What A Day - Highs And Lows of the Climate Bill
Episode Date: August 8, 2022Hot Take’s Mary Annaïse Heglar joins us to talk about the Senate passing the Inflation Reduction Act on Sunday. It now heads to the House this week where it’s expected to pass. One of the main pi...eces of the legislation addresses the climate crisis, but the bill ultimately falls short of many activists’ demands.And in headlines: Indiana’s banned nearly all abortions, President Biden is now negative for COVID, and Lake Mead revealed another set of human skeletal remains.Show Notes:NPR: “Democrats passed a major climate, health and tax bill. Here's what's in it” – https://n.pr/3zCXpmnCrooked’s “Hot Take” – https://crooked.com/podcast-series/hot-take/Vote Save America: Fuck Bans Action Plan – https://votesaveamerica.com/roe/Crooked Coffee is officially here. Our first blend, What A Morning, is available in medium and dark roasts. Wake up with your own bag at crooked.com/coffeeFollow us on Instagram – https://www.instagram.com/whataday/For a transcript of this episode, please visit crooked.com/whataday
Transcript
Discussion (0)
it's monday august 8th i'm josie duffy rice and i'm marianne ease hegler and this is what a day
where we're looking inward to understand why kim kardashian and pete davidson's breakup made us
sad honestly the only thing about it that makes me sad is that it's news fair, very fair.
So first off, let's give a big what a day welcome to the co-host of Hot Take, Marianne Hegler.
You'll be joining the WOD squad for a couple of days, and it is so amazing and exciting to have you with us.
Thank you so much for having me. I'm excited.
Of course. On today's show, a jury ordered Alex Jones to pay more than $45 million to the family
of a Sandy Hook shooting victim.
Plus, the Senate passed the Massive Inflation Reduction Act yesterday.
I've got some things to say about that, and we'll get to that later.
Yeah, I'm really excited to hear.
But first, let's talk about the current state of
climate before we get to the bill, because it's been very deadly around the world, which is
obviously not unusual at this point. Even looking at what's happened just in the US over the last
handful of days really illustrates how important this issue is right now. I mean, it's critical.
Yeah, it's crucial. It is life or death, existential, existential. And people and
wildlife are at stake, right?
Definitely.
So let's start in the middle of the country.
Josie, what's been happening over there?
Yeah, so over eight days, there have been three extreme rainstorms that have destroyed areas in three states, Missouri, Kentucky, and Illinois, and killed at least 39 people.
According to the New York Times, the storms broke, quote, century-old records. Some parts of Illinois, quote, recorded more rain in 36 hours than they usually get the entire month of August.
In Kentucky, the rain was 600 percent higher than normal.
And the state is still under threat of serious rainfall this week, which would be disastrous.
Yeah.
You know, so they have these terms like 100-year storm, 500-year storm.
And we have gotten to this point with climate change where those terms are basically meaningless.
It's like record-breaking at this point.
It means nothing.
Happens every year.
Yeah.
So can you talk about the dangerous flooding out in the West, too?
Yeah.
So on Friday, Death Valley National Park announced it would close all roads in and out of the park after serious flooding that stranded about 500 visitors and 500 staff.
And this was after almost two inches of rain. So more than 1300% higher than its average
August rain. And to me, like, this is an example of like two inches, it doesn't sound like much,
right? But this is a completely different climate. This is the desert. Two inches is a big deal.
And so it's just a reminder that like, doesn't have to be two feet of rain. What can overwhelm an environment can be seemingly minimal.
And it has a serious impact on people and places and animals.
So I know I'm preaching to the choir right now, but I think you hear these numbers and you think like, oh, we can withstand that.
And the truth is like often we cannot.
And Mary, it's not just rain.
Hundreds of miles north of that at the California-Oregon border, the McKinney Fire, which we can withstand that. And the truth is, like, often we cannot, right? And Mary, it's not just rain.
Hundreds of miles north of that at the California-Oregon border, the McKinney Fire, which we mentioned last week, has grown to over 60,000 acres. And it's destroyed almost 100 homes.
And it's only 40% contained as of our recording at 9.30 p.m. Eastern on Sunday night.
So that's just a sampling of the climate catastrophes spurred by climate change happening as we speak. And again, that's just the United States. Across the world, other
people are experiencing events like this, but events that are often way more extreme and often
in places way less equipped to handle them, right? And so speaking of that, I do want the WOD Squad
to listen to your pod, Hot Take. Last month, you and Amy talked to reporter Aline Brown about the
relationship between climate change and mass incarceration. And it's really such a good
episode. I really recommend giving it a listen. The bottom line is that like many of the venues
of punishment, jails, prisons, et cetera, are located in places that are climate precarious.
That is kind of by design, right? We always put populations that we care less about in the most precarious places. And
this means places that are at risk of flooding or extreme heat. And in climate emergencies,
incarcerated people are often the last ones to be helped. And they're often not evacuated,
nor do they have basic mitigators like heat or air conditioning. I mean, last year, hearing the
stories about Texas prisons in the middle of summer, I mean, it was like torture. Yeah. Right. This year, too. Right. Being in the facility alone is torture. Yeah. We talked about that a lot on
the podcast episode. One of the stories Aline shared with us is, you know, sometimes security
or corrections officers, they'll have like a separate area that actually is climate controlled
and they'll turn the air conditioning way up so the like sweltering prisoners can watch them in there with their coats.
That is devastating.
So climate change makes prison abolition all the more of an emergency.
It's an acute emergency meeting a stagnant emergency.
Yes.
So all of what you just heard, you'll hear much more of that on the episode.
It's so interesting. So check it out. We'll have a link in our show notes.
Yeah. The general rule is if it happens on Earth, it's affected by climate change and vice versa.
But yeah, let's turn now to the big news out of D.C. Yesterday,
the Senate passed the Inflation Reduction Act.
The yeas are 50, the nays are 50. The Senate being equally divided, the vice president votes in the affirmative and the bill as amended is passed.
So Vice President Kamala Harris broke the tie vote, which split down party lines, which I will just underscore means that Mitt Romney, who had a whole op ed in The Atlantic about how climate change is real, voted against this. And now the bill is going to go to the House this week, where it's expected to pass
pretty easily. Yeah, so one centerpiece of the bill tries to tackle climate change,
and we're going to talk about that in just a second. But before we get to that,
can you highlight some of the other key pieces of it?
Sure. So it does several things on health care. It lowers prescription drug costs, but it won't be immediate and it won't be for every drug.
It's specifically for 10 drugs starting in 2026, which, oh, my God, that is so much closer and sounds so much further away.
I'm like, oh, the real future. And then it's like, no, it's 2022.
It's just a couple of years. It failed to put a cap on insulin prices at $35 a month because Republicans blocked that effort.
The bill will also be funded by a new 15 percent minimum tax for companies that make more than a billion dollars.
Those are the big points.
And we'll put a link to a news story in our show notes that goes into more depth.
This bill to me feels like subjectively a win, objectively kind of depressing.
You know, you got to wait four years to get lower prescription drug costs.
We got to be excited that companies that make a billion dollars have to pay 15% in taxes,
which just feels dark.
Okay, so now it's very appropriate that you're here with us today because a centerpiece of
the Inflation Reduction Act, as this bill is called, is climate.
And it's been like a huge
bargaining chip, right? And we've heard a lot about that. And you've got some criticisms of it.
But let's start with like what it does. Yeah. Before we get to why it's not enough.
Yeah. So there's over $360 billion of the bill is investing in climate action. So it does things
like invest in renewable energy tax credits on electric
vehicles, home improvements, things like that. And $60 billion of it is going toward things that
could advance environmental justice in some way, depending on how it's implemented. And some
analysis says that the bill would cut America's carbon emissions by 40% by 2030.
And this sounds like a win, I think, to some people. I mean, I've been following kind of the Twitter discussion about it.
And there's also a lot of kind of pushback, right?
Saying like this doesn't go far enough.
So can you tell us a little bit about that perspective?
I think you'd be hard pressed to find anyone who would say that it goes as far as it should.
Right.
Even the proponents will tell you it doesn't go far enough.
We'll link to this in the show notes, too.
But there's a really good Twitter thread before yesterday's vote by my friend Rihanna Gunwright, who's a policy wonk that I trust on
pretty much anything, pretty much trusted with my life. So part of what she said is that, quote,
those investments come at tremendous racist costs, the full scope of which we don't yet know,
but could very likely take some lives. She also said, quote, I simply cannot say that another bill
that treats black, brown, and indigenous lives,
again, as the price of admission
for domestic political progress
is something where the good outweighs the bad.
Yeah, absolutely.
So talk to us a little bit about that specific point.
You've got your own take here
on where this bill falls short.
So for most people,
they're not hearing about the
inequality that's inherent, maybe in the bill or like that we're seeing in the bill. So talk to us
a little bit about that. Before I get to that, I really do want to acknowledge the hard, hard work
that went into getting us to this point, not just in the time of this administration, but across
generations, people have sacrificed so, so much to get this bill, and this bill is meaningful.
And I don't want the fact that there are problems with the bill to sound like it's a stain on those people's character or integrity.
That's not how I mean it at all.
But there is a lot wrong with the bill.
So first of all, it expands fossil fuel infrastructure, which we simply can't do.
The science has been crystal clear for years now that if we want a shot at a livable future,
which should not sound to anyone like some sort of pie-in-the-sky type of fantasy, like it is just basic survival, girl.
It's like basic human instinct.
We can't build any more fossil fuel infrastructure if we want to do that.
So it's important to look at where that fossil fuel infrastructure would go.
So in order to get Joe Manchin on board with it, the bill requires the
leasing of oil and gas drilling on the Gulf of Mexico and Alaska. And those are places that had
already been deemed sacrifice zones, including places like Appalachia, where Joe Manchin even
wants to bring back the Mountain Valley Pipeline. Well, that sounds good to be bringing back
pipelines at this point in the fight. No. That's sarcasm. It's terrible. It sounds absolutely awful.
And I don't mean to make jokes because it's not funny,
but it just seems so antithetical to the clear answer
for what we need to do moving forward
and the clear investments we need to be making
and the clear preventative measures we need to be taking.
And it just feels like so many people are in denial.
Yeah.
We keep wanting to find the solutions that are not the solutions. And by we, I so many people are in denial. Yeah, we keep wanting to
find the solutions that are not the solutions. And by we, I don't mean me. I don't mean you.
Right. There's another piece of this bill that you actually think sounds good at first, but
once you dig deep, it's pretty bad. And that's carbon capture and storage, which sounds fancy
and cool to me. So please explain to me why it's not. It's not really real. So the bill includes a lot of
money for carbon capture and storage. And we talk quite a lot about this bill on the latest episode
of Hot Takes. So folks who really want to get into the weeds, please go listen to that because my
co-host Amy Westerveld knows so much about this stuff. But anyway, carbon capture and storage is
not a thing that anybody knows how to do safely. And it's how we get mirages like clean coal that kind of lull people into a sense of complacency about climate change.
Carbon capture and storage is basically a fossil fuel executive's wet dream.
And it would allow them theoretically to attach a contraption to their power plant that would suck out the carbon before it can go into the atmosphere.
And if that sounds fantastical, that's because it is.
It doesn't really exist. And then they need to take that carbon and store it somewhere. Now, let's keep
in mind that these are some of the same people who have been drilling for oil for a century
and still regularly spill it. These are the people who just last summer set the ocean on fire,
a thing I didn't even know you could do. Right. That was totally new territory for me.
I was like, we have crossed into a whole new level.
Right.
These are not the innovations we need.
Right.
Right.
We're looking for solutions to climate change,
and they're over here innovating, setting the ocean on fire.
Yeah.
No one asked for that.
So would you trust them to put carbon in a ball
and bury it somewhere without it backfiring?
Right.
You can imagine the types of places where they would take and store this carbon.
And I promise you it wouldn't be anywhere near where any of these oil tycoons live.
Right.
Carbon capture and storage money, as far as I understand, it's not really coming with a lot of regulation.
So essentially the fossil fuel industry we get to regulate itself. And as a black woman in the Gulf South who drives through Cancer Alley, every time I go to see my mama, I don't like the odds of that scenario.
Yeah. These are the communities that already get the least amount of attention in every way. Right.
Any policy on any level like these are the places that people ignore.
How do we kind of combat these narratives and what more can we be pushing lawmakers to do?
Greenwashing abounds, you know, so take us critical eye to that. But, you know,
stepping back, I do get the need to pass the bill. And I'm really glad that the dam has broken on
climate action. And it's going to take work to make sure that this is the beginning and not the
end. So I want to make sure everybody listening understands that just because the bill is the biggest climate bill ever does not mean that it's anywhere near what we
actually need. And anybody working on climate knows that even the folks who like are extremely
happy about this bill know that it's not enough. So it's a stepping stone and it needs to be
treated that way. And we need to fight like hell to save this beautiful planet that we all live on. And we need to disabuse people in power of the idea that any casualties are allowable.
So any elected official needs to be doing everything that they possibly can.
We are really, really late in the game for incremental action.
So if there's a tool at anybody's disposal, they should use it, especially if they're an elected official.
The thing about climate action is that if we were going to go through a prescription of all of the things that need to be done, we would be here like all night and you would hate me.
But there's a million things that could be done to solve this.
And this is a start.
It's a way to build the momentum that
we need to go. So there's so much more to say about this bill. But if you aren't subscribed
to my podcast, Hot Take, go and do that now where we talk about this bill and so many other things,
climate. And that's the latest for now. We'll be back after some ads.
Now let's wrap up with some headlines.
Headlines.
On Friday, Indiana became the first state to ban nearly all abortions following the Supreme Court's devastating decision to overturn Roe earlier this summer. The law removes constitutional protections for any abortion procedures.
It makes exceptions for when the life of the mother or the fetus is at risk. It doesn't
really define those things. So those exceptions only sort of matter, as well as for cases of rape
and incest. But Republican lawmakers were even divided on these exceptions. One state representative
argued this bill does not go far enough and said during negotiations,
the body inside of the mom's body is not her body, not her body, not her choice.
Quick question.
Is it the representative's body?
You may wonder.
And the answer is it's especially not.
It's really super, super not his body.
Interesting.
At all in any way, shape or form.
Interestingly, one Republican senator said exceptions such as for rape are important,
especially for rape victims with disabilities.
And in his testimony, the lawmaker spoke about his daughter who has Down syndrome
and actually got choked up on the floor and had to step away.
It was this kind of moving moment until you remember that this guy is still
trying to keep many others from having the right to control their body
in a way that he feels so emotional
at the idea of his daughter having that right.
So it's just a reminder of how drastically
the game has changed in just a few months.
This law is going to go into effect on September 15th.
Yikes.
Yeah.
So it's turning now to Gaza.
A ceasefire was reached yesterday
after three days of intense fighting between Israel and Palestinian militants.
Over the weekend, Israeli airstrikes killed at least 44 Palestinians, including 15 children, according to the Palestinian Health Ministry.
Yeah, more than 300 in Gaza were injured in their literal defense.
Palestinians fired hundreds of rockets at Israeli towns and cities, but almost all of them were intercepted by Israel's missile defense system.
The violence on Saturday was the worst in the Gaza Strip since an 11-day war between Hamas and Israel in May of 2021.
Egypt helped broker this latest ceasefire agreement, although the Israeli prime minister's office said in a statement that if it's
violated, quote, the state of Israel maintains the right to respond strongly. I do not like the sound
of it. Yeah. Police in Albuquerque said on Saturday that a murderer may be targeting Muslim men in the
city. Authorities found the body of a Muslim man who was shot and killed over the weekend,
and they believe the murder could be connected to three other killings of Muslim men that have happened in the past year.
Police haven't made progress on a suspect, but officers did warn members of the Muslim
community on Saturday to look out for each other in the wake of the killings.
Oh my god, that must be terrifying.
Yeah, that's really scary.
Alex Jones might want to stock up on some of his own supplements because he was ordered to pay more than $45 million in punitive damages on Friday to the parents of a young child that was killed in the 2012 Sandy Hook Elementary School shooting.
Jones had already been ordered to pay $4 million in compensatory damages.
This sounds like a huge payout for the parents, but there's a catch. Texas law caps punitive damages, so Jones could pay as little as $1.5 million in that category.
The lawyer representing the parents did say that Jones could end up parents may have to go to the Texas Supreme Court
to get payment from a guy who has claimed that their like dead children who were killed in their
kindergarten classroom didn't exist and that they're scammers and has like basically sicked
people on them and put them through more torture. It's just unbelievable. President Biden can
officially return to his lifestyle of mixing and mingling with party animals all around the globe.
Because he is now negative for COVID, and this time hopefully it will stick.
He first saw the coveted single purple lion on Saturday and again yesterday.
He celebrated his new antibodies with a trip to Delaware to reunite with First Lady Jill Biden.
I do kind of love the idea of going on vacation to Delaware after you finish COVID.
It's very Biden.
Yeah, yeah.
Stays on brand.
But also I've heard that he secretly really wanted to go to Burning Man and that was the worst part of going to COVID.
It's a rumor I'm trying to start.
If you were at Burning Man and you spotted Joe Biden, please hit us up.
We want to know your whole story.
Or if you dressed up as him. So, and one last story, which should
be the basis of a mafia series
about climate change. Lake Mead
in Nevada revealed another
set of human skeletal remains
yesterday. For those of you who are
keeping track, this is the fourth set to turn
up this summer. As drought
causes Lake Mead's water levels
to drop, the high skeleton count
is partly explained by the reservoir's closeness to Las Vegas
with its large population of people with something to hide.
As former Vegas Mayor Oscar Goodman said earlier this year,
quote, there's no telling what we'll find in Lake Mead.
It's not a bad place to dump a body.
Okay, I'm sorry.
I just noticed that he said that earlier this year.
Not last month. Earlier this year. Yeah. He knows something. I love this. I love this. It's so
ex-Vegas mayor to me to be like, it's not a bad place to dump a body. It's just so chaotic. Yeah.
And those are the headlines.
That is all for today.
If you like the show, make sure you subscribe, leave a review, avoid Lake Mead, and tell your friends to listen.
And if you're into reading and not just rumors suggesting Kim and Pete may get back together like some of us,
What A Day is also a nightly newsletter.
Check it out and subscribe at crooked.com slash subscribe.
I'm Marianne E. Hegler.
I'm Josie Duffy Rice.
And enjoy your new antibodies, President Biden.
I really do love this idea of him being in the desert.
He could really get some clarity there. What a Day is a production of Crooked Media.
It's recorded and mixed by Bill Lance.
Jazzy Marine and Raven Yamamoto are our associate producers.
Our head writer is John Milstein, and our executive producer is Leo Duran.
Our theme music is by Colin Gilliard and Kshaka.