George Soros gave Ivanka's husband's business a $250 million credit line in 2015 per WSJ. Soros is also an investor in Jared's business.

Saturday, February 19, 2011

NY Mayor Bloomberg says global warming as dangerous as terrorism and weapons of mass destruction

2/11/2008, "Bloomberg slams U.S. energy law over corn ethanol," Environmental News Network, from Reuters report, by Louis Charbonneau and Timothy Gardner

"Terrorists kill people, weapons of mass destruction have the potential to kill enormous numbers of people, global warming has the potential to kill everybody," said the head of the city where nearly 3,000 people died in the September 11 attacks.

"This is really just as lethal, it's just that the results are something we will face long term," he said."...

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(Mayor Bloomberg has a business devoted to profits in the global warming and carbon trading industry. Since 2007 he has called for more taxes on Americans as reparation for climate crime. From his UN speech 3 years ago):

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2/12/2008,
"Mayor (Bloomberg) Compares Threat of Global Warming to Terrorism," NY Sun, Benny Avni, United Nations

"While he acknowledged that scientists are unable to predict its consequences, Mayor Bloomberg yesterday compared the scourge of global warming to
  • the threat of terrorism and the proliferation of
  • weapons of mass destruction.
Although it is a "long-term" fight, he said, reducing gas emissions may save the life of "everybody" on the planet, the same way that fighting terrorism and its proliferation saves lives in shorter terms.

Addressing a U.N. climate change conference, the mayor also announced a new plan to reduce the use of tropical hardwoods by New York City and told delegates that the city plans to host a meeting in June of leaders from 20 major world cities to discuss ways for the largest municipalities

  • to reduce global warming.

Other participants in the conference called for a "war" against climate change, in which

Mr. Bloomberg renewed his call, made first late last year, for taxing countries such as America that emit large amounts of carbons, which are believed to cause changes in the planet's climate. "So long as there's no penalty or cost involved in producing greenhouse gases, there will be no incentive" to meet

  • targets set by international institutions,

the mayor told the General Assembly. "For that reason, I believe the U.S. should enact

"Terrorists kill people. Weapons of mass destruction have the potential to kill an enormous amount of people," Mr. Bloomberg told reporters after addressing the U.N. General Assembly, but

Like smoking, Mr. Bloomberg said, these are preventable killers. "We should go after terrorists every place in this world, find them and kill them, plain and simple," he said. If weapons of mass destruction "get out of the hands of the countries that have them and get into the hands of terrorists, the potential is just mind-boggling," he added. And while global warming "is a much longer-term thing," he said, it "has all of the same potentials of destroying the planet that we live on.

  • No scientist knows for sure what's going to happen, but you don't want to wait to find out."

Mr. Bloomberg announced that in addition to his initiatives to convert the city's taxi fleet to hybrid fuels, devise a plan for congestion tax, "green our buildings," and plant more trees, the city would curb the use of tropical hardwoods, which it purchases to the tune of $1 million a year, causing rainforest deforestation. The city will immediately reduce by 20% the use of such hardwoods, which are used in park benches, ferry landings, beach boardwalks, and the Brooklyn Bridge walkway. A new design study would devise ways to replace them altogether in the long term, the mayor said. The two-day conference, titled "Addressing Climate Change: the United Nations and the World at Work," included, in addition to members of the General Assembly, such stars of entertainment and industry as

  • film actress Daryl Hannah and
  • Virgin Atlantic Airways founder Richard Branson.

Mr. Branson called on governments to match his company's announced prize of $25 million to encourage scientists and inventors to find a technological solution that would

  • "avert a catastrophe" to the environment.

On another issue, Mr. Bloomberg told The New York Sun that the Fire Department of New York has had access to the U.N. compound on First Avenue, and "we think we have plans if there were fire" there. "The United Nations is making progress," he added. "They're going in the right direction, they are not there yet." Specifically, he indicated, plans should be made ahead of the ambitious U.N. renovation plan this spring. "Construction is always a dangerous period, so we're going to have to work very carefully with them going forward."

Jurisdiction issues have hampered relations between local emergency teams and the United Nations. Most recently, the organization declined to notify local authorities when workers got sick after handling boxes from

  • North Korea at a U.N. basement.

After the Sun reported on the incident, FDNY officials were permitted to examine the boxes and determined that mold was the cause of the sickness. "We are not here to try to take their sovereign right to dictate what goes on, on their property," Mr. Bloomberg said of the United Nations. "But given the interaction with the emergency responders in the city, we have to work together.""

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Bloomberg addresses United Nations in 2008.


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Reference: 4/12/10, "Aides who knew Bloomberg best leaving City Hall," AP report from NY Post, Regarding Bloomberg's image as an international global warming star.

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Additional citation for Bloomberg 'lethal' quote re global warming:

2/12/2008, "Threat level is 'green,'" NY Post by David Seifman

"Global warming is "just as lethal" as terrorism because it "has the potential to kill everybody," Mayor Bloomberg said yesterday.

"This is just as important as stopping nuclear proliferation," he told reporters after addressing an environmental conference at the United Nations.

"This is just as important as stopping terrorism . . . This really is just as lethal. It's just the results are something we will face long term."

Bloomberg has been hammering hard on his environmental plank since April, when his administration released an ambitious blueprint for cutting the city's carbon emissions by 30 percent through 2030.

Yesterday, the mayor offered a frightening vision of the unimpeded effects of climate change, arguing it has the same potential for causing calamity as terrorism and nuclear weapons falling in the hands of the wrong people.

  • "We should go after terrorists every place in the world, find them and kill them," the mayor said.

"Weapons of mass destruction - if they get out of the hands of the countries that have them and get into the hands of terrorists, the potential is just mind-boggling . . . Global warming is a much longer-term thing. But it has all the same potential of destroying the planet we live on."

In his speech before the General Assembly, Bloomberg called for a carbon tax in the United States and commitments by China and India to "accept the burden of greatness" by setting energy-efficiency standards."...

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