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Earth Republicans Government United States Science Politics

Trump Admits 'Some Connectivity' Between Climate Change and Human Activity (cnn.com) 559

An anonymous reader quotes a report from CNN: President-elect Donald Trump conceded Tuesday there is "some connectivity" between human activity and climate change and wavered on whether he would pull the United States out of international accords aimed at combating the phenomenon, which scientists overwhelmingly agree is caused by human activity. The statements could mark a softening in Trump's position on U.S. involvement in efforts to fight climate change, although he did not commit to specific action in any direction. During the campaign, he vowed to "cancel" the U.S.'s participation in the Paris climate agreement, stop all U.S. payments to UN programs aimed at fighting climate change and continued to cast serious doubt on the role man-made carbon dioxide emissions played in the planet's warming and associated impacts. "I think there is some connectivity. Some, something. It depends on how much," Trump said Tuesday in a meeting with New York Times reporters, columnists and editors. He has previously called climate change a "hoax" invented by the Chinese. Asked if he would withdraw the U.S. from international climate change agreements, Trump said he is "looking at it very closely," according to Times reporters Maggie Haberman and Mike Grynbaum, who were live-tweeting the meeting. He added that he has "an open mind to it," despite explicitly promising to withdraw from at least one climate accord on the campaign trail. The President-elect on the campaign trail repeatedly vowed to slash environmental protection regulations burdening U.S. businesses and said that beyond the consequences to the planet, he is particularly mindful of the economic impact of combating climate change. He said he is considering "how much it will cost our companies" and the effect on American competitiveness in the global market, according to a tweet from Grynbaum.
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Trump Admits 'Some Connectivity' Between Climate Change and Human Activity

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  • by Freischutz ( 4776131 ) on Tuesday November 22, 2016 @08:43PM (#53343599)
    He's getting very good at emulating a pancake.
    • Re:Flip flop .... (Score:5, Insightful)

      by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday November 22, 2016 @08:47PM (#53343617)

      I thought he looked more like a waffle.

      But I'm not gonna complain if he flip-flops away from stupidity and toward sanity.

      • by Sowelu ( 713889 )

        Just because we might get out of the fire and back into the frying pan, that doesn't make it a good place to be. Careful you don't normalize the many, many other things he's still pretty crazy on.

        • Re:Flip flop .... (Score:5, Insightful)

          by JoeMerchant ( 803320 ) on Tuesday November 22, 2016 @10:57PM (#53344183)

          Not so worried about him making crazy decisions.

          Am still worried about him filling cabinet posts with dyed in the wool crazy career politicians - that's where some real damage can be done.

          • Re:Flip flop .... (Score:5, Insightful)

            by sg_oneill ( 159032 ) on Wednesday November 23, 2016 @01:50AM (#53344649)

            dyed in the wool crazy career politicians

            Its not the career politicians that worry me, its the "maverick" ones. Washington wonks are at least a known quantity. They are versed in bureacracy and doing things the washington way. We know those guys, we've had them for over a century.

            Its the non washington people, trump, the breibart and daily stormer whackjobs, and the like that keep me up at night. Because those folks have a plan, and I'm not sure we're going to enjoy that plan very much at all.

          • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

            by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

            The non-politicians are even worse. The white supremacists, the alt-right hatemongers, the members of his own family.

            Looks like he will have to be forced to give up his business interests, but he has made it abundantly clear that he intends to use the presidency to enrich himself anyway.

        • by AthanasiusKircher ( 1333179 ) on Tuesday November 22, 2016 @11:15PM (#53344243)

          Just because we might get out of the fire and back into the frying pan, that doesn't make it a good place to be.

          Also, let's be clear what Trump actually said here. "Some connectivity." It's not like he's suddenly become an environmentalist.

          I can just hear him tomorrow if he got too much push-back from conservatives: "Uh... yeah... I said 'some connectivity.' Not a lot. Like a phone -- when you got 'some connectivity' you might have one bar if you're out in the woods. Well, not on my phone, because my phone's awesome and I'm rich. But some people get one bar. That's 'some connectivity,' which is all there is with the climate change. Obama and ISIS, on the other hand -- there's FIVE bars of connectivity there."

      • by ShanghaiBill ( 739463 ) on Tuesday November 22, 2016 @09:24PM (#53343809)

        But I'm not gonna complain if he flip-flops away from stupidity and toward sanity.

        He has already flip-flopped on Hillary, and now says he will not send her to prison after all. The alt-right is livid. Next, he will be telling the Mexicans that they will only have to pay for their side of the wall.

        • by Sarnya ( 4782477 )

          But I'm not gonna complain if he flip-flops away from stupidity and toward sanity.

          He has already flip-flopped on Hillary, and now says he will not send her to prison after all. The alt-right is livid. Next, he will be telling the Mexicans that they will only have to pay for their side of the wall.

          Who cares what he thinks. It's unlikely the woman will go to prison. All that nonsense is a Republican load of nonsense.

        • Re:Flip flop .... (Score:5, Insightful)

          by Gussington ( 4512999 ) on Tuesday November 22, 2016 @11:35PM (#53344303)
          You have to feel for Trump voters. He is pretty much flip flopping on every one of the reasons they voted for him. As Obama said "whatever assumptions you bring into the office, this office has a way of waking you up."
          Trump will follow in Hillary's, Obama's and Bush's footsteps because that what you have to do in politics to succeed. For some reason most people don't get this and actually think the change candidate can actually do anything different from anyone else.
          • Re:Flip flop .... (Score:5, Insightful)

            by AthanasiusKircher ( 1333179 ) on Wednesday November 23, 2016 @12:46AM (#53344507)

            For some reason most people don't get this and actually think the change candidate can actually do anything different from anyone else.

            Well, actually it IS possible to change SOME things.

            The problem with Trump, more than perhaps most candidates, is that many of his biggest campaign claims were completely unrealistic, but supporters chose to believe them anyway.

          • Re:Flip flop .... (Score:5, Insightful)

            by h33t l4x0r ( 4107715 ) on Wednesday November 23, 2016 @03:07AM (#53344789)

            Trump will follow in Hillary's, Obama's and Bush's footsteps because that what you have to do in politics to succeed.

            Funny, I don't remember any white supremacists in Obama's cabinet.

      • by h33t l4x0r ( 4107715 ) on Tuesday November 22, 2016 @09:32PM (#53343839)
        Usually when conservatives flip from climate change denial, it's to too late to do anything about it so we shouldn't try.
      • Re:Flip flop .... (Score:5, Insightful)

        by 0100010001010011 ( 652467 ) on Tuesday November 22, 2016 @10:19PM (#53344023)

        At the rate of change we've seen out of him so far he's going to be left of Bernie in 4 years.

        Hell I wouldn't be surprised if TrumpCare(tm) was single payer through some loopholes and careful wording. Marketing is everything.

    • by presidenteloco ( 659168 ) on Tuesday November 22, 2016 @08:58PM (#53343685)

      He just said whatever he thought would win him the election.

      What he said has pretty much no attachment to what he will do.

      He's a fast learner at becoming a typical lying establishment politician, after having been briefed on the actual facts of the nation and the world.

      Of course the role dictates what you have to do in it, anyway. It's all part of the machine.

      Enjoy the ride, suckers.

      • by JBMcB ( 73720 )

        He just said whatever he thought would win him the election.

        Stop the presses. That never happens. Ever.

      • He said he is considering "how much it will cost our companies" and the effect on American competitiveness in the global market, according to a tweet from Grynbaum.

        Yeah he's being sensible. What a boob!

        • Actually that's the scary part. It's one thing when Freddie Kruger is trying to kill you and eat your soul, it's quite another when he starts giving you solid stock tips.

      • by shanen ( 462549 )

        Another example of "insight" on today's Slashdot. *sigh* Still missing the "funny" posts more, but perhaps your post deserved that mod for the joke that Trump has ever been anything but a stupendous liar. Again, I have to note that I am not criticizing you [presidenteloco] or your writing, but just the atmospheric decline.

        The ride should be interesting, in accord with the most cursed Chinese interpretation of "interesting". I suspect a lot of people are going to get off now--or get pushed off.

      • by hey! ( 33014 )

        If you think he's a typical establishment politician you don't know your history.

        For politicians like Trump it doesn't matter to his followers if he contradicts himself. What matters is how he makes them feel in the moment.

      • by ( 4475953 )

        Nah, Trump was vague (or contradictory) about his real policies right from the start, other Republicans were primarily against him because they feared that he's leaning too much towards the Democrats.

        So far, the start doesn't look too bad. He might do a good job as a president. I just hope that he gets rid of this Steve Bannon, who should not be let anywhere near a government, and also stops promoting torture. There may occur some minor problems with his narcissism and the way he seems to judge other peopl

    • by rtb61 ( 674572 )

      You are seeing some who has no intention of running again and hence he is already in second term mode, no votes to win and it is all about him and the mark he makes in history and not interested in other rich gits money, he already has his own, being a successful reformer would be a real ego kick, the Cromwell of his time https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]. Would Trump see himself in that light, ohhh yeahh. When The Shrub, Uncle Tom Obama become just a forgotten bitter history, well they remember Don Don the

    • Is Trump going to tell Pence that there is "some connectivity"?
    • He's a politician (Score:4, Insightful)

      by HalAtWork ( 926717 ) on Tuesday November 22, 2016 @10:45PM (#53344145)

      Did anyone expect any different?

  • by fahrbot-bot ( 874524 ) on Tuesday November 22, 2016 @08:47PM (#53343613)

    Running for President and being President are two entirely different things.

  • Trump 2016 (Score:3, Insightful)

    by backslashdot ( 95548 ) on Tuesday November 22, 2016 @08:47PM (#53343615)

    Trump is the best thing to happen to the socialist agenda. He is going to run up a massive deficit. How soon before the conservatives try to disparage him? It will be comedic gold. This is the guy they said is unafraid to speak the truth and can't be bought. Cause no matter what you believe if you say exactly what u think you're good .. right? I mean, nobody despicable in history ever said what they really think?

    • Re: (Score:2, Interesting)

      by Anonymous Coward

      How soon before the conservatives try to disparage him?

      It will be around 2018 when there are riots in every major city. As an historian, I find it interesting to see the Stein's gate theory play out in a timeline that only has a 20% probability. (A 20% probability doesn't mean that this timeline is "unpossible," just that a time traveler has a random chance of arriving in a worldline where Trump is president or Clinton in the events leading up to the year from hell.) The major events all remain unchanged. In my timeline, it's supposed that the riots happene

    • He is going to run up a massive deficit. How soon before the conservatives try to disparage him?

      Do you mean like the way conservatives turned against Ronald Reagan?

    • by guises ( 2423402 )
      The trouble is we already have a ton of debt, we just can't afford to learn another lesson like that.
      • by Jeremi ( 14640 )

        How much debt can we actually run up, before the shit hits the fan? AFAIK when you're a government (and particularly the US government, which is in control of the world's de facto reserve currency), there's no fixed limit, only some theoretical, undetectable-except-in-retrospect event-horizon at which the world's investors start to lose faith in your ability to pay off your debt.

        • by guises ( 2423402 )
          There's no fixed limit, as you say, but there's a fuzzy limit of approximately 100% of GDP. This is usually around the point when investors start to get nervous with most countries. We're over that now, but being the largest economy in the world and having so much tied in to our economy gives us more leeway than most countries get. Still, our debt is as high as it can realistically be before we start running into some rather harsh consequences in terms of interest rates.
    • He is going to run up a massive deficit. How soon before the conservatives try to disparage him?

      If people voted based on deficit spending, Perot, Gore, and Kerry (and maybe Paul) would have been elected president. Republicans talk about fiscal conservatism, but not many actually take it seriously.

  • ... reality is doing him in, as it does all political outsiders.

    • Re:Ball-busting ... (Score:5, Interesting)

      by Rei ( 128717 ) on Tuesday November 22, 2016 @08:52PM (#53343645) Homepage

      Obama and Guantanamo, for example.

      It was obvious that he really wanted to close that thing. Who knows exactly what he learned when he was office, but you could just see that combination of "frustration" and "defeat" in him when the topic came up afterwards.

      • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

        Obama is an insider Black man.

        That's why we have an outsider White man.

        Obama wanted out of Afghanistan and Iraq, he wanted to close Gitmo, and he wanted immigration reform and affordable health care.

        He will have no legacy.

        No president after him will, either.

        The President has become the person who steps forward when a nation-state says, "I want to talk to America."

        Other than that pageantry, the President offers condolences and empty promises of change to the families of victims.

        • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

          by Anonymous Coward

          The concept of a Legacy is for suckers. Do what you need to do, while you're there. Trying to plan your life so someone 100 years from now will have something to talk about is ridiculous.

        • by shanen ( 462549 )

          Amusing comment, and if I ever saw a mod point to give, I think your comment deserves an "interesting" or "funny", even though I think I mostly disagree with you.

          For example, I think President Obama's main legacy will be to have been the last president. I think Trump is about to turn America into a monarchy, and with the full control of the government from his personal and rebranded so-called Republican Party, he might succeed. The real test will be in 2020, when I expect Trump to dump Pence and nominate Iv

          • Re:Ball-busting ... (Score:5, Interesting)

            by CaptainDork ( 3678879 ) on Tuesday November 22, 2016 @11:06PM (#53344207)

            Interesting take, but wrong.

            America is way long overdue for the needle to peg out to the right.

            That's obviated by the results of this last election.

            America needs Trump and everything he can possibly bring to the fight.

            America needs to actually experience the fantasy of suicide so it can get a sour taste in its mouth and deal with that which has remained in the shadows.

            The effort to convert America to Christianity needs to be exposed so we can get rid of the son of a bitches.

        • by whoever57 ( 658626 ) on Tuesday November 22, 2016 @10:10PM (#53343991) Journal

          That's why we have an outsider White man.

          "outsider"? Trump? You mean the scion of a wealthy family?

          He may have convinced millions of people that he is an outsider, but they are badly mistaken.

      • It's pretty easy to understand why Obama didn't close Guantanamo :
        There are many innocent people there. If they weren't terrorists before entering there, they sure would be now after 15 years of inhuman treatments.
        No country wants them, so they'll rot there for eternity without ever facing a trial.

        Obama learned the lesson, and just gave the chairforce orders to use more drones.

  • by Tablizer ( 95088 ) on Tuesday November 22, 2016 @08:50PM (#53343627) Journal

    There's a fact about Trump that's growing ever more apparent: his mouth is nearly useless. Only his actions matter (and they've yet to unfold).

    Forrest Trump is like a box of chocolates: you don't know what you are getting until you bite into one ... or one bites into you.

    • Getting elected is an action that counts. As do cabinet appointments.

    • Forrest Trump is like a box of chocolates: you don't know what you are getting until you bite into one ... or one bites into you.

      or when it grabs you by the-hey, that's just rude!

    • by shanen ( 462549 ) on Tuesday November 22, 2016 @09:48PM (#53343925) Homepage Journal

      Insight on today's Slashdot, eh? Not intended as a personal criticism, though I personally miss the "funny" posts more.

      No, the Donald's past actions are quite clear. Trump loves crushing his opponents. The "You're fired" bit on TV was just a way to personalize Trump's personal preferences and make them more marketable.

      If Trump avoids impeachment, then I predict that Trump will dump Pence in 2020. He will pick Ivanka as his VP, to replace him in the White House in 2024. How's that for America's first female president, AKA queen? Things will be perfectly clear by then, but we'll get a lot of clarity as soon as he names his Supreme Court justice in a few days. Even as I write, I'm sure he is interviewing his deplorable list of candidates in search of the one with the highest degree of personal loyalty to the Donald.

      Notwithstanding the Electoral College, the will of the voters was clearly expressed in 2012 for President Obama to pick that justice, and by the largest number of the voters in 2016 that Trump NOT pick that justice.

    • Many people like Trump because he appears to be honest and genuine in what he says. This always made me laugh because I view him as the exact opposite. He says what he does to appeal to those whom he is speaking to. He is the least honest of all those who ran for the Republican nomination. A complete BS artist. I am willing to bet there is never a complete wall, Mexicans are not all deported, and Obamacare is not repealed - in name possibly but not in practice.

      What is really depressing is that by sp

  • Damn! And me here without my heart medicine handy....
  • by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday November 22, 2016 @08:56PM (#53343675)

    Think of all the stereotypes you can think about with a politician.

    Lying, manipulative, weasil-tactics, duplicitous, and so on.

    Trump is pretty much all those things to a level we're unfamiliar with in the modern era. People tend to vastly overestimate how badly corrupted our system has become in the recent modern era, when seeing isolated incidents of outrageous things, such as lies before congress, violence, or right being ignored.

    The thing is, if you've ever read any newspapers from the 1800s, or from earlier eras from most places, politics have always been truly horrible, to a much greater degree than we're used to. History is replete with millions of deaths for the sake of the worst kinds of political stupidity, Even the mythical ideals, such as Camelot, are filled with absurdly horrible acts as commonplace, when you read the versions not cleaned up for modern standards.

    The return to commonplace racism, outright lying and fiercely punishing those who call you out on lies, and playing of all sides with open disdain is what we seem to be seeing here. A return to the 'good old days', well before the 1950s.

    So yeah, if Trump find he can use the specter of global warming to push some part of his agenda, a nugget to throw to get someone in line, he'll play that card.

  • by Shane_Optima ( 4414539 ) on Tuesday November 22, 2016 @09:03PM (#53343719) Journal
    I don't know what to think nor even if it's worth thinking about any more. Governance by RNG. Ignoring for a moment all those shadowy Republican puppet-masters that are a hell of a lot cleverer and more tenacious than Trump... this could actually be an improvement of sorts?

    I mean, this is not actually flip-flopping any more. The term is simply not strong enough. What we have here is a flesh and blood expert system running some crude, buggy-as-shit genetic optimizing algorithm... and it's shortly going to be POTUS.


    Huh.
  • Trump has nasal drips of factoids. Drip-drip-drip.
  • by Idou ( 572394 ) on Tuesday November 22, 2016 @09:08PM (#53343747) Journal
    On the one hand, it looks like Trump lied to a bunch of scared and vulnerable people to get elected (under the disguise of "not being another politician" and "not just being all talk"). . . On the other hand, a lot of his promises ranged from authoritarian to completely incoherent (Bring back jobs by attacking free trade when automation is the real job killer at this point? Bring back coal by attacking green technologies when natural gas is the true coal killer?).

    Either way, the guy is a real douche in my book. . .
    • Either way, the guy is a real douche in my book. . .

      If, during Trump's presidency, the labor force participation rate rises to 68% or more, will you admit in your book that you are the douche? ;-)

      • by Idou ( 572394 )

        If, during Trump's presidency, the labor force participation rate rises to 68% or more, will you admit in your book that you are the douche? ;-)

        Here are the possible explanations for a labor force participation rate increase under Trump:
        - broken window economics (increase in low level/value jobs at a price of significant overall wealth destruction and great risk of fiscal and monetary crisis)
        - dumb luck (this is not North Korea. . . but do you really believe the 'Dear Leader' has more influence on economic growth or labor participation than, say, technological advancement!?)

        Understanding the above does not make one a douche. . . just capab

  • "Human Activity" hey? The Chinese are human, right? And creating a hoax is an activity.

  • by poity ( 465672 ) on Tuesday November 22, 2016 @09:28PM (#53343821)

    Some just wanted job protection, and others wanted to stick it to the establishment. Climate change skepticism was hardly on anyone's minds on the right. They're probably still euphoric from seeing the left break down in tears on election night, and will forgive broken promises for now.

    You know what's funny? Seems like if you want to get things done, you need a Democrat to start wars, and a Republican to protect the environment. That way, the left largely stays silent as countries get attacked, and the right largely stays silent as regulations are imposed.

    • by swb ( 14022 )

      Nearly everyone I knew who voted for Trump did so because they didn't like Hillary or the sanctimonious liberalism she represented. After that there was a desire to throw a monkeywrench into the system.

      I don't think anyone actually believed in his "promises" in any literal sense, they were translated into general understandings. "The wall" wasn't ever going to be an actual wall but a generally harder line on illegal immigration, moving jobs to the US wasn't any specific plan but some vague understanding t

  • ...he is considering "how much it will cost our companies"...

    Right from the very beginning, Trump struck me as an individual who cared for nothing but himself and how much money he had, having no regard for the actual *people* of the United States, and looking only at their economic worth. Some things are, in fact, more important than money, and I am discouraged that Mr. Trump does not seem able to realize that. While this waffling on his previous stance on climate change is probably going to seem like wel

  • ... who voted him in because globalism is un-American.

  • by taustin ( 171655 ) on Tuesday November 22, 2016 @09:48PM (#53343921) Homepage Journal

    Scott Adams predicted this in May [dilbert.com].

    Predicted that Trumps real position on climate change was actually "I don't know because I haven't looked into it," and that once he did, if he decided it was a problem, he'd be the only person who could convince the Republican base that it was a problem and that something needed to be done. That no Democrat ever could, but Trump could carry the Republicans right along because they see him as one of them, and very credible.

    Mr. Adams is a very observant wingnut.

    • and according to all reports, he is a rational person in his private dealings.

      Mr Adams is not very observant. There was an article on Trump's dealing related to his casinos and he was not very rational in the way he went about making one deal. He ended up far worse off than he could have been.

      But it is an interesting theory. It's too early to tell what will happen, although the cabinet appointments he has made are not very encouraging.

  • minus the ACA that was keeping my type-1 diabetic friend alive. Thanks America.
  • ...after that well-known radical leftist Margaret Thatcher addressed the issue!
  • by ElectricHellKnight ( 4011689 ) on Wednesday November 23, 2016 @04:07AM (#53344913)

    Here's an interesting idea... Maybe, just maybe, President-elect Trump is not the raving, selfish, hate-filled, idiot the media and his opponents have painted him as. Maybe he's actually a sane and intelligent individual with good intentions, who might not be an expert in all areas of everything (nobody is), but who does have lots of experience picking and listening to experts in their respective fields.

    Maybe he isn't "flip-flopping", but just realizing that a man as persuasive as him might be able to turn some of the far-right around on issues like climate change and LGBT rights. In order to persuade someone to agree with you, you have to first convince them that you actually kind of agree with them. Perhaps Trump isn't as stupid as people think, and he actually knows this.

    Perhaps he isn't just saying "what's in it for me?", and he actually feels some degree of patriotism (shocking, I know, that the president of the United States might actually like this country).

    Maybe I'm being naive, but I honestly don't feel like Donald Trump is a dirty, lying, crook who's manipulating the American people for himself. I just don't get that impression of him, and I've been signaled out before for my keen ability to spot a lie. If you disagree, that's fine, but that doesn't make you smarter than anyone else. It doesn't make you better than anyone else. It doesn't mean you're 'above all the sheeple'. It just means you have a different opinion.

    One thing that human beings will never get over is their need to be right. If they believe Trump is a bad guy, no amount of evidence to the contrary will ever convince them. They have to feel superior, every single good thing Trump does must be part of some evil master plan of his. So go ahead and downvote me, because that's easier than admitting you could possibly have misjudged the man based on a flood of lies and misinformation spread by people who thought he was "literally Hitler".

If all the world's economists were laid end to end, we wouldn't reach a conclusion. -- William Baumol

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