Better late than never. The climate hoaxers need to be prosecuted if we want to prevent more hoaxes from proliferating.
Milloy has been on the correct side of these issues for a long time.
He has done excellent work.
They should bus in a bunch of immigration judges to the detention center.
Hopefully they have plenty of rubber stamps.
Alternatively, since the court doesn’t seem to recognize the scope of the problem, perhaps DOJ can copy and paste (differing only by name) 20 million requests for a Declaratory Judgement that each individual be deported without further due process that the deportation order.
Let the courts deal with that and maybe it’ll dawn on them what the Exec branch has to deal with and the rest of us have to pay for while we wait (handouts to illegals).
In fact, such a flood of requests may delay all the other suits the leftist lawyers have up their sleeves.
Stop the financial attack and drain on freon. r22 is surcharged so as to force us into woke gasses. Gasses that are flammable. Bring back to r22.
"The regulation of greenhouse gas emissions from fossil fuel burning is axiomatically a “major question” and Congress never expressly gave EPA authority to regulate greenhouse gases."
FR: Never Accept the Premise of Your Opponent’s Argument
While federal policing of the environment is arguably a good idea, both the Supremes and the Trump Administration, as a consequence of misguided, institutionally indoctrinated presidential advisors imo, seem to be overlooking that the states have never expressly constitutionally given the post-17th Amendment ratification, unconstitutionally big federal government the specific power to police the environment.
"From the accepted doctrine that the United States is a government of delegated powers, it follows that those not expressly granted, or reasonably to be implied from such as are conferred, are reserved to the states, or to the people. To forestall any suggestion to the contrary, the Tenth Amendment was adopted. The same proposition, otherwise stated, is that powers not granted are prohibited [emphasis added]." —United States v. Butler, 1936.