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Setbacks in the Fight Against Climate Change

Setbacks in the Fight Against Climate Change

New York Times3 days ago
To the Editor:
Re 'E.P.A. to Retract Bedrock Finding on Climate Crisis' (front page, July 30):
The Environmental Protection Agency has decided to dispense with the scientific finding that recognizes climate change as a danger to humans, despite a consensus to the contrary among scientists around the world, thus revoking the E.P.A.'s ability to regulate climate change.
When a democratically elected government lies to its citizens on a matter of life and death, what legitimacy does that government have?
I ask Lee Zeldin, the E.P.A. administrator, and Republicans in Congress: Which is more important, protecting the citizens of the U.S. from the life-threatening effects of climate change, or pleasing President Trump?
David BaldwinPetaluma, Calif.
To the Editor:
Re 'NASA Website Will Not Provide Previous National Climate Reports' (news article, nytimes.com, July 14):
It's a grim irony that as responders searched for and recovered bodies from climate-intensified flooding in Texas, the Trump administration was burying the nation's premier climate assessment.
President Trump's relentless gutting of climate and weather science means that more Americans will get hurt and die while the fossil fuel polluters driving the climate crisis reap the benefits. For 25 years, the National Climate Assessments have mapped out vital information about how climate change is affecting the nation and our neighborhoods, now and into the future.
They're critical guides to helping governments plan and prepare. They serve as warnings of what awaits if we don't quickly move from climate-heating fossil fuels to affordable, clean energy.
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