The Pour Over Today - Bonus Episode: 2024 Election Topics - The Climate
Episode Date: October 15, 2024In a special episode of The Pour Over Today, we’re explaining the debate about the climate, including where VP Harris and former President Trump stand. This is the tenth episode of our Election Coll...ection, designed to help us grow in understanding and compassion on key 2024 election topics. Please support our TPO sponsors! Cru: give.cru.org/tpo Upside: https://links.thepourover.org/Upside The Bible Study: https://links.thepourover.org/TheBibleStudy Politics for People Who Hate Politics: https://links.thepourover.org/PoliticsForPeopleWhoHatePolitics Keola Fit: https://links.thepourover.org/KeolaFit_Pod Compelled Podcast: https://links.thepourover.org/Compelled Dwell Differently: https://links.thepourover.org/DwellDifferently Nothing Left Unsaid Podcast: https://linktr.ee/tgnlu CCCU: https://www.mycccu.com/tpobonus Courage for Life Study Bibles: links.thepourover.org/CFL_Podcast_0901 Grace Bible for Kids: https://links.thepourover.org/GraceBibleforKids The Daily Walk Bible: https://links.thepourover.org/DailyWalk
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In a special episode of The Poor Over Today, we're explaining the debate about the climate,
including where VP Harris and former President Trump stand.
This is the 10th episode of our election collection designed to help us grow in understanding
and compassion on key 2024 election topics. Climate change is a uniquely heated issue in US politics.
There are disagreements not only on what to do, but also on how urgent the issue is to
begin with.
While most agree that the climate is changing, there is debate over the degree to which human
activity has contributed to and can do anything about climate change.
This impacts people's views on policy decisions central to this topic such as what types of
energy the U.S. uses, fossil fuels versus clean renewable energy, where the U.S. gets
its energy, domestic production versus imports, how the U.S. regulates or incentivizes environmentally
friendly practices, and whether the U.S. works with other countries
to combat climate change.
Here are some key terms that come up
in the debate about the climate.
Fracking, hydraulic fracturing is a process
of pumping water, sand, and chemicals deep underground
at very high pressures to crack rocks
and release natural gas and oil.
Paris Climate Agreement, an international treaty
signed in 2016 by 196 countries that
establishes a framework to keep global surface temperatures from rising more than 1.5 degrees
Celsius above pre-industrial levels, clean energy, energy sources that do not release
greenhouse gases into the atmosphere, including solar, wind, geothermal, and nuclear power. And renewable energy, energy sources that naturally replenish themselves,
such as solar, wind, and hydropower.
We'll be back with what Republicans and Democrats say after a quick break.
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Republicans generally rank climate change near the bottom of their policy priorities,
saying that Earth's climate has been warming and cooling since the beginning of time and
that humans' impact on that change is unproven.
They argue climate regulations harm the world's fossil fuel-dependent economy, reducing jobs
and overall prosperity, without meaningfully impacting the climate.
Republicans generally support investing
in clean, renewable energy alongside domestic oil
and gas drilling as a way to reduce pollution
and ensure the U.S. isn't dependent
on foreign adversaries for energy.
Democrats generally rank climate change
near the top of their policy priorities,
often citing a moral obligation
to protect the environment
for future generations.
They argue science has definitely linked human behavior to the warming climate and support
government regulations like caps on emissions and subsidies for renewable energy to alter
human behavior as well as working with other countries to combat climate change.
Democrats generally believe that developing renewable energy solutions
and upgrading U.S. infrastructure to be more climate-friendly will create jobs and help
not hurt the economy. While there's disagreement over climate change, there's a lot of common ground
when it comes to energy policy. First, 69% support America becoming carbon neutral by 2050.
Second, 68% say the country should diversify energy
sources but don't want fossil fuels phased out completely. Third, 66% support the federal
government incentivizing wind and solar power production.
Though we may not agree on the best way to balance the health of the earth and the needs
of humanity, we can pray for wisdom as we seek to be thoughtful stewards of God's good
creation.
Genesis 2, 7, and 15 says,
Then the Lord God formed the man out of the dust from the ground and breathed the breath
of life into his nostrils.
And the man became a living being.
He took the man and placed him in the Garden of Eden to work it and watch over it.
And now, candidate stances.
Vice President Harris believes the climate crisis is one of the most urgent matters of our time.
As a senator, Harris co-sponsored the Green
New Deal, a progressive resolution to transition America out of fossil fuels and into clean
energy within a decade. In 2019, she said she favored banning fracking, but reversed
that position in 2024. Harris touts the Biden-Harris-Adman's Inflation Reduction Act as the largest climate
investment in our nation's history.
Former President Trump has repeatedly referred to climate change as a hoax.
While in office, he rolled back hundreds of environmental protections and withdrew the
U.S. from the Paris climate agreement because it was financially unfair to Americans.
The U.S. became a net energy exporter while he was president, and he says he's committed
to further unleashing American energy sources like coal, oil, and gas to ensure affordability
for families and security in the world. That's all we have for today.
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