual states seem determind to fulfil the Paris agreement, no matter what Trump says. You may call it toothless and pointless, but it seems to have sent out a signal that is going to be followed, regardless.

    49. Re:Remember NAFTA! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      On a side note, isn't it great how a "reduction of hazardous substances" directive (or at least the part about lead-free solder) makes electronics more likely to malfunction and harder to repair? I guess it's good for sales, though.

      Yeah, I'd still be using my perfectly good, 15 year old iPhone if it wasn't for those RoHS cunts!

    50. Re:Remember NAFTA! by butzwonker · · Score: 1

      The world of global politics and diplomacy doesn't work that way.

      You can hardly ever get hundreds of countries with politicians from all imaginable political sides and different obligations towards their voters to decide on a bunch of regulations in one go. Such treaties require patient work, which is a problem in the case of the global warming effect, because the matter has become urgent by now. (In fact, it may be too late already.) Unfortunately, enacting international treaties is and has always been slow. You start with a declaration of will. Then you negotiate concrete mechanisms, then you turn these into follow-up treaties, then these treaties are decided and signed (but not ratified yet), and finally they are ratified by all of their members. There are negotiations at each of these steps.

      Usually, governments bail out at the last step, e.g. the US signed the Rome statute to put the International Criminal Court in place but continues to refuse to ratify it. Bailing out of a non-binding declaration of will like the Paris agreement is far more drastic, it is essentially a blocking move that makes further co-operation fruitless. The US has isolated themselves with this step from the rest of the world in that matter.

      On a side note, I find Trump's middle position oddly incoherent and indecisive. He really needs to make up his mind whether he believes the majority of scientists and his daughter or whether he believes his base voters and (some of his) fellow Republicans.

    51. Re:Remember NAFTA! by Kiuas · · Score: 1

      What's the point of having measurable goals if there's obligation to meet any of them.

      You think the US wants obligations in these treaties? You think the US, especially now under this new Trumpian-mercantilist/nationalist approach, would ever agree to any pact that for example allows other countries to place sanctions on the US unilaterally if it fails to meet its goals?

      This whole line of 'the Paris accord is useless because it's not bidning' is BS and a rhetorical red herring when it's quite clear that the largest economies in the world will never agree to binding pacts with sanctions. Therefore, the Paris accords represent the best possible outcome where we all agree to reduce emissions and to periodically review emission goals.

      IIf the Paris accords were binding, I can guarantee you that Trump & Co would have withdrawn even faster, making a big scene out of how the US 'will not bow to these globalist overlords and their fake news of the climate warming that's just an excuse by the Chinese to make the US less competitive-"

      The Paris Accord won't actually accomplish anything beyond being some feel-good self-masturbatory act that serves as a good photo op.

      More bullshit. You know, we're all in the same boat with the climate. Rational people understand that fucking up the climate will fuck up everyone. Countries want to reduce emissions because they want to stabilize their own future. China is dealing with unforeseen amounts of pollution causing the air condition in some of its major cities to be so bad that breathing the air is equivalent to smoking a pack or 2 of cigarettes every day. They understand this, and they understand that reducing emissions not only has benefits for all of the planet but for themselves and their citizens and economy directly.

      The fact that this is so hard to get for many Americans is astounding to me. There's no 'winners' and losers here. Either we all win and the the pace of the warming is slowed down enough that we can actually prepare for it and save critical ecosystems, or we all lose and end up with migratory movements of hundreds of millions or even billions of people as ocean surface rise and loss of arable land forces people to move at record numbers and increased extreme weather (think Harvey except even bigger) wreaks havoc to infrastructure causing hundreds of billions of damage.

      The boat is taking in water, and we're sinking. And while the rest of us are trying our best to figure out a way to pluck the whole, the commander-in-orange and the so called """leader""" of the free world pouts in the corner crying over 'well, we're not going to do anything unless you force us to" and is attempting to poke MORE holes to the hull by increasing fossil fuel use, which is literally a self-destructive move. The level of psychosis of the Trump administration on this one is beyond measure.

      So please, pretty please, on behalf of the rest of the world: Get your shit together on this one. Once the damage is done, it's irreversible, and I for one do not want to have to explain to my grand kids that the reason hundreds of millions of people are starving and there's a gigantic refugee crisis that makes the current migratory movement out of Syria/middle-east look like a field trip is because once upon a time the most powerful economy in the world was lead by a guy with a toddler's level of scientific understanding.

      --
      "It is the business of the future to be dangerous" -Alfred North Whitehead
    52. Re:Remember NAFTA! by thegarbz · · Score: 1

      The Paris Accord won't actually accomplish anything

      Tell it to the countries currently cutting emissions to meet the "voluntary" obligations.

    53. Re:Remember NAFTA! by MtHuurne · · Score: 1

      2) Ending subsidies would mean that many alternative sources (such as oil sands and shale) would simply go out of business. That reduces the worldwide output, in turn driving up the cost per barrel. Research and development of extraction from such sources would likely languish compared to the pace it now has.

      If you reduce fossil fuel consumption, then of course fossil fuel production is going to decrease as well. So I don't think you can count this as a problem: it is an intended consequence.

      7) I don't know what it's like in other countries, but here in North America, federal and state/province level governments get significant revenue from fuel taxes. When have you ever seen a political body voluntarily give up a revenue stream? Moreover, with the increase in cost of living, they will be under enormous pressure to increase aid (in one form or another) to the poor. That is hard to do in the face of reductions in revenue.

      Over here in the Netherlands, there are huge energy taxes on all consumer energy bills, even if you are buying renewable energy. I don't think it makes sense, but that doesn't stop the government from getting their cut.

    54. Re:Remember NAFTA! by Migraineman · · Score: 1

      Ya know, China is free to clean-up its internal pollution problems without the Paris Accord. I wonder why they haven't taken the initiative on this ...

      Oh wait! Having actually read the Paris Accord, it is clear that the construct IS carefully crafted to, as you noted earlier, "make the US less competitive" in a global marketplace. Specifically, there's a USD$100 BILLION commitment from the "developed" countries ... PER YEAR ... to be wealth-redistributed to other countries for dubious climate-related projects. The vast majority of this funding, if not all of it, is expected to come from the USA.

      The Paris Accord is a global wealth-redistrubution program wrapped in a wafer-thin-veneer of "OMG, save the planet."

    55. Re:Remember NAFTA! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "What's the point of having measurable goals if there's obligation to meet any of them."

      The point is having everyone agree that they're a problem and having everyone agree to try to fix it. This should be obvious.

      'The Paris Accord won't actually accomplish anything beyond being some feel-good self-masturbatory act that serves as a good photo op. "

      We are already on track to meet our stated goals.

      Comments like yours sound all witty and snarky, but really they're just ignorant. You don't know what you're talking about, and it's obvious to anyone who does.

    56. Re:Remember NAFTA! by DarthVain · · Score: 1

      Not to mention I think many are of the mind that the US is constantly circumventing NAFTA, and what the point of a pact if one of the members only abide by it when they feel like it. Things like the softwood lumber issue when Canada has already won in the courts, and it looks like it is going to happen all over again. The whole "Buy America" policies, etc... However this isn't a Trump thing, these are systemic issues that have been around since the start really.

    57. Re:Remember NAFTA! by cyberchondriac · · Score: 1

      The point is that someone will be marking your homework and publicly shaming you in front of the class if you don't do a good job.

      With a metaphor like that, pardon me if I say you sound like someone who's spent most of their life squirreled away in academia, conditioned to paying tuition, and removed from the actual workforce.
      Significant costs come with the membership to that accord, providing little return on investment since nothing at this point is usefully defined. Without clear guidelines, it has little to no hope of accomplishing anything practical. It's a pony show and a political money pit at this stage, and they're looking at the US and licking their chops over the magnanimous share we'll be "asked" to contribute.
      Maybe if they get more serious about actually developing a viable plan, it'd be worth it beyond just the face time and good PR. But as of right now, it sort of smacks of the hollowness of Leonardo DiCaprio preaching AGW to the masses while flying around on his private jet, or the old Al Gore who used to have a house that was about as efficient as an industrial revolution era factory (but at least he updated).

      --

      Look back up at my post, now look back down, you're on the Internet. Now look back up. I'm a signature.
    58. Re:Remember NAFTA! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Makes for good headlines for the ignorant among the electorate who will be over the moon that Trump is standing up for them against the evil globalist. No need to be bothered with details when it has truthiness going for it

    59. Re: Remember NAFTA! by ebvwfbw · · Score: 1

      Have you read the agreement? That moron as you called him is spot on. The US was obligated to pay billions while the rest of the world did absolutely nothing. Nothing was required of them at all, other than to collect money from the US. Read it. Then ask what kind of a President would agree to such a thing in the first place? Why wasn't this set up as a treaty - because no sane person here would have agreed to it if it saw the light of day in the Senate, and they knew it. Just as they admitted fooling everyone on the Iran deal, ACA, etc. Just youtube Gruber sometime. He'll tell you how stupid you (me, everyone else) are.

    60. Re:Remember NAFTA! by Marxist+Hacker+42 · · Score: 2

      I can't find a single goal in the Paris Accord that I would consider measurable. But maybe, I'm too much of a physicist and not enough of a sociologist.

      --
      SJW: a person who perceives an injustice, and while correcting it, commits a greater injustice.
    61. Re:Remember NAFTA! by Lisandro · · Score: 1

      You should check again - every country pledges to a series of goals when they enter/ratify the accord: http://climateactiontracker.or...

    62. Re:Remember NAFTA! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      >It's kind of appalling that the US is only willing to do anything if it is forced to with punishments for failure beyond just naming and shaming.

      Are you saying the US will only do something if it itself is punished for nothing doing something? Because that's completely wrong here.

      If the US is flipping the bill, the US wants the recipients to enter binding agreements. In other words, if the recipients do not spend the money as originally agreed, the US wants those recipients to face repercussions.

      The US already gives the most net foreign aid of any individual country by far. If anything, foreign aid should more binding.

    63. Re: Remember NAFTA! by Chromium_One · · Score: 1

      0/10, again.

      Every participating country sets their own goals and standards, there's no penalty for not meeting them, there's no actual obligation required to be met. Go insert a rusty chainsaw up your asshole and push until you can taste it, shit-for-brains.

      --
      When you live in a sick society, just about everything you do is wrong.
    64. Re:Remember NAFTA! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well that creates quite the dilemma for you then doesn't it given that Trump's counter argument is that it will create jobs too.

      They can't both be full of bullshit, because that makes no sense, so you may wish to consider simply that the GP is right on this, and that you're in an increasingly marginalised minority for believing otherwise.

      Last century was America's, this century will be China's because China is beginning to advance ahead of the US technologically in areas like green tech for precisely the fact that it is doing as GP says, whilst the US is still focussing on trying to create more of last century's dead end jobs, like coal mining.

      I didn't believe all the crap at the turn of the century about this being China's century until I saw the US opting to defeat itself and allow this to happen - it'll be China's century not inherently because of China outpacing the US through simply competing harder, but through the US opting to fall into irrelevance through ignorance.

    65. Re:Remember NAFTA! by phantomfive · · Score: 1

      They can't both be full of bullshit,

      Really? Are you sure that's a position you want to commit to?

      Opposing politicians are always full of bullshit. It's part of the job.

      --
      "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
    66. Re:Remember NAFTA! by Marxist+Hacker+42 · · Score: 1

      None of which are mandatory, and none of which are actually MEASURABLE. You can estimate emissions but you can't put a measuring device on every tailpipe and every smokestack and every nose in the world.

      Like I said, it's the difference between sociology and physics. Physics deals with what we can *actually* measure, not estimates gamed for a pre-determined conclusion.

      --
      SJW: a person who perceives an injustice, and while correcting it, commits a greater injustice.
    67. Re:Remember NAFTA! by Lisandro · · Score: 1

      All of the targets MUST be measurable, per the accord letter. GHG can be either measured by production or consumption, with a calculable error; your concern seems to be that these measurements are mostly indirect. I fail to see how that make them invalid.

    68. Re:Remember NAFTA! by KingBenny · · Score: 1

      omg, someone who reddit and doesnt slur ? well, leave it to trump to negotiate the laws of nature to more favour the united lobbies of the free world i guess ... thats what you get for old bats ruling the world, they got one foot in the grave what do they care

      --
      Free speech was meant to be free for all... how can anyone grow up in a nanny state ?
    69. Re:Remember NAFTA! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You won't believe it? They sent us a bunch of egg heads to negotiate and they all broke so we have to wait for replacements before continuing:
      https://www.youtube.com/watch?...

      Based on your picture linked just below, there is rumors that you might be their father and your mother their mother:
      https://school.discoveryeducat...

    70. Re: Remember NAFTA! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You've yet to provide any logical argument to refute what the GP stated. So, yeah we'll just take your word for it that his point is stupid...sheesh.

    71. Re: Remember NAFTA! by Chromium_One · · Score: 1

      The entire set of accords is nothing more than statement of intent. There is no actual obligation anywhere within it. Should any signing party wish do to something different, they can just go ahead and do it. There is nothing for enforcement, nor is there any actual penalty.

      Remove your head from your ass.

      --
      When you live in a sick society, just about everything you do is wrong.
    72. Re:Remember NAFTA! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "It is impossible to understate the harm the US has done in that regard."

      Is it really? Is it possible to quantify the harm? No, because you can't, because the U.S. has continued to reduce emissions every year, but don't let facts get in the way of bluster (yours or Trumps).

    73. Re:Remember NAFTA! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      As if there won't be someone scoring you even if you don't sign up? What are the odds that nobody will shame a country that didn't? Oh, wait, there's shaming going on without a score. Doh! Most American politicians don't increase their domestic support by pleasing the international community, so your Tesla example is crap.

    74. Re:Remember NAFTA! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And how many nations would have signed up if there were goals and obligations. Clue: A hellava lot less.

    75. Re:Remember NAFTA! by dcw3 · · Score: 1

      Oh, you mean the U.S.?
      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/...

      --
      Just another day in Paradise
    76. Re:Remember NAFTA! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ...there are plenty of sensible politicians in the US there are plenty of sensible politicians in the US ...

      Um, no. Just no. No matter what side you're on, it's still no. Stick with tending bar...you clearly don't understand what politicians do.

    77. Re: Remember NAFTA! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Obligated to pay billions"? What in the name of the good fuck are you talking about?!

    78. Re:Remember NAFTA! by Marxist+Hacker+42 · · Score: 1

      And yet, by definition, they simply aren't. Neither production nor consumption of GHG can be measured directly, without error. "With a calculable error" makes anything they measure complete estimate garbage. Indirect measurement is just made up numbers, with no reality whatsoever.

      Like I said, sociology, not physics. Just like the rest of "climate science"

      --
      SJW: a person who perceives an injustice, and while correcting it, commits a greater injustice.
    79. Re:Remember NAFTA! by thegarbz · · Score: 1

      Yes, and all the other. But the fact that the USA is taking some responsibility anyway makes the orange baby with the weird hair look even more stupid.

    80. Re:Remember NAFTA! by lsatenstein · · Score: 1

      NAFTA and the Paris Climate Change Accord are not really comparable. NAFTA is a legally binding treaty with enforceable obligations on all parties. PCCA is symbolic, and countries can set their own goals, with no consequences for failure to abide by them. So "pulling out" of PCCA just means that America will no longer need to make up fake goals. I can't even imagine what there could possibly be to "renegotiate" since there is (almost) nothing there.

      Its called Face saving.

      --
      Leslie Satenstein Montreal Quebec Canada
  2. Trump says Moo by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Moo Moo

  3. Good by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    At the core this was nothing but a redistribution of wealth out of the US with no real guarantees the cash would be used to actually preserve the environment.

    1. Re:Good by Sique · · Score: 4, Informative
      There should be a "Not informative" moderation.

      The Paris Agreement was a self-commitment of all signing countries to limit the increase in global temperatures to 2 degrees Celsius until the year 2100. Not more, nothing less. If Climate Change was non existant, or a naturally occuring phenomenom, the U.S. could simply keep the agreement because either the global climate doesn't change at all, or the climate change is so slow (previous climate changes took ten thousands of years to happen), that there is no reason to fear anything within the next 100 years.

      At no point in the agreement there was any mentioning of wealth or the redistribution of it.

      --
      .sig: Sique *sigh*
    2. Re:Good by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      You don't know much about carbon markets, do you? -PCP

    3. Re:Good by Alwin+Henseler · · Score: 5, Insightful

      At the core this was nothing but a redistribution of wealth out of the US with no real guarantees the cash would be used to actually preserve the environment.

      The US is near the top in countries that:
      a) Have the biggest impact on our environment (both climate-related & otherwise), and
      b) Have the resources to do something about it.

      So it's only reasonable that countries like the US, China & European countries should take the lead to reduce mankind's influence on climate.

      Paris was negotiated among a large number of countries. Pulling out after the fact just shows the US as an untrustworthy partner. Especially since Paris was more about setting goals than binding agreements.

    4. Re: Good by guruevi · · Score: 2

      27 pages is an awful lot of document to just state that. The agreement does include unspecified "contributions" of which China and the US will bear nearly half of the world's. Signed agreements are binding even if it's just a 'shame' thing, media pressure and future reinterpretation based on personal beliefs rather than science are a real risk, you complain about Trump for doing it but imagine someone like our current VP or anyone in the Republican party for that matter reinterpret the needs of the world based on their faith and associated bloodlust - nuking all non-Christian countries would definitely help climate in the long run.

      Agreements with shoddy wording and no enforceability nor accountability is bad. You see what Trump can do with it, pray nobody that actually interprets the rhetoric like gospel comes in power.

      --
      Custom electronics and digital signage for your business: www.evcircuits.com
    5. Re:Good by elrous0 · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Purely symbolic agreements like these are a symptom of the larger problem: No one wants to make the REAL sacrifices to address the problem.

      I'm still somewhat skeptical of man-made climate change myself, but if you're going to accept the idea, then you also have to accept the idea that fixing it is going to require real sacrifices. Symbolic gestures, talk, commitments to make sacrifices far in the future (long after the politicians who made said promises are safely out of office), etc. aren't going to cut it.

      Right now everyone wants to talk a big game, but they want someone else to make any actual sacrifices. Al Gore lectures me on energy efficiency, then gets into a SUV and drives home to a mansion that uses 10x more electricity every month than my family does. Politicians promise that some other politicians in the future will make sacrifices, but not them of course. Business CEOs promise that some other CEOs will cut emissions by 2035, but not them and not now of course.

      If you believe that this is a problem, then step up to the plate and tell your citizens and businesses that they're going to have to sacrifice NOW. Because vague promises for the future isn't going to cut it. In short, put up or shut up.

      --
      SJW: Someone who has run out of real oppression, and has to fake it.
    6. Re:Good by Sique · · Score: 2
      There is no global carbon market.

      Some countries have an internal carbon market, some trade zones (e.g. the E.U.) have them. That's fine, but the Paris Agreement does not demand having carbon markets.

      --
      .sig: Sique *sigh*
    7. Re:Good by HornWumpus · · Score: 1

      Was never ratified by the US, no legal force. Even aside from the fact it's an empty agreement.

      Foreign government negotiators that didn't recognize it as meaningless propaganda should go back to elementary school.

      --
      John McAfee 'It was like that time I hired that Bangkok prostitute; to do my taxes, while I fucked my accountant'
    8. Re: Good by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you believe that this is a problem, then step up to the plate and tell your citizens and businesses that they're going to have to sacrifice NOW. Because vague promises for the future isn't going to cut it. In short, put up or shut up.

      Quite a lot of countries are making very specific internal promises to phase out fossil fuels in different contexts, with milestones on short enough time scales that some current politicians will still be in office. In some cases, progress is fast enough that schedules are being shortened.

      Claims that all promises are too vague or distant to be meaningful are usually made by those trying to dismiss real world, practical progress so they can excuse places that are not making progress.

    9. Re: Good by meerling · · Score: 1

      Are you kidding!?!?! These days 27 pages to an international agreement isn't even a freaking post-it note in scale!

    10. Re:Good by SlaveToTheGrind · · Score: 5, Informative

      The Paris Agreement was a self-commitment of all signing countries to limit the increase in global temperatures to 2 degrees Celsius until the year 2100. Not more, nothing less. . . .

      At no point in the agreement there was any mentioning of wealth or the redistribution of it.

      You mean this Paris Agreement? The one that says in Article 9, Paragraph 1, " Developed country Parties shall provide financial resources to assist developing country Parties with respect to both mitigation and adaptation in continuation of their existing obligations under the Convention"?

      There should be a "Not informative" moderation.

      Indeed.

    11. Re:Good by vux984 · · Score: 1

      Purely symbolic agreements like these are a symptom of the larger problem:

      You are right that nobody wants to make real sacrifice, but it represents significant progress to get people to agree there is a problem that even needs to be addressed.

      Step one to solving a problem is to admit there is a problem. While in many respects the paris accord does nothing to solve the problem, but from another perspective it's pretty impressive we even got the Paris accord.

    12. Re:Good by AmiMoJo · · Score: 3, Informative

      There should be a "Not informative" moderation.
      The Paris Agreement was a self-commitment of all signing countries to limit the increase in global temperatures to 2 degrees Celsius until the year 2100. Not more, nothing less.

      Your post may be in need of that tag...

      The Paris Agreement also committed signatories to setting ever increasing goals, which would then be monitored and those failing to set adequate goals or to meet them would be named and shamed. That's actually really important, because it gives politicians political capital to get things done.

      It also laid the groundwork to get the various mitigation trading schemes linked up, so that things are not double counted. That's now happening, and will both prevent the systems being abused and make them more effective.

      Paris also establishes standards for measuring progress, which must be scientifically rigorous and will be independently monitored.

      You might not think much of this, but the practical effects are undeniable. China is pushing really hard and exceeding its quite ambitious goals. The EU is pushing quite hard too, and using it as a catalyst for change. Don't make excuses for the US not doing its bit.

      --
      const int one = 65536; (Silvermoon, Texture.cs)
      SJW, n: "Someone I don't like, and by the way I'm a fuckwit" - AC
    13. Re: Good by fahrbot-bot · · Score: 4, Funny

      27 pages is an awful lot of document to just state that.

      If it's that short, can't we just add the Paris Climate Accord agreement to the iTunes EULA. That way, we can get everyone to agree to it without noticing.

      --
      It must have been something you assimilated. . . .
    14. Re: Good by lazarus · · Score: 1

      You can find the full text of the agreement on Scribd.

      --
      I am not interested in articles about life extension advancements.
    15. Re:Good by meerling · · Score: 1

      And yet staying in it caused no harm, and pulling out created lots of bad publicity and lack of trust for our country on a worldwide scale. Stupid move.

    16. Re:Good by Powercntrl · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I'm still somewhat skeptical of man-made climate change myself

      All fossil fuels started out as prehistoric biomass. Epcot used to have a mildly entertaining attraction which explained this. The ecosystem we're living in today has adapted over millions of years to a cooler climate, thanks to all that carbon being sequestered underground.

      It is simply denying reality to assume reversing the process of carbon sequestration is going to have no effect on the climate. Now yeah, if you believe God just put all that oil and coal down there for his devout followers to reap, yeah - can't argue logic and reason against religious beliefs.

      Al Gore lectures me on energy efficiency, then gets into a SUV and drives home to a mansion that uses 10x more electricity every month than my family does. In short, put up or shut up.

      That dimwitted blonde deplorable making the rounds on social media made the same argument. The flaw in that logic, however, is that it's tantamount to dismissing a warning of "smoking is unhealthy", because it was given to you by a smoker. The hypocritical behavior of the messenger does not invalidate the factuality of the message.

      The take away is that yes, they should be practicing what they preach. Not that their hypocritical behavior is an acceptable justification for you to start rollin' coal.

      --

      ---
      DRM is like antifreeze, to the MPAA/RIAA it's sweet, to the consumers it's poison.
    17. Re:Good by l0n3s0m3phr34k · · Score: 1

      Technically it never reached the point of being able to be ratified. First, there must be the "advice and consent" of the Senate, and THEN ratified by the POTUS. However, there is a long tradition in the US called "Sole Executive" agreements. Congress has tried several times to "revoke" this tradition and failed, so this is one of those measures that is "not specifically denied" so technically allowed. In regards to the Paris Agreement, there is (was?) a high chance of any monetary costs incurred by US entities would have been challenged and blocked; reasons for this stem from the Vienna Convention on the Law of Treaties.

      The Paris Agreement was, however, crafted specifically with this in mind. They purposly did NOT call it a "treaty", and this is exact reason why most of the terms are nonbinding, and why it calls for countries to set targets without setting sanctions for noncompliance. It's purposely vague because of US law.

      References: International Agreements and U.S. Law
      The Constitution - Executive agreements
      The Paris Accord and the Reality of Presidential Power

    18. Re:Good by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The eu is politically masturbating hard maybe. But that is it. Is amiga a gender?

    19. Re:Good by SlaveToTheGrind · · Score: 2

      China is pushing really hard and exceeding its quite ambitious goals.

      I take it you haven't actually visited China lately, or you'd know firsthand what baloney that is. China may say all sorts of high-minded things in political contexts, but at the end of the day its economic growth comes first and the environmental implications of that growth come second.

    20. Re:Good by tsa · · Score: 1

      A move worthy of Trump.

      --

      -- Cheers!

    21. Re:Good by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Was never ratified by the US, no legal force. Even aside from the fact it's an empty agreement.

      Probably you should not have signed up to it then, you useless fucking cunts.

    22. Re:Good by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "bad publicity". Only if you are hippie that feels before realz.

    23. Re:Good by Thelasko · · Score: 1

      The US is near the top in countries that: a) Have the biggest impact on our environment (both climate-related & otherwise), and b) Have the resources to do something about it.

      True. But what gets ignored is the fact the US does do something about it. Historically, the US has been a leader in environmental regulation. Previous efforts at international agreements (Kyoto) failed because they didn't recognize that.

      I agree the US can do more, but be careful not to paint a picture that it is doing nothing.

      --
      One of our competitors trademarked the term "hypothesis". From now on, we will call them "boneheaded ideas".
    24. Re:Good by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Financial resources does not necessarily mean "give them money for free". It could, but it can also mean loans at outrageous interest rates. The reality would end up being somewhere in between on a case by case basis. It could also be implemented in the form of private enterprises (banks) setting up offices to provide resources in those countries. It might include some subsidies, it might not.

      Like the rest of the agreement, the terms are so vague that to argue that the US is somehow getting a bad deal out of it is disingenuous at best and childish at worst.

    25. Re:Good by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The Paris Agreement has some vague references to "contributions" but doesn't seem to set any requirements. The "Green Climate Fund" which Trump quoted in his speech is a completely different program formed 5 years before the Paris Agreement, Obama committed to $3 Billion but only transferred $1B to the fund before leaving office. Trump is under no obligation to give it any more money and is not expected to give any.

    26. Re:Good by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And the dollar amounts for Article 9, Paragraph 1 were spelled out where? Oh, that's right there aren't any set monetary requirements. Literally Trump could have had the White House cleaning staff clean out the couches and given the resulting pocket change to a few of the listed countries and claimed that he had honored the US obligations for that section.

    27. Re:Good by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So if I'm a CEO of a business that makes clothing, and my predecessor signs a pledge saying that said business won't club baby seals to death and use their skins for clothing. Then I organize a press conference, and loudly proclaim that I'm nullifying that pledge and we'll kill/skin baby seals if we want, you don't think that is going to have a negative effect on the business even if our business doesn't, hasn't and has no plans to make baby seal clothing?

  4. This is a man by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    who stands by his convictions.

    1. Re: This is a man by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Stands by his convictions? His conviction is that climate change is not real, as evidenced by putting climate change deniers to head the EPA and NASA. Under the Trump administration there is a systematic effort to purge all data about climate change from the public record.

      Given that, negotiating to participate in any climate treaty would be a betrayal of his principles.

      It's an idiotic principle based on a denial of evidence. This posturing is either an inconsistency of his thinking, or a cynical attempt to seem less crazy while quietly trying to undermine science. But to say it's based on some noble principle is just wrong.

    2. Re:This is a man by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      who stands by his convictions as long as it makes money for him and his family

      There fixed it for you.

  5. Coal by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    So, no more coal jobs?

    1. Re:Coal by cdreimer · · Score: 2

      The Chinese are promising to create gold mining jobs for 92 million Americans, if they can pass a drug test and play World of Warcraft 24/7.

    2. Re:Coal by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Drug testing? This is a very good idea! Maybe we should drug test this happy bunch. Some other poster said they were your siblings:
      https://www.youtube.com/watch?...

      Are you on drugs Christopher? We always had that explanation but we might have to reconsider:
      https://school.discoveryeducat...

  6. Misleading headline by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    I'd just like to point out that the WSJ is the only outlet reporting it this way. What officials actually said is that "the white houses position on paris has not changed" and that we would be pulling out baring any major renegotiation.. this is purposeful reframing

    1. Re:Misleading headline by ColdWetDog · · Score: 0

      Rule 34! Rule 34!

      --
      Faster! Faster! Faster would be better!
    2. Re:Misleading headline by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Would that involve the White House servicing the Eiffel Tower?

    3. Re:Misleading headline by fahrbot-bot · · Score: 1

      Rule 34! Rule 34!

      Okay, Ted Cruz is now on board.

      --
      It must have been something you assimilated. . . .
  7. Virtue Signaling by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The Paris Climate Accords were nothing more than virtue signaling on a global scale. They had no teeth at all and didn't bind us to anything.

    If the Trump administration decides not to pull out, it's because they realize staying in or pulling out would have no tangible effect on US administration policy.

  8. There's Nothing to Re-Negotiate by Ironlenny · · Score: 5, Informative

    The Paris Accord is completely voluntary with each nations limits, set by that nation. If we don't link the limits we set for ourselves, then we just don't have to follow them.

    --
    There is a system for subverting the system and you should use that system!
    1. Re:There's Nothing to Re-Negotiate by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Sssh, don't get in the way of Trump's "negotiating" a nothing-burger victory that lets him declare a Triumph after marching his legions around chasing unicorns and fairies for a bit, then coming back and saying that he's found a rock that repels tigers.

      After all, you don't see a tiger around here after all.

    2. Re:There's Nothing to Re-Negotiate by rholtzjr · · Score: 2, Informative

      The WSJ story has already been debunked. Stop the madness already.

    3. Re:There's Nothing to Re-Negotiate by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      A lot of people went to a lot of trouble to setup ngo/companys in 3rd world shitholes on the promise they were getting cash out of the usa under the paris climate deal.

      You don't want all that effort to steal being wasted do you?

  9. It's a trick. Get an axe. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Insightful

    You don't negotiate with Trump, unless he's outright giving ground just to spite his own side. Not because he's a 'genius negotiator' - but because his future decisions have almost no relationship with his previous promises.

    Sure, you might make an agreement with him and get lucky, but it's all a roll of the dice - and there's no benefit to playing. The only reliable result would be uncertainty injected between you and the other folks involved in any agreement you're letting Trump into.

    If he wants to make outright concessions on his own, cool - but no negotiating down any terms or disrupting any of what you're doing in the name of cooperating with him.

  10. How did this article get in by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I thought this article was nixed in the meta moderation. Or are the editors ignoring the meta moderation?

    1. Re:How did this article get in by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Insightful

      What's the matter, little Trumpist snowflake, butthurt that freedom of speach applies to everyone and not just to little alt-right alternate-facts-loving shitfucks like you ?

    2. Re:How did this article get in by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So it was nixed and you posted it anyway. Thanks editor. You even had the audacity to mod you own vitriol up.

  11. Negotiation won't stop hurricanes by Alain+Williams · · Score: 3, Insightful

    The only way to do that is to cut emissions ... and even then there is a large time lag ... it will take years to reverse what we have done.

    1. Re:Negotiation won't stop hurricanes by mark-t · · Score: 1

      Decades, but who's counting?

    2. Re: Negotiation won't stop hurricanes by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      The funny thing is that the US has already drastically cut emissions simply by retiring coal powered electric generation by repowereing to natural gas. Is it to zero? No. But economics have already driven the proper response without disrupting quality of life.

    3. Re:Negotiation won't stop hurricanes by Kohath · · Score: 2, Insightful

      US Hurricanes stoped on their own from 2006 until 2017, with the lone exception of Sandy which was just barely a Category 1. Does climate change cause hurricanes? Where was it the last 10 years then?

      Does climate change only cause bad weather and never good weather? How does it know which is which? Were there more hurricanes before climate change or fewer?

      Please tell us how many hurricanes will happen at each level of emissions. Because you are stating a specific cause and effect linkage between emissions and hurricanes. Please quantify it and explain the cause and effect relationship.

    4. Re: Negotiation won't stop hurricanes by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Interesting

      That is only a fortuitous coincidence that natural gas prices undercut coal. If coal became cheaper, economics, if unaccountable for externalities, would drive things in the wrong way. Markets didn't pick natural gas because it is a better solution for reducing emissions, but simply because it was cheaper.

      You sound like a pilot saying, "See, I don't have to steer because the wind changed directions and is now pushing us in the right direction."

    5. Re:Negotiation won't stop hurricanes by Gravis+Zero · · Score: 2, Informative

      Hurricanes aren't new and they'll always be around. However, climate change is making them stronger and more destructive. Don't pretend like it's something it's not because it's just as bad as pretending climate change is a hoax.

      --
      Anons need not reply. Questions end with a question mark.
    6. Re:Negotiation won't stop hurricanes by Kohath · · Score: 2, Insightful

      How much more destructive? What was the trend in storm intensity before and after climate change? How does the cause and effect relationship work exactly?

      What specific, quantifiable cause and effect relationship are we acknowledging? And what clear evidence of this specific effect should we be sure not to ignore?

    7. Re:Negotiation won't stop hurricanes by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Insightful

      What? "Stopped on their own"? Hurricanes don't stop because major ones didn't happen to hit the US. There are other parts of the world, you know. Example: hurricane Igor in 2010 did enough damage in Newfoundland, by that point "only" a tropical storm, that the name was retired. As you can see by checking almost any source, even boring old wikipedia, there were plenty of other hurricanes that year, in the middle of the period you mention, but most did not strike the US and most that did were comparatively weak. As seems to be a common theme with people who are overly skeptical of climate change, the year before the period you cite, 2005, was a very busy, record-breaking hurricane season in a number of ways. They ran out of the 26 alphabetical names and had to start naming storms "alpha", "beta", and so on. The 2005 season didn't end until the year rolled over into 2006, so of course subsequent years tend to look like a relative "lull" in hurricane activity by comparison, something highlighted by skeptics by conveniently ignoring the crazy high year.

      Here's a list for the 2000s. When did they "stop"? Same question for the 2010s. Here's a nice chart. The lowest number in the period you cite appears to be 2013, which had only 2 hurricanes in the Atlantic, not zero. So far this year we've had 6 and counting, which would be about average if there weren't any more, but they get more attention than usual because 2 of them that were notably strong hit the US.

      Most of what I've seen written about hurricanes and climate change suggests there might not be any more hurricanes in number than usual, but that they might become more intense and have more rainfall when they do form, so numbers might not be the best way to judge changes.

      As for cause and effect to account for that, hurricanes feed off warm water in the tropics. Do the math.

    8. Re:Negotiation won't stop hurricanes by Kohath · · Score: 1

      Most of what I've seen written about hurricanes and climate change suggests there might not be any more hurricanes in number than usual, but that they might become more intense and have more rainfall when they do form, so numbers might not be the best way to judge changes.

      Lots of things might or might not be happening. Climate change might be causing fewer, weaker hurricanes. Or stronger ones. Or more. Or it might not be doing anything to hurricanes. Or it might be doing something that's not significant.

      Numbers are the only scientific way to judge changes.

    9. Re:Negotiation won't stop hurricanes by Gravis+Zero · · Score: 2

      How much more destructive? What was the trend in storm intensity before and after climate change? How does the cause and effect relationship work exactly?

      What specific, quantifiable cause and effect relationship are we acknowledging? And what clear evidence of this specific effect should we be sure not to ignore?

      They actually study this stuff: https://www.gfdl.noaa.gov/glob...

      --
      Anons need not reply. Questions end with a question mark.
    10. Re:Negotiation won't stop hurricanes by Kohath · · Score: 3, Informative

      You should read it. The thing you said:

      Climate change is making [hurricanes] stronger

      Is contradicted by their first sentence in their first summary conclusion:

      It is premature to conclude that human activities–and particularly greenhouse gas emissions that cause global warming–have already had a detectable impact on Atlantic hurricane or global tropical cyclone activity.

    11. Re:Negotiation won't stop hurricanes by tsa · · Score: 1

      I saw a talk about the climate once at a scientific convention, and the guy said that even if we pull all the plugs and do everything we can the planet will get warmer first before it cools down. It will be 50 years from now that the average temperature is what it was before global warming started.

      --

      -- Cheers!

    12. Re:Negotiation won't stop hurricanes by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes. It's like turning a large ship. It doesn't happen promptly even when the change is implemented.

      Therefore, full steam ahead? No, that would be silly. You start making the turn well in advance of the collision once you become aware of the possibility.

    13. Re:Negotiation won't stop hurricanes by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You're right - a few years ago we had a series of storms in the little village I lived in (Southern UK). A couple of sections of our fence blew down (it seems that our predecessors didn't know how to concrete fence posts properly, and the wind got the better of them). All those storms were the 'run off' of hurricanes in the Atlantic - a sort of 'weather export' from the Americas.

      We haven't had any of that sort of thing since - therefore, climate change has stopped changing because the weather's more to my liking, in the place I happen to live. Either that, or trans-atlantic trade in bad weather has ceased, possibly due to the NAFTA controversy.

    14. Re:Negotiation won't stop hurricanes by rhazz · · Score: 2
      You are a complete ass. Did you stop reading after that first bullet? Let's provide the whole quote mmk? There are four bullets, and you quoted only the first.

      It is premature to conclude that human activities–and particularly greenhouse gas emissions that cause global warming–have already had a detectable impact on Atlantic hurricane or global tropical cyclone activity. That said, human activities may have already caused changes that are not yet detectable due to the small magnitude of the changes or observational limitations, or are not yet confidently modeled (e.g., aerosol effects on regional climate).

      Anthropogenic warming by the end of the 21st century will likely cause tropical cyclones globally to be more intense on average (by 2 to 11% according to model projections for an IPCC A1B scenario). This change would imply an even larger percentage increase in the destructive potential per storm, assuming no reduction in storm size.

      There are better than even odds that anthropogenic warming over the next century will lead to an increase in the occurrence of very intense tropical cyclone in some basins–an increase that would be substantially larger in percentage terms than the 2-11% increase in the average storm intensity. This increase in intense storm occurrence is projected despite a likely decrease (or little change) in the global numbers of all tropical cyclones.

      Anthropogenic warming by the end of the 21st century will likely cause tropical cyclones to have substantially higher rainfall rates than present-day ones, with a model-projected increase of about 10-15% for rainfall rates averaged within about 100 km of the storm center.

    15. Re:Negotiation won't stop hurricanes by Kohath · · Score: 1

      I'll read it later maybe. The first sentence was enough to establish the original comment was an irresponsible exaggeration. You guys should stop exaggerating if you want Americans to take any action on Climate.

      Many people want the US out of the Paris agreement for spite alone, because they're tired of being bullied by jerks.

    16. Re:Negotiation won't stop hurricanes by Kohath · · Score: 1

      What if the weather is just the weather? What if linking any specific weather event to climate change is not factual?

    17. Re:Negotiation won't stop hurricanes by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'll read it later maybe. The first sentence was enough to establish the original comment was an irresponsible exaggeration. You guys should stop exaggerating if you want Americans to take any action on Climate.

      Many people want the US out of the Paris agreement for spite alone, because they're tired of being bullied by jerks.

      Just checking ... do you mean that the Americans are the bullying jerks (count those military bases, IMF, etc) or are the Americans being bullied?

    18. Re:Negotiation won't stop hurricanes by Gravis+Zero · · Score: 1

      Sorry, I missed your comment. However, climate change is making hurricanes stronger. The fact that we cannot detect it says more about how crude our instrumentation is more than anything else. The laws of physics are clear about what is happening, even if we cannot detect it. Claiming anything else is to deny the basic principles of science.

      --
      Anons need not reply. Questions end with a question mark.
    19. Re:Negotiation won't stop hurricanes by Gravis+Zero · · Score: 1

      The first sentence was enough to establish the original comment was an irresponsible exaggeration. You guys should stop exaggerating if you want Americans to take any action on Climate.

      How am I exaggerating? I said it's making them stronger and more destructive which is true. Right now it's marginal (to our instruments) but it's still 100% true.

      Many people want the US out of the Paris agreement for spite alone, because they're tired of being bullied by jerks.

      No, some people in the US want out of the Paris agreement because they are being told that they are being bullied by jerks. The reality of the matter is much different. That aside, the laws of physics is the biggest jerk of all because it does not care if you are good, evil, kind, nice, ambivalent or indifferent. The laws of physics bows to no man.

      --
      Anons need not reply. Questions end with a question mark.
    20. Re:Negotiation won't stop hurricanes by Kohath · · Score: 1

      How am I exaggerating? I said it's making them stronger and more destructive which is true. Right now it's marginal (to our instruments) but it's still 100% true.

      The experts you cited said your statement could not be responsibly made at this time. The differences in storm strength are not significant. Meaning they can’t be determined to be other than regular random variations.

      No, some people in the US want out of the Paris agreement because they are being told that they are being bullied by jerks.

      If a voter wants jerks to stop bullying him, how does it matter if you say you disagree with his understanding of his situation? You don’t seem to want to listen to him. So why should he listen to you? (And before you come up with an answer, remember he’s not listening to you because you’re distinctly not on his side. So lecturing will not be heard.)

    21. Re:Negotiation won't stop hurricanes by Kohath · · Score: 1

      So you’re saying you can’t imagine anything else happening, even though the thing you insist must be happening is undetectable. In other words, you are guessing based on an incomplete understanding of the overall system.

    22. Re:Negotiation won't stop hurricanes by Gravis+Zero · · Score: 1

      The experts you cited said your statement could not be responsibly made at this time. The differences in storm strength are not significant.

      And yet we know from science that despite being "not significant" it is stronger and thus more destructive.

      If a voter wants jerks to stop bullying him, how does it matter if you say you disagree with his understanding of his situation?

      How is this voter being bullied? Also, facts always matter. Your everyday survival depends on facts.

      You don’t seem to want to listen to him.

      What is it that I am not listening to? Concerns over job losses? The government created programs to help miners transition into other jobs... and now it's getting axed. Coal country is dying and waiving every coal related regulation will not stop that because natural gas is cheaper.

      So why should he listen to you? (And before you come up with an answer, remember he’s not listening to you because you’re distinctly not on his side. So lecturing will not be heard.)

      If you want to do yourself in, that's your business. However, when you threaten the future of humanity, it's everyone's business. You do not have to listen but you will have to endure as the world changes despite your objections.

      --
      Anons need not reply. Questions end with a question mark.
    23. Re:Negotiation won't stop hurricanes by Gravis+Zero · · Score: 1

      I can imagine a lot of things but I'll use humanity's best working theory until a better one comes along because that's science. Science has continually lacked a perfect understanding and has altered its position to more accurately describe the universe.

      Besides, if I'm wrong, the worst thing that will happen is I'll be embarrassed and change my view. However, if you're wrong, people will die unnecessarily and lives will be ruined.

      --
      Anons need not reply. Questions end with a question mark.
  12. "Paris Climate Accord" is the problem... by vux984 · · Score: 3, Funny

    "an official White House statement in response to the article insisted only that the U.S. would withdraw "unless we can re-enter on terms that are more favorable to our country."

    What exactly would be more favorable than: "a voluntary non-binding commitment, where you set your own terms that you can then ignore"?

    Clearly the problem is the name? If we renamed it the 'Trump Climate Accord' that would solve only real issue the current White House has.

    1. Re:"Paris Climate Accord" is the problem... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The ones were the US doesn't agree to pay billions on Chinese solar panels, where China and India pay nothing at all, and are exempt from most of the climate regulations.

      Also known as "lets send our money over to china, pollute there, stimulate their economy, to vaguely help another poor country X"

      It's a garbage treaty based around spreading socialism ideals with the belief the US has near infinite money to spend on other people.

    2. Re:"Paris Climate Accord" is the problem... by gtall · · Score: 1

      Yep, the only problem the alleged Administration has with the current Paris accords is that Trump didn't get to pee in the corners, Obama beat him to it.

    3. Re:"Paris Climate Accord" is the problem... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you're gonna go making countries responsible for all the wealth they stole from other countries, England, Spain, Portugal, and the Netherlands are fucked. I'm sure all of the South American, Central American, Caribbean, and North American countries want all that gold back... And tea... And sugar... And cotton...

    4. Re:"Paris Climate Accord" is the problem... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah, and we have to...

      Give Ireland back to the Irish
      Give Lapland back to the Laps
      Give China back to the Chinese
      And give Yoko back to the Japs

    5. Re: "Paris Climate Accord" is the problem... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No. I think of it as globalists redistributing my hard earned wealth into their own pockets.

      Exactly who and how did the US "steal" anything and exactly how would this globalist theft return such alleged stolen wealth to the alleged victims?

    6. Re:"Paris Climate Accord" is the problem... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Thats ok you can keep most of your shitty little states , We don;t want the back They still cost more money than they bring in.

    7. Re:"Paris Climate Accord" is the problem... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This doesn't just solve the Climate issue, it can also solve the Health-care one, the NAFTA one, and the upcoming Tax Reform: change nothing except re-name with Trump or Republican or 'Merica and pretend something was accomplished. Everybody's happy.

    8. Re:"Paris Climate Accord" is the problem... by coofercat · · Score: 1

      There'd have to be a clause that states:

      No country, or representative shall call us ninnies, nincompoops, or smelly-pants, either in public or in closed session. Further, no mention shall be made about the current President's hands, size, shape or general nature thereof. Indeed, any mention of the United States progress with respect to the accord shall be suffixed with a statement of "the greatest ever, I'm sure of it, period!".

    9. Re:"Paris Climate Accord" is the problem... by DarthVain · · Score: 1

      "a voluntary non-binding commitment, where you set your own terms that you can then ignore" I think that pretty much describes all agreements, in particular the environmental kind.

      As individual countries, everything is "voluntary". What kind of "binding commitment" is ever made that can't be broken with little or no repercussions for an individual country. Countries regularly set their own terms and then ignore them for everything. Looking back a previous examples, I don't think any of them are ever met.

      Anyway not to belittle the symbolic nature of the idea, and to get countries talking about it. I'm just always astounded by the assertion that a country isn't going to do whatever it wants. This is literally what politics is. I mean if a country didn't meet targets, then what? Economic sanctions? On the US for example LOL? Again it is all politics, and to a certain point just theatrics with these sorts of things. Trump just wants to come out tough for his base, then "re-negotiate" to make himself look good, all with little or no repercussion. As mentioned, whatever it is will probably be ignored, and the time frame to which it will take place will be outside his term of office anyway...

  13. Both old news AND wrong. Impressive. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The President said he intended to negotiate a better deal for the US back when he first announced that the US would not sign the Paris Accord. That was back in May/Jun.

    As for the article, it's a speculation piece that the Trump Administration WILL sign the Paris Accord - which the White House and its representatives have already said is not true.

  14. Worlds biggest polluter per capita by thegarbz · · Score: 0

    ... wants a deal more favourable to the country.
    Small EU economy pulling out the EU wants concessions and to keep all the benefits of being part of the EU.

    And where is my damn pony!

  15. Re:RUSSIANS stole the election from HILLARY CLITON by dougTheRug · · Score: 1

    Hillary Cliton was never even a candidate,

  16. It was a garbage treaty by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Interesting

    The treaty where the US agrees to pay billions on Chinese solar panels? Where China and India pay nothing at all, and are exempt from most of the climate regulations.

    Also known as "lets send our money over to China, pollute there, stimulate their economy, to vaguely help another poor country X"

    It's a garbage treaty based around spreading socialism ideals with the belief the US has near infinite money to spend on other people.

    1. Re:It was a garbage treaty by JonnyCalcutta · · Score: 1

      Hey, some other coward said the exact same thing above. You guys should get together for a bit of smoochy smoochy

  17. Re:RUSSIANS stole the election from HILLARY CLITON by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Hillary and Russia have nothing to do with one another.

  18. Re:Both old news AND wrong. Impressive. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    As for the article, it's a speculation piece that the Trump Administration WILL sign the Paris Accord - which the White House and its representatives have already said is not true.

    Did the White House call it 'fake news'? I ask, because in the past most things they called fake news were actually true.

  19. Hell no! by Plumpaquatsch · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The treaty has already been watered down just to get the US on board - and now Trump wants a better deal? Fuck you! Time for an embargo on US goods.

    --
    Of course news about a fake are Fake News.
  20. Re:It's a trick. Get an axe. by HornWumpus · · Score: 0

    Just like this previous promise by Obama has no legal force. Politicians put on shows, news at 11!

    --
    John McAfee 'It was like that time I hired that Bangkok prostitute; to do my taxes, while I fucked my accountant'
  21. Re: RUSSIANS stole the election from HILLARY CLITO by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    They have nothing in common. Nothing. Avert your eyes or you will see why there is nothing to see.

  22. White House denies Paris climate rumor by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    https://seekingalpha.com/news/3295907-white-house-denies-paris-climate-rumor

  23. That has been debunked by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Look again, the administration has flat-out denied it. It would be great if people would do a little more research before posting.

  24. What a raw deal.... by modmans2ndcoming · · Score: 1

    I mean...come on....An agreement that does not require us to actually do anything? horrible. We should have gotten out. /s

  25. Renegotiate by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I will renegotiate in terms favorable to Trump inc. with a few ra ra's thrown in to please the White nationalist Nazis.

  26. Re:Hell no! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Bring it on!
    Can we embargo his Tweets? That will be worth billions to the world economy outside the USA. They do more harm than good.

  27. Renegotiating the climate change accord by fustakrakich · · Score: 1
    --
    “He’s not deformed, he’s just drunk!”
  28. Re: Jesus Fucking Christ, You Entitled Brat! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Despite all this constant negative comments, covfefe.

    TheRealDonaldTrump

  29. Re:RUSSIANS stole the election from HILLARY CLITON by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    They have a hell of a lot to do with each other, which is precisely why Putin put his finger on the scale in Trump's favor.

    The US State Department under Clinton was basically doing the same thing in Ukraine that the Russian troll farms did to us.

  30. Keep shooting that foot.... by XSportSeeker · · Score: 4, Insightful

    There was absolutely no reason to withdraw from it, and some republicans are only now starting to realize this.

    Paris Climate Agreement needs no renegotiation because it's non-binding, it's been criticized for asking too little too late, it was a political and diplomatic move without any negative consequences - other than being a symbolic gesture that doesn't really change much.

    http://www.latimes.com/opinion...
    https://www.newscientist.com/a...
    http://www.npr.org/sections/13...

    Even worse, a smart politician could use it in their favor right now. Even if the objective isn't met, it's far into the future, so he/she could just say that his/her political party did everything they could during their term to get there, but other administrations endded up not following it properly. It's the perfect excuse for a political party to return to power when things gets more dire in the future.

    What happened there was the usual Trump blindness when trying to undo everything Obama did that got some attention under his administration on the premisse that everything he did was bad in some way, stupid campaign promisses filled with misinformation and vilification, plus Trump being an idiot that only listens to cospiracy theory alt-right channels.

    Worst of all: if Trump just kept quiet and didn't step back from the agreement, the US would probably hit it's target anyways. Governments are not leading the way on this - the global economy is.
    The economy is moving independent of governmental interference towards renewables, generating less garbage, developing electric cars, closing down fossil fuel power plants, and a bunch of other stuff. We're moving away from fossil fuels because it became economically feasible and attractive to do so, from an international standpoint.

    Stepping down from the accord just painted the US as a country to be sidestepped for doing all sorts of businesses that will be moving tech towards cleaner goals - which is why so many US corporations were quick to announce they'd keep following the accord regardless of what the government is talking. It's not because those corporations are "good" or environmentaly friendly or some bullshit. It's because the global economy right now is aligned with those goals.

    Notice how many news we hear these days about China's progressive moves towards clean energy. That's because China is trying to get the worldwide leadership on that particular topic. Trump just made it this much easier for another country to assume the position of global leader in a topic that lots of people are paying close attention to.

    But now the damage has already been done. With or without renegotiation, it doesn't matter. Republicans can either be outright denied a renegotiation, which will continue looking bad for US in general, or they can get the agreement renegotiated which will keep them on a list of countries that are still in denial of a problem that needs firm stances, not because it's some charity or plead for help from another country, but because of their own interests.

    1. Re:Keep shooting that foot.... by cbeaudry · · Score: 0

      Its all nice to be naive and have an ideology, but when you swallow lies wholesale, you need to seek help, because you have a problems.

      The reason to pull out, was to send a message to the world, that the accord is bullshit, non binding, based on lies and a redistribution scheme so the world bank could skim money off of hundreds of billions of dollars of green projects.

      You are delusional if you think anyone will "sidestep" the USA, the single biggest consumer market on the planet. I have a unicorn to sell you.

      China has always been on track to have green energy. NUCLEAR, lots and lots and lots of NUCLEAR. They signed the agreement, because they want to sell chinese solar panels and they agreed to do NOTHING for 30 years, until their nuclear power plants come online.

      You live in your green echo chamber. The rest of us live in the real world.

    2. Re:Keep shooting that foot.... by JustNiz · · Score: 3, Interesting

      >> Paris Climate Agreement needs no renegotiation because it's non-binding,... too little too late, it was a political and diplomatic move without any negative consequences...

      Seems like exactly a good reason to renegotiate it. It needs to be both effective and binding.

    3. Re:Keep shooting that foot.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "The economy is moving independent of governmental interference towards renewables, generating less garbage, developing electric cars, closing down fossil fuel power plants, and a bunch of other stuff."

      Uh... people get a new phone every other year. We have even moved backwards from when you had to pay a deposit on bottles where they were returned, washed and reused. Today redemption value is a joke and they break it up and melt it down using vastly more energy. The only electric vehicles that aren't hideous are so expensive that they are out of the price range of the masses. Every "renewable" energy solution either polluted heavily creating the hardware used to generate the energy or is a disaster to wildlife.

      Things really aren't that much better bro, but hey... don't listen to me. I can see you took the NPR pill.

    4. Re:Keep shooting that foot.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The really funny thing is the US is giving up a colossal economic sector because of wrong-headed ideological reasons. *Even if* you think climate change is bull, there's still a huge market in green technologies. The right-wing cry of "it's all a money-making scheme" is a bit odd really when you consider that usually right wingers are only too happy to take part in money making schemes. As you say, China is selling vast amounts of solar panels; Denmark and Germany are selling vast amounts of turbines. The USA.... The USA is still scrabbling about in coal reserves, generating no economic value beyond the commodity price of what they dig out of the ground. But it didn't have to be China, or Germany, or Denmark. With a bit more foresightedness the USA could have cornered the world market in solar and wind power.
      The OP's point about sidestepping the US isn't so much about not selling to the US, but about buying from the US - if you're not interested in selling green technology, fine - the world will buy it from elsewhere. The US's disinterest in the sector is literally driving countries into the arms of your great rival China. And the products we do sell to the US (and the stuff you make for export)? They'll still be made in compliance with all those environmental regulations the EU and other regions insist on, simply because countries want to be able to sell the same product to a global market rather than making different versions for every regulatory region on the planet. Even US-made products will still comply, for the same reason but in reverse (US companies might not need to comply for the domestic market but they still want to produce one version of the product they can export globally).

    5. Re:Keep shooting that foot.... by DNS-and-BIND · · Score: 1

      Why would we want to be global leader any more? The world made it quite clear that they hate our guts. They did not ask, they demanded that we stop oppressing them. Why can't China have its time in the sun? America needs to attend to America right now, we're hurting bad and we don't have time for this world leader shit any more. We suck at it too, all we did was start war after war. I look forward to a time when the world likes us again.

      --
      Shutting down free speech with violence isn't fighting fascism. It IS fascism!
    6. Re:Keep shooting that foot.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Erm, it really isn't the case that EVs are either hideous or expensive. My Renault Zoe is a great looking car and it's perfectly affordable.

    7. Re:Keep shooting that foot.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Trump would never agree to that, so the exercise would be pointless.

    8. Re:Keep shooting that foot.... by DarthVain · · Score: 1

      A how do you make something "binding". At this scale that's pretty hard to do. Anyone going to tank their own economy by applying economic sanctions on the US or China? Military?

      I mean about the only thing is trying to not look like an asshole on the international stage. I'm not sure Trump cares all so much about that either.

    9. Re:Keep shooting that foot.... by JonnyCalcutta · · Score: 1

      Hey, we do like you guys. You just have to learn to keep the volume down and stop kicking your balls over the fence.

    10. Re:Keep shooting that foot.... by JustNiz · · Score: 1

      Financial penalties then trade sanctions against any country that doesn't honour their commitments..

      >> Anyone going to tank their own economy by applying economic sanctions on the US or China?

      I agree there would be some economic impact for countries imposing trade sanctions against the US, but probably not as much as most Americans would like to think. America does consume a lot but there are plenty of alternative sources for most things that America exports. Compare that loss to the financial and human cost of a destroyed environment/ecosystem and it's peanuts.

    11. Re:Keep shooting that foot.... by JustNiz · · Score: 1

      Sure he would, it just depends on how favourable he perceives the deal for the US is.

    12. Re:Keep shooting that foot.... by DNS-and-BIND · · Score: 1

      Like America? Have you even seen the approval ratings? Holy shit. ISIS is more popular worldwide. Americans are the least educated and knowledgeable of foreign affairs, languages, and disparate cultures, societies, and social norms amongst all Westernized countries and the least exposed universally.

      --
      Shutting down free speech with violence isn't fighting fascism. It IS fascism!
  31. Easy renegotiation by Actually,+I+do+RTFA · · Score: 1

    Just change the name to "Trump Climate Plan from the Fabulous Trump Hotel in Paris". Done.

    --
    Your ad here. Ask me how!
  32. Re:RUSSIANS stole the election from HILLARY CLITON by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    as it turned out billary was the lesser of 2 evils. Still unelectable. Bernie is old. Bush family are liars. Shame there was not a fucking worthy candidate in the whole fucking big US of A lol...
    You should have opted for a provisional government consisting of NASA and US army officials.
    You brought this Trump madness on yourself...

  33. Good luck by nedlohs · · Score: 1

    It'll be a challenge to negotiate a better deal than: "do whatever you want, make up your own goals with no penalties if you miss them anyway".

  34. Re:Hell no! by rholtzjr · · Score: 2

    Well, considering we have been in a trade deficit for the past 10 years to about the tune of $43B a month (hint: that usually tells most that you already ARE restricting US goods from entering your market)....... Okay, I raise your embargo with a 100% tariff on all foreign produced products. And I call.

  35. Re:It's a trick. Get an axe. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Trump has been putting on "shows", lying, cheating, breaking his promises, screwing up his business partners and groping little girls for the past fourthy or so years. He's only been president for the past six months.

    What was his excuse for the other thirty-nine and a half years ?

  36. Re:It's a trick. Get an axe. by WheezyJoe · · Score: 2, Insightful

    You don't negotiate with Trump, unless he's outright giving ground just to spite his own side. Not because he's a 'genius negotiator' - but because his future decisions have almost no relationship with his previous promises.

    This, except Trump doesn't have a "side" to spite, except his own. The only thing he cares about, tweets about, speeches about, or discusses with people is how popular he perceives himself. Now that the ride on the Right and the GOP is losing steam, Ryan and that little turtle-head McConnell refusing his calls (Mitch? Mitch? Are you there, Mitch? It's ME! President Trump! The President, you little turd! Goddammit, I can hear you breathing into the phone, you no-neck amphibian!), so maybe it's time to give the Left a try. I mean, shee-itt! He threw the white supremacists a bone for Charlottesville, and what did it get him? Nothing but headaches, damn ingrates, and Bannon being a total two-faced asshole. Even Fox News turning sour, you'd think they'd see the fair-and-balance of it. How can you get a good round of golf in with all that going on?
    So, why not go 180 on the Paris Accords? Why not go 180 on the debt ceiling? Why not go 180 on the illegal.. uh.. Dream Kids? Shit, if it goes well, and the mean old liberal fake-news start throwing rose petals at him and call him a hero, maybe he'll "re-negotiate" some other stuff, too.

    Take a lesson, liberals. With Trump, everything's for sale, for the right price. A front-page Sunday New York Times "Best President Ever", and it'll be "Wall? What Wall? I'd never build a Wall with Mexico, that would fuck up NAFTA!"

    --
    Take it easy, Charlie, I've got an Angle...
  37. This is why Americans lose to Russians and Chinese by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    > "unless we can re-enter on terms that are more favorable to our country"

    We are now at a crucial fork in humanity's path to the future. The wrong choice could lead us to early demise as species -- taking a lot of other beings with us in a major worldwide extinction.

    Thinking about "the country" will destroy American States, American Cities and kill American citizens. That reveals a very narrow, almost animal-like limited thinking.

    Even Russians and Chinese know this is a fight for all mankind, whatever petty causes they might have. The USA needs to think, plan and act in a very sophisticated way. They should be readying "cleaning systems" and working with those two countries and Europe to ensure that the targets would easily surpass those established in Paris.

    It seems we now need another world leader, as the USA seem to be flooring the gas pedal in reverse gear.

  38. Here's the thing by rsilvergun · · Score: 3, Interesting

    the folks who voted Trump don't care. They're not seeing any of that Soy, wheat & corn money. It mostly goes to big agrabusiness. They really don't give a flying rat's ass if the whole country goes to pot because right now they're pretty much at rock bottom.

    Calling these folks racists while ignoring their very real economic problems is what got us Trump. Steve Bannon might be an asshole but he said something brilliant. He said if the left keeps up these pointless identity politics while the Right runs on economic populism then the Right is going to rule America for the next 1000 years. He's right.

    Now, the Right isn't actually going to _do_ anything populist. They're all bought and paid by the ruling elite. But if you're giving me the choice between Hilary's "neo-liberalism" (e.g. all the same economic policies as the Right wing but Gays & Abortions are OK) and Trump at least _saying_ he's going to do something material to help the working class folks are going to pick Trump every time. And why shouldn't they? Especially when Trump at least gives lip service against violence?

    If you don't like the road this country's traveling down you need to get with Bernie & Co. That means Single Payer Healthcare, ending the 7 pointless wars we're fighting, free college for everybody, $15 minimum wage, etc, etc. It means taking care of the working class even if it pisses you off to think somebody has a nice life and didn't have to work that hard to get it. Otherwise those Angry White Men are going to stay angry and they're going to go find themselves a Stalin style strong man who _isn't_ a 70 year old charlatan and when they do expect lots of nasty violence. It's not a nice thing to think about, but it's reality. It's what happens everytime we abandon a signinficant portion of the ruling class to abject poverty.

    --
    Hi! I make Firefox Plug-ins. Check 'em out @ https://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/addon/youtube-mp3-podcaster/
    1. Re:Here's the thing by DRJlaw · · Score: 1

      They're all bought and paid by the ruling elite. But if you're giving me the choice between Hilary's "neo-liberalism" (e.g. all the same economic policies as the Right wing but Gays & Abortions are OK) and Trump at least _saying_ he's going to do something material to help the working class folks are going to pick Trump every time. And why shouldn't they? Especially when Trump at least gives lip service against violence?

      Yes, because between the people telling you that you must adapt even if it is painful and the people outright laying to you and telling you that you need not change a thing, continually voting for the latter is going to... make you far worse off and demonstrate to the world that you are a rube.

      Fool you once, shame on Trump. Fool you twice, shame on you.

    2. Re: Here's the thing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And by saying "you must adapt" what you really mean is that they must surrender to the genocide. Ain't going to happen. The war to destroy traditional cultures is going to turn very violent and bloody when the rural conservatives run out of options and the liberal effete shortly there after run out of food and water.

    3. Re:Here's the thing by bjdevil66 · · Score: 2

      This was the most brilliant post I've read in a long time... right up until "Bernie & Co."

      If the Dems kicked their liberal social policies about forcing fringe groups and minorities to the forefront of policy out, and started REALLY helping the middle class with balanced versions of what Bernie Sanders is talking about and enforcing existing regulations (what the hell happened to the Sherman Anti-Trust Act??), they'd win every election for the next 1000 years.

    4. Re:Here's the thing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes, because between the people telling you that you must adapt even if it is painful and the people outright laying to you and telling you that you need not change a thing, continually voting for the latter is going to... make you far worse off and demonstrate to the world that you are a rube.

      Why is it okay to tell one group "adapt or die" while giving handouts to another group, patting them on the head and telling them they don't need to change a thing, it's that first group's fault?

    5. Re:Here's the thing by DNS-and-BIND · · Score: 3, Informative

      Yes, but it's so emotionally satisfying to look down at poor people and insult them for being racist. It makes us look good by contrast: us tolerant people on one side, and the deplorable morons on the other. It turns out that punching down on powerless people feels awesome. No wonder it was banned.

      --
      Shutting down free speech with violence isn't fighting fascism. It IS fascism!
    6. Re:Here's the thing by thegarbz · · Score: 1

      It means taking care of the working class even if it pisses you off to think somebody has a nice life and didn't have to work that hard to get it.

      You don't need to give people a nice life. It's enough to give them opportunities, a crappy roof over their heads, and not let them die or become disabled due to basic treatable medical conditions. This argument always gets me. Free healthcare, free college, and some basic social security does not create a "nice life", it creates a bare minimum maintainable life.

    7. Re: Here's the thing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Of course, the "liberal effete" spent the 20th century learning to grow 95% of the food with 2% of the labor. We'll see who starves. My guess is that it'll be the residents of the same Republican-voting states who currently leech off of the rest of us.

    8. Re:Here's the thing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      $15 minimum wage, etc, etc. It means taking care of the working class even if it pisses you off to think somebody has a nice life and didn't have to work that hard to get it.

      The irony being that it is often those that would benefit most from those reforms are the ones most opposed to them.

    9. Re:Here's the thing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "...you need to get with Bernie & Co."

      Oh please. You think a bracing dose of socialist politics are going to appease the Angry White Men? Really?

      If so I have a lovely bridge in Brooklyn to sell you.

      The Angry White Men are angry because they aren't automatically In Charge any more. It's a lot more than just economic opportunity that's at the heart of the Alt-Right. Just off the top of my head, the Angry White Men dislike:

      1). Women's Libbers;
      2). Brown people;
      3). Non-Christians;
      4). Anything Lefty, which in America includes traditional Republican dogma;
      5). Gun control;
      6). Essentially all Public Health initiatives;
      7). Baggy pants and rap music;
      8). ...well, you get the idea.

      If it's something that would get a senior citizen riled up, it's a hobby horse for the Angry White Men. For the record that would include literally every policy position that Bernie & Co. espouses.

    10. Re:Here's the thing by MercTech · · Score: 1

      One point I'd disagree on. The Democratic Party is run by the old money elite class. Those old families that feel they have an obligation to force people to behave the way they think they should. The Republican Party is run by new money rich that think that since they got theirs people are only lazy if they don't succeed the way they did. (even if they are several generations away from the self made man like the Bush family)

      As long as there are career politicians; there will be corruption.

      --
      NRRPT/RCT
  39. Re:Hell no! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "Okay, I raise your embargo with a 100% tariff on all foreign produced products. And I call."

    All of a sudden it is no longer profitable for Canada to export it's natural resources to the US and the majority of it's exports now go across the oceans instead. The US will now have much fewer resources to build their products with and the reduced availability will allow domestic natural resource sources to raise their prices as demand rises with the shortage.

    Hm. Feels like you'd be a good fit with the Trump administration's policy setting team. You should apply.

  40. Re:Hell no! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Not buying isn't the same as restricting. Most Western nations have pretty low tarriffs on goods from the USA.

  41. The UN and EU Already Shut Door On Re-Negotiation by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    After the 1 June announcement and again in August, the UN (General Sec., FCCC and IPCC) and EU officials said re-negotiation was impossible, take it or leave it.

    But it is not about the Paris Accord!

    It IS about The UN Green Climate Fund fraud.

  42. Re:Hell no! by Plumpaquatsch · · Score: 1

    Well, considering we have been in a trade deficit for the past 10 years to about the tune of $43B a month (hint: that usually tells most that you already ARE restricting US goods from entering your market)....... Okay, I raise your embargo with a 100% tariff on all foreign produced products. And I call.

    Good luck with that.

    --
    Of course news about a fake are Fake News.
  43. Re:Hell no! by rholtzjr · · Score: 1

    Yea, you also with your embargo.

  44. Business as noral then for the USA by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    as the right conditions are treaties they have no intention of honoring!

  45. Re: What is US trying to renegotiate? by presidenteloco · · Score: 3, Funny

    I have no idea, but the US shouldn't be let back in without paying a special "stupid" tax - for all the toxic disinformation they spew on this topic.

    --

    Where are we going and why are we in a handbasket?
  46. I think you're underestimating by rsilvergun · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Just how bad off these guys are. They barely have jobs, and only if you count crap like Uber or part time at Walmart a job. You can forget about a wife and family since no women wants a man without a steady job. They've got just enough food to survive and prevent them from turning into roving bands of bandits.

    These are the people our economy abandoned when manufacturing moved overseas and light blue collar work started going to illegals. Trump is the first politician to acknowledge their suffering. Hilary & co figured the 'Blue Firewall' would keep them voting 'D' and didn't even bother campaigning at them. She was horribly wrong.

    Yeah, I know Trump's awful. So do they. But Trump _might_ do something positive for them. And for us too. He _might_ kick out the illegals and end the H1-B program and get better trade deals that favor American workers. Now, I'm rational enough to know he won't actually do any of that. But I also have something to lose. I'm not sure how I'd vote if I was in the shape these Trump voters are. I think if I'd lived that poorly for that long I wouldn't be rational though.

    All of this is why we need to reach out and take care of those people. It's the same problem we had in WWII. We abandoned the Germans and look what it got us: Nazis. We've abandoned the American working class and, well, what do you know, we've got Nazis again.

    --
    Hi! I make Firefox Plug-ins. Check 'em out @ https://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/addon/youtube-mp3-podcaster/
    1. Re:I think you're underestimating by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Sure, it's all those illegals who moved manufacturing overseas and caused pain to the poor snowflakes (i mean white men).

      I guess with limited education and a diet of ho-ho's you can make that connection and miss the Republican elite (good case in point is Secretary 'honeymoon on taxpayer's dollars' Mnuchin who at GS probably single-handedly caused more manufacturing jobs to move overseas than all the illegals in this country).

      If the illegals really did steal jobs from snowflakes, they why aren't they doing all the cushy manufacturing jobs that the snowflakes used to do? Its their rich white bosses (who are also snowflakes, they despair when people criticize them as rich) that moved the jobs overseas for fatter bonuses and less pesky labor costs.

      So no, I dont think we need to coddle poor white snowflakes. We should take healthcare away from them (just the way their own party is trying to do) and let them die from opioid overdoes. This is social darwinism at its best.

    2. Re:I think you're underestimating by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Trump might do something to help them. And monkeys might fly out of my butt.

      Some of my friends and relatives support Trump, and I've seen some of the stuff the believe and repost on Facebook etc. They are the textbook definition of gullible. They literally believe Hillary was going to take away our guns, and that Trump is wading through water rescuing kittens from a hurricane. These people, frankly, are beyond our help.

  47. Re: What is US trying to renegotiate? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Lol let back in? You silly europeans literally wear your virtue signals like badges of honor. Fucking pathetic.

  48. Re: What is US trying to renegotiate? by Barsteward · · Score: 1, Troll

    being socially aware is always preferable to being a self obsessed troglodyte

    --
    "The hands that help are better far than lips that pray." - Robert Ingersoll (1833-1899)
  49. Billions by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    What about the $ Billions the US committed to this farce? That commitment needed withdrawn. The money just goes into more US bashing.

  50. Re:Hell no! by houghi · · Score: 1

    Let's start by banning US OS systems., So no MacOS and Windows anymore.

    --
    Don't fight for your country, if your country does not fight for you.
  51. Re:It's a trick. Get an axe. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    > Sure, you might make an agreement with him and get lucky, but it's all a roll of the dice - and there's no benefit to playing.

    Why do you think most of the banks stopped loaning to him, and his *own lawyers* always meet two at a time with him to make sure he doesn't creatively reinterpret what he agreed to last time?

    The guy makes it all up as he goes along. He has no plan but pure ego, like an adult 3-year-old with money.

  52. Please. The PCA was a terrible piece of garbage by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Say what you will about anthropogenic climate change, the PCA had loads of pork in it.

    I seriously wonder how many people commenting here have read it, and can comment on things like the support for women's rights initiatives and other agendas that were tacked on to it.

    It became a hodge podge of political initiatives which had nothing at all to do with climate.

  53. Re:Hell no! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    There's no significant restriction on US goods. The reason the US has a trade deficit is no one wants anything the US sells. The most valued products the US produces - software and cell phones etc - are bought through international countries registered in tax havens.

  54. Don't Re-Negotiate by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Ignore it and eliminate it.

  55. Political Optics by DarthVain · · Score: 1

    It's genius really.

    Refuse the PCCA, and you come out on top with your base.
    "Re-negotiate", set some made up goals (like most do anyway, and on a time scale outside of your term in office), and you become the "Deal Maker"...

    Basically you get to look tough, then a savvy negotiator, and "get stuff done" which you can totally lie about progress because of the time frame.

    That's like a political trifecta!

  56. Re: What is US trying to renegotiate? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I have no idea, but the US shouldn't be let back in without paying a special "stupid" tax - for all the toxic disinformation they spew on this topic.

    Not fair. If you were to apply a stupid tax to the US it would be bankrupt in no time.

    (Don't get me wrong, there's plenty of very smart folks in the US, but they seem to have a higher percentage of stupid folks than pretty much anywhere in the world too.)

  57. mod +1 snowflake by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Diddums

    1. Re:mod +1 snowflake by Kohath · · Score: 1

      Yes, this exactly. You want action on climate change, this is why you aren't going to get it. People would rather turn up the AC than be ruled by evil people who hate them.

  58. Re:Hell no! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It may be an outlier but I think some Asian region (Hong Kong, Taiwan, etc) that has some pretty obscene tariffs on foreign cars (I think it's like 40-60%). It was on Slashdot as part of an article regarding the sudden drop off of Tesla sales after an "incentive" (sounds more like a temporary removal of a major disincentive) was allowed to sunset.

  59. Re:It's a trick. Get an axe. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The Trump position on the Paris Accord is mostly likely to include, "Climate Change Is Not Real!"

    Sure, Trump is interested in renegotiating the Paris Accord, so that it says the exact opposite of what the Paris Accord originally said.

  60. Re: What is US trying to renegotiate? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Right on. The US owes the world a great debt, what with its obsession with spewing junk science based bullshit and having a populace so stupid that it elected an absolute imbecile for president.

  61. Re:RUSSIANS stole the election from HILLARY CLITON by dcw3 · · Score: 1

    Hillary and Russia have nothing to do with one another.

    Tell that to the Clinton Foundation
    https://www.nytimes.com/2015/0...

    --
    Just another day in Paradise