That’s a fine thing.
Sounds like a law firm, doesn't it?
Other aspirants to the mansion in Tallahassee, two-termer Jeb Bush among them, have duly given lip service to environmental concerns as a matter of course, but when lobbyists for the land-razing industry's pushes came to shoves, Bush, ever aware of who was buttering his biscuits and a Florida developer for years himself, was about as green as fellow font of Floridiocy Katherine Harris is sane. Bush wasn't as baldly unconcerned as his fossil-fuel-industry whore of an older brother is, but Florida's problems continued to worsen over the eight years Jeb valiantly tried to keep control over possibly the most difficult state to govern of them all, occasionally stepping in a real turd, as he did when seeking to pin the blame for Terri Schiavo's "murder" on her husban.
Enter fellow Republican Crist. Miraculously, in just half a year, has hosted a global warming summit, issued directives intended to greatly reduce air pollution, moved toput solar panels on the Governor's Mansion, asked utility companies to build more windmill generators, and required all state vehicles to begin using biofuel blends such as ethanol. He appears serious about a plan to lower CO2 emissions to 1990 levels by 2025. It seems strange that he's a member of today's GOP, but Teddy Roosevelt, the most pro-environment president America has ever had, was a Repubican, so Crist is merely a throwback. And he's certainly the anti-Inhofe many of us have been hoping for.
8mm