Battle For The Consumer Protection Agency

Fact; Not Fake Trump News! After the financial collapse in 2008, President Obama and the Democrats passed legislation creating the CFPB, as one of the remedies protecting America from the evil doers ever again destroying the economy. The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau has returned more than $12 billion back to consumers who were cheated or deceived by banks, lenders and other tricksters. Some of the biggest recipients of these consumer protections are our Veterans and their families, who often struggle during deployments and are frequent victims of financial shenanigans; and of course the poorest of the poor, many who inexplicably voted for Trump. Does the recent Wells Fargo scandal ring a bell? The GOP’s rich and powerful political donors have given the Republi-cons their marching orders; destroy the CFPB! Tell your representatives to stand up for America’s consumers and the CFPB.    John Hanno

UPI: Acting consumer bureau chief sues Trump admin in power struggle

By Ed Adamczyk     November 27, 2017

Federal Consumer Protection Bureau acting director Leandra English filed a lawsuit Sunday to keep her position, after President Donald Trump named budget director Mick Mulvaney, pictured, to the post. File Photo by Olivier Douliery/UPI/Pool

Nov. 27 (UPI) — The acting head of the U.S. Consumer Financial Protection Bureau has filed a federal lawsuit that says President Donald Trump overstepped his authority by trying to replace her with budget director Mike Mulvaney.

The resignation Friday of CFPB chief Richard Cordray came after he appointed Leandra English, his former chief of staff, as acting director.

Trump, however, announced that Mulvaney, his Office of Management and Budget director, will take over the leadership post instead.

English argues in her lawsuit, filed late Sunday, that the court should deny the Trump administration’s claim that the Federal Vacancies Reform Act permits him to appoint a new director.

“The president’s purported or intended appointment of defendant Mulvaney as acting director of the CFPB is unlawful,” the legal challenge states. “The president’s use of the Federal Vacancies Reform Act to appoint an acting director of the CFPB would be an obvious contravention of Congress’s statutory scheme.”

The CFPB was established in 2011 to protect consumers in dealings with banks regarding debt collection, credit card and loan companies. Republicans have said the agency has too much power and unnecessarily burdens banks and credit card companies. Mulvaney, while a member of Congress, co-sponsored a bill to eliminate the agency.

A permanent director of the agency must be nominated by the president and confirmed by the Senate.

Sen. Lindsay Graham, R-S.C., told CNN Sunday that Trump is on “good ground” to appoint Mulvaney and called the CFPB “the most out of control, unaccountable federal agency in Washington.”

Mary McLeod, CFPB general counsel, said in a memo this weekend that Trump has the power to appoint Mulvaney.

“Statutory language, legislative history, precedent from the Office of Legal Counsel at the Department of Justice, and case law all point to the conclusion that the President may use the Vacancies Reform Act to designate an acting official, even when there is a succession statute under which another official may serve as acting,” she wrote.

“It’s a watchdog agency. Wall Street hates it like the devil hates holy water, and they’re trying to put an end to it with Mr. Mulvaney stepping into Cordray’s spot,” Sen. Dick Durbin, D-Ill., countered.

The Hill:  Succession battle at consumer agency intensifies

Reuters       November 27, 2017

The two officials both claiming to be the rightful acting director of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau are battling for control of the agency on Monday morning.

Office of Management and Budget Director Mike Mulvaney, who President Trump says is now in charge of the consumer bureau, showed up for work with donuts and ordered CFPB employees to ignore all directives from Deputy Director Leandra English and report them to the agency’s legal department, according to Reuters.

Mulvaney was seen entering the CFPB’s headquarters in downtown Washington carrying a Dunkin Donuts bag.

English, whom former CFPB Director Richard Cordray named as his successor, sent the director’s weekly email to CFPB employees this morning, addressing herself as the “acting director.”

She also briefed lawmakers at the Capitol Monday on her transitions plan, a source familiar with the plans told The Hill.

The White House told CNBC that Mulvaney was given access to the director’s office with full support from the bureau’s staff, despite the lawsuit filed against him and Trump by English.

English sued Trump and Mulvaney in federal court on Sunday night to block Mulvaney from taking acting directorship of the CFPB. She cited the CFPB’s line of succession as enacted in the Dodd-Frank Act, which calls on the deputy director to serve as acting chief when between permanent directors.

English claimed that Trump violated Congress’s will by claiming he had the power under the Federal Vacancies Act to supersede Dodd-Frank. However, the CFPB’s chief counsel issued memo to employees supporting the White House’s nomination of Mulvaney.

The Justice Department released memo on Saturday arguing that it is within Trump’s authority to appoint Mulvaney as the interim director of the CFPB.

Prominent Democrats, who have fiercely defended the CFPB under Cordray, called Trump’s appointment of Mulvaney an illegal attempt to destroy the agency from within.

While serving as a congressman before joining Trump’s administration, Mulvaney sponsored bills to eliminate the CFPB and backed other legislation to put it under closer legislative oversight.

Mulvaney has in the past called the bureau “a sick, sad joke” that shouldn’t exist.

Thanksgiving 2017

                Thanksgiving 2017

John Hanno  November 23, 2017  

For last years Thanksgiving Day post, I recounted my pure joy and feelings of hopefulness after Barack Obama was elected in 2008. After 8 years of the Bush administration’s blunders in Iraq, the avoidable financial collapse and a major Republi-cession, most of America was ready for a political reset.

The new president was left with a monumental mess; but with help from Speaker Pelosi, Harry Reid and a Democratic controlled Congress, his administration reluctantly bailed out the banks, saved the auto industry, reversed the monthly loss of 800,000 jobs, cut the unemployment rate by half, tripled the stock market and spent a significant amount of good will and political capital, giving 30 million American healthcare, many for the very first time. And all that in the face of unprecedented opposition from the Republi-cons.

That all changed last November, when America’s rust belt states decided they had nothing to lose by voting for an egotistical flim-flam candidate like Trump.

I wrote then that I was afraid Trump would show us “who he really was”: ‘Like probably 80% of Americans who did not vote for Mr. Trump, I’m worried for America’s children and grandchildren, the poor, our middle class, labor, the environment, our Democracy and half of the rest of the world. And I worry that Trump will try to undo  60 to 75% of what President Obama accomplished. President Obama set the bar high with his performance in repairing the economy after the Republicans drove it into a ditch, by repairing our reputation around the world and by his integrity and concern for all human beings. If the Trump Administration can do half as well, I will be surprised. I sincerely hope I’m proved wrong.’

Unfortunately I was all too right! Trump proves daily why a 3 million majority of voters chose Hillary and not him. Every worry I had about how Trump would govern has come to fruition, including how he would attempt to undo every one of President Obama’s and the Democrat’s accomplishments. He has a sick and maniacal obsession with erasing every speck of President Obama’s legacy. Many of us realized early on, that the cabinet he would assemble, would not drain the swamp but would construct a diabolical cabal of self dealing, self absorbed, self interested billionaires and multi-millionaires, who couldn’t care less about 99% of American’s health care, employment, education, financial protections, environment; and who are so thoroughly incapable and unwilling to “Make America Great Again.” And the cowardly and unpatriotic Republi-cons in congress are willing to go along with any of Trump’s hair brained ideas, as long as they can pay back their rich campaign contributors with lucrative tax breaks favoring the rich and powerful.

But I’m thankful the “Resistance” is as strong today (if not stronger) as it was when Trump was installed by hook or crook or collusion with a foreign evil doer last November.

In spite of the dread and chaos that has enveloped our Republi-con Federal governance, I’m thankful for special prosecutor Robert Mueller and his team of truth finders. Hopefully, they can prove to the world that America’s Democracy is not for sale and can’t be undermined by a ruthless despot like Vladimir Putin and his conspirators in the Ult-Right Grand Old Party.

I’m thankful there are patriotic professional athletes like Colin Kaepernick, who might be willing to forsake a lucrative career in order to stand up for what they believe in. And the NFL should be ashamed for not whole-heartedly  standing by these thoughtful and principled young people.

I’m thankful my fellow Veterans will stand strong against Trump and the Republi-cons in congress attempts to privatize the V.A. health system.

I’m thankful the climate deniers pushing the Keystone XL, including Trump and his fossil fuel pandering EPA chief Scott Pruitt, will be tied up for at least 2 more years, because by then it will be obvious, this toxic tar sand pipeline is already obsolete.

I’m thankful women everywhere are now stepping forward and demanding they are more than just sexual objects to be exploited or abused.

I’m thankful some of the critters now populating the new GOP are finally standing by these women.

One of them is not serial abuser Donald J. Trump, who has enthusiastically endorsed sexual predator Judge Roy Moore. He and ultra-partisan Alabama governor Kay Ivey would rather vote for a man barred from shopping malls and high school sporting events because he prayed on under-aged girls, instead of a decent democrat like Doug Jones for U.S. Senator. They believe a reliable Republican Senate vote is more important than moral integrity; and this from the family values pretenders.

The New York Post, left, and New York Daily News are arranged for a photo, Wednesday, Nov. 22, 2017. The papers will often tackle the same topics on their front page, but only when the stars align do their colorful headline writers get the same idea. Both were reporting Wednesday on President Donald Trump's backing of Republican Alabama Senate candidate Roy Moore, who is accused of molesting a 14-year-old girl decades ago. Moore denies the charge. (AP Photo/Mark Lennihan)

Alabama voters will ultimately prove how far we’ve come in healing America’s political, gender and racial divides, when it decides whether they want to be represented in the U.S. Senate by a pedophile who was booted off the Alabama Supreme Court twice or by a Democrat with a high moral reputation and long and honorable history of advocating for under-represented Americans, like the murdered little girls killed when Ku Klux Klan members planted sticks of dynamite beneath the steps of their church.

Image may contain: 1 person, smiling, suit and text

Repeated from last years post: I’m thankful for all the organic and sustainable farmers like myself, who feed their neighbors without spoiling the earth. And I’m thankful for the organizations like MOSES who promote and teach the next generation of protectors.

Also repeated from last year: ‘And in spite of how hard Mr. Trump, his exploitive cabinet, the fossil fuel pandering Republican controlled Congress and the evil doers in the fossil fuel industry work, to overturn progress made by the Obama Administration, to reverse climate change and global warming, they can’t stop the march to a cleaner more sustainable world. Alternative energy is cheaper than coal, oil and gas, it’s sustainable and 10’s of millions of people around the world are already enjoying it’s benefits. The world is using less coal, more wind, solar and alt energy, emitting less carbon dioxide and growing and farming more sustainably. More than 100 large corporations have pledged to become 100% renewable. Corporations, utilities, countries, states, cities and communities have promoted and invested in renewable energy. Even oil companies and insurance companies have woken up to the new sustainable world order. We are plodding forward. Trump, his fellow billionaires and the big banks who are heavily invested in fossil fuel assets will attempt to extract every ounce before America says, enough is enough. But they’re on the wrong side of preserving humanity.’

I’m thankful I’m able to post almost daily, stories about the progress entrepreneurs, cities, states, nations and businesses are making battling climate change and global warming.  Countries on every continent, Including ultra-polluters China and India are taking serious the existential climate threats to humankind. In spite of the powerful and entrenched deniers, human progress will not be abated.

And above all, I’m thankful (if we’re to believe the polls) America is waking up to the fact they elected a despot who would do anything, tell any lie, jeopardize any environment and demonize any opposition, in order to elevate himself and his families wealth and power, and his insatiable ego.

The Alabama election in December may portend what we have to look forward to in the 2018 mid-term elections. Most of America is standing firm against the assault on our democracy, by a GOP fully embedded with their incredibly rich and powerful patrons. And our journalists and free press are working overtime, uncovering the diabolical conspiracies that have replaced America’s once proud and principled leadership in the world. If they prevail, next Thanksgiving just might bring much more to be thankful for.

North Korea Women Are Raped, Sexually Abused And Not Represented Under Kim Jong Un’s Power

Newsweek – World

North Korea Women Are Raped, Sexually Abused And Not Represented Under Kim Jong Un’s Power

Greg Price, Newsweek           November 20, 2017      

North Korean women are subjected to rape and sexual assault while being denied education and work under Kim Jong Un’s totalitarian regime, a United Nations panel said Monday.

The UN Committee on the Elimination of Discrimination against Women found in its review of the North that women who managed to escape the regime’s clutches but were later brought back faced rape and assaults while in detention, Reuters reported.

According to the panel, the women who flee and return “are reportedly sent to labor training camps or prisons, accused of ‘illegal border crossing,’ and may be exposed to further violations of their human rights, including sexual violence by security officials and forced abortions.”

The panel said penalties for rape — including child rape, rape by a superior at work and recurrent rape — decreased in severity in 2012. In the case of rape by a work supervisor, the penalty was lowered from four years to three years in prison.

Kim himself was accused of having young girls pulled out of schools to be his sex slaves by a defector in September.

Women also lack access to education and are “under-represented or disadvantaged” in North Korea’s judicial system, according to the panel. Opportunities for management and leadership roles are scarce for them.

Twenty-eight percent of pregnant or lactating women were found to have “high levels of malnutrition.”

GettyImages-853458684In a photo taken on September 24, 2017 a women and child stand on a street in Pyongyang. AFP via Getty Images/Ed Jones

North Korea reportedly told the panel November 8 that recent economic sanctions were to blame for the poor treatment of women, and the panel agreed that the sanctions disproportionately affected women.

The United States and the UN have repeatedly tightened sanctions on the North this year to deter its rapidly expanding nuclear and missile defense programs. Kim has refused to cease weapons testing even as the U.S. and China have offered to come to the negotiating table, and it has accused America and its allies of preparing for a military strike or invasion.

This is only the latest instance of a UN panel exposing rampant human rights violations under Kim’s rule. Pyongyang has had a long and terrible history of human rights abuses and was ranked the fourth-worst nation in the world for human rights by watchdog group Freedom House.

The organization’s recent annual rankings put North Korea ahead of only Eritrea, Tibet and Syria in human rights, with North Koreans’ political rights and civil rights each scored at seven, the worst score possible for those categories.

American hostage mom describes brutal treatment by Taliban captors

ABC – Good Morning America

American hostage mom describes brutal treatment by Taliban captors

James Gordon Meek, Megan Christie, Brian Ross and Sean Langan,

Good Morning America          November 20, 2017 

PHOTO: Caitlan Coleman Boyle, 31, of Stewartstown, Pennsylvania, had three children while in Taliban captivity from 2012 to 2017. (ABC News)The American mom held hostage by the Taliban for five years says she was beaten and raped as she tried to protect her children from their captors.

Caitlan Coleman Boyle, 31, from Stewartstown, Pennsylvania — who was abducted while traveling in Afghanistan with her husband, Joshua Boyle, 34, of Perth-Andover, Canada, and had three children in captivity — described the brutal treatment her family endured in captivity, in an exclusive broadcast interview with ABC News.

She said some of their guards “hated children” and targeted their eldest son for beatings, sometimes with a stick, claiming the young boy was “making problems” or being “too loud.” When Coleman Boyle tried to intervene, she was beaten as well. “I would get beaten or hit or thrown on the ground,” Coleman Boyle said.

According to her husband, Coleman Boyle sustained serious injuries while fighting to keep their captors from her children.

“She had a broken cheekbone,” Boyle said. “She actually broke her own hand punching one of them. She broke her fingers, so she was very proud of that injury.”

She accused her captors of even more grievous crimes, saying the guards murdered their unborn daughter in a “forced abortion,” and she was later raped by two men in retribution for trying to report the crime to their superiors.

“They just kept saying that this will happen again if we don’t stop speaking about the forced abortion, that this happened because we were trying to tell people what they had done and that it would happen again,” Coleman Boyle said.

The two told ABC News they are speaking out so soon after their release because they want justice for their abusers, hoping Taliban leaders will be put on trial for war crimes or otherwise be held accountable in the tribal justice system.

“Our focus is on trying to hold accountable those who have committed grave human rights violations against us and against others,” Boyle said. “I lost a daughter. That was more of a crushing blow to me than the years. What they did was a crime against humanity by international law.”

American hostage mom and family freed 5 years after being kidnapped by Taliban

As families of freed hostages rejoice, tensions rise about their return

The couple was abducted while traveling in eastern Afghanistan’s war-torn Ghazni province in 2012, taken prisoner by the Haqqani network, an extremist element of the Afghan Taliban, and quickly transported to Pakistan. Coleman Boyle, who was pregnant at the time of their capture, gave birth to three children while in captivity.

The family was frequently moved to different locations through Pakistan’s tribal belt. According to Boyle, who says he was shackled for the duration of his captivity, the family was usually held in a single room, often underground, sometimes on a concrete floor, sometimes on a dirt floor. The parents used discarded items as makeshift toys for their children.

“We would just teach them to use things like bottle caps or bits of cardboard, garbage essentially, but what we could find to play with,” Coleman Boyle said.

He said they taught their eldest son the alphabet, geography and constellations and tried their best to make the horrible tolerable. They used British history — the tale of the execution of Charles I in 1649 — to make up a game about beheadings, to ease their eldest son’s fear, should their captors do the same to his parents.

“He certainly knew that this type of thing could happen to his family, so he had great fun pretending to be Oliver Cromwell chasing Charles I around and trying to behead him,” she said. “So we made it a game so that he wasn’t afraid, because there was, you know, there was nothing we could do if it came to that except try to make him less afraid.”

PHOTO: The family sat down with ABC News' Chief Investigative Correspondent Brian Ross in their first television interview since being freed from the Taliban. (ABC News)Danger, however, was never far from their minds. Coleman Boyle said they told their son “some” of what was happening to them but tried to keep “the worst bits” from him.

“But he had to know that these people were bad that he was interacting with, outside of his family,” she said. “That everyone else he saw, you couldn’t trust.”

The physical abuse of the family escalated, Boyle said, when the Haqqani network demanded he join the extremist group as a Western propagandist.

“They had come four different times, to offer employment in the group … and I made it very clear that I’d rather be the hostage than be on your side of the cage.” Boyle said. “I’d rather be inside than outside.”

His refusal had serious consequences.

“There were beatings. There was violence. Then they’d come to make the offer again. Still said no. More beatings, more violence. Maybe that’ll be the solution. Still no,” Boyle said. “And after the final time — that’s when they killed our daughter. And after that, there were no more intimations of recruitment.”

Coleman Boyle, who was taken hostage when she was more than six months pregnant with her first son, had to hide the pregnancies of her two other children born in captivity. Her husband helped her deliver them, she said, with no doctor present.

“They didn’t want us to have any more,” she said.

PHOTO: A still image from a video posted by the Taliban on social media, Dec. 19, 2016, shows American Caitlan Coleman next to her Canadian husband Joshua Boyle and their two sons. (Taliban/Social media via Reuters )She believes the guards put something in her food in 2014 to force a miscarriage of their unborn daughter, who the couple named Martyr Boyle. The couple complained to their captors and tried to slip notes to Taliban visitors informing them of the crime, so, the two said, their guards raped her while their eldest son was in the room to compel her to stay silent.

“One day they came into the cell, and they took my husband out forcefully, dragging him out, and one of the guards threw me down on the ground, hitting me and shouting, ‘I will kill you,’” Coleman Boyle said. “That’s when the assault happened. It was with two men. And then there was a third at the door. And afterwards, the animals wouldn’t even give me back my clothes.”

The day after she was raped, Coleman Boyle said, Pakistani gunships strafed Haqqani positions in North Waziristan.

“There were two helicopters with Gatling guns firing constantly,” she said. “There was a lot of AK-47 fire, and there were even some larger explosions.”

Shrapnel struck the buildings where Coleman Boyle and Boyle were held separately.

“It was a big, big battle. And our guards were hiding out of sight. They were absolutely terrified,” she said. “But my husband and I were each laughing to ourselves … thinking, ‘I hope that these sons of bitches die today.’”

Caitlan Coleman and her husband Joshua Boyle are seen here in this undated family photo. (Coleman Family)The family was freed in mid-October in what was described by the Pakistani army as an operation carried out by Pakistani troops, but details about that operation remain unclear.

Now living in Canada and trying to adjust to freedom, with the help of supporters such as HostageUS, Coleman Boyle and Boyle say the scars from years of abuse in captivity are only beginning to heal. They weren’t ready to answer lingering questions about his past and the circumstances leading to their capture and release.

Boyle was previously married to a fellow Canadian, Zaynab Khadr, who had family ties to al-Qaeda. Her father was a suspected al-Qaeda financer killed by Pakistani security forces, and her younger brother Omar Khadr was once the youngest detainee at the U.S. terrorist prison at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba. He has since been released.

When the family arrived in Toronto a month ago, Boyle told reporters at a press conference that he and Coleman Boyle were captured while trying to help poor Afghans.

“I was in Afghanistan helping the most neglected minority group in the world, those ordinary villagers who lived deep inside Taliban-controlled Afghanistan, where no NGO, no aid worker and no government has ever successfully been able bring the necessary help,” he said.

Boyle refused to discuss with ABC News why he was in Afghanistan, however, saying he has already answered those questions from the news media.

Coleman Boyle confirmed that she and her husband “made the decision” to have more children, but she and Boyle declined to explain that decision further.

“I think it’s a sad statement on the state of affairs of the world when a family is asked to justify their decision to have children in any circumstance,” he said.

And the circumstances of the family’s release remain in dispute. The U.S. government had planned a commando raid to secure the family, but officials were surprised when the family suddenly appeared in the custody of the Pakistani military. Boyle maintained that the family was rescued in a firefight.

“The only thing being exchanged was bullets,” he said.

In the meantime, the two are focused on the future and on their family. Coleman Boyle says it was the children who kept her going while she was in captivity, so after years of trauma, she hopes it’s time for them to heal.

“I hope that they find enough happiness and joy to make up for it,” Coleman Boyle said.

PHOTO: Now living in Canada, Caitlan Coleman Boyle says she is focused on helping her children make up for lost time. (ABC News)

Sean Langan is a British filmmaker and ABC News contributor who was held hostage by the Taliban’s Haqqani network in 2008 and has produced a new documentary, “The USA vs. Bergdahl,” about former Taliban prisoner U.S. Army Sgt. Bowe Bergdahl.

We Need Leaders Not In Love With Money, But In Love With Justice. MLK

Truth Theory‘s video to the group: Veterans against the G.O.P.

Yes!

Posted by Truth Theory on Sunday, September 24, 2017

How Canadians Solve Their Problems Without The 300 Million Guns America Covets.

How Canadians Solve Their Problems Without The 300 Million Guns America Covets.

Huge Snowball Fight

How Canadians Solve Their Problems

Posted by Only In Canada on Friday, November 10, 2017

Solar Panels in the Path of a Pipeline!

Tiny House Warriors

Solar Panels in the Path of a Pipeline! Tiny House Warriors + Lubicon Solar = #StopKM
Tiny House Warriors are building 10 Tiny Homes in the path of the Kinder Morgan pipeline and with the help of Lubicon Solar, we just solarized the first home! DONATE to help us stop destructive pipelines and build a renewable energy future! tinyhousewarriors.com & lubiconsolar.com

Solar Panels in the Path of a Pipeline

Solar Panels in the Path of a Pipeline! Tiny House Warriors + Lubicon Solar = #StopKMTiny House Warriors are building 10 Tiny Homes in the path of the Kinder Morgan pipeline and with the help of Lubicon Solar, we just solarized the first home! DONATE to help us stop destructive pipelines and build a renewable energy future! tinyhousewarriors.com & lubiconsolar.com

Posted by Tiny House Warriors on Wednesday, November 15, 2017

Rep. Tim Ryan Gives Fiery Speech Against Republican Tax Bill

Let’s call this what it is: Republicans in Congress just voted to put their campaign donors ahead of their constituents.

Text NOT ONE PENNY to 21333 now to be the first to know when your voice is needed to hold them accountable and stop this bill in the Senate!

Rep. Tim Ryan Gives Fiery Speech Against GOP Tax Plan

This rep. didn’t hold back on exposing just how ridiculous the GOP tax plan really is

Posted by NowThis Politics on Thursday, November 16, 2017

African Americans Disproportionately Suffer Health Effects of Oil and Gas Facilities

EcoWatch

African Americans Disproportionately Suffer Health Effects of Oil and Gas Facilities

David Leestma       November 15, 2017

https://resize.rbl.ms/simage/https%3A%2F%2Fassets.rbl.ms%2F14993599%2Forigin.jpg/1200%2C630/7aVA7%2Fen2LL2Ne73/img.jpgTeens play basketball at a public park in Port Arthur, Texas. Karen Kasmauski / International League of Conservation Photographers

African American communities face a disproportionate risk of health issues caused by gas and oil pollution, according to a report issued Tuesday by two advocacy groups.

The report from the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People and the Clean Air Task Force noted the importance of Obama-era U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) regulations that finalized standard for methane and ozone smog-forming volatile organic compound (VOCs). The report states that if the Trump administration’s dismantling of environmental regulations continues, the situation for African Americans will worsen.

The study found oil and natural gas facilities were built or currently exist within a half-mile of more than one million African Americans, exposing these communities to higher risks of cancer due to toxic emissions. “African-Americans are exposed to 38 percent more polluted air than Caucasian Americans, and they are 75 percent more likely to live in fence-line communities than the average American,” the report said, referring to neighborhoods near to gas and oil facilities.

Counties located in the Gulf Coast Basin are home to the most counties with oil refineries and higher percentages of African Americans. Michigan, Louisiana and Tennessee, the report found, have the highest percentage of African American residents living in oil refinery counties. Texas and Louisiana, both in the Gulf Coast Basin, were home to the largest African American individuals at risk for cancer, with nearly 900,000 living in areas above the EPA’s level of concern.

“The effects of oil and gas pollution are disproportionately afflicting African Americans, particularly cancer and respiratory issues, and the trend is only increasing,” said Dr. Doris Browne, the National Medical Association President.

The report also found that oil and natural gas industries violate the EPA’s air quality standards from natural gas emissions-related ozone smog in numerous African communities, causing more than 130,000 asthma attacks among school children. This results in more than 100,000 missed school days each year.

Defending the environmental protections finalized during the Obama administration and advocating for additional protections against pollution from the oil and gas industry will help improve the health of many African American communities, the study noted.

But the Trump administration has already begun to dismantle Obama-era EPA steps taken in 2016 that aimed to clean up toxic air pollutants such as benzene, formaldehyde and sulfur dioxide. It is also taking aim at 2016 EPA actions that address the 1.2 million existing sources of methane pollution and other airborne pollution. The White House claims these regulations are unnecessary industry burdens. The Trump administration’s moves are being challenged in courts around the country.

“What this administration is discovering as it attempts to undo vital health and environmental protections is that these sensible standards cannot simply be wished away, only to the benefit of the oil and gas industry,” said Sarah Uhl, program director of short-lived climate pollutants for Clean Air Task Force.

“Not only do we have the law on our side, we also have the medical and scientific communities who will help ensure that our air, and our health, particularly in fence-line communities, are protected to the full extent of the law.”

Trump’s top economic adviser can’t contain his surprise after CEOs say his tax plan won’t make them invest more

The Independent

Trump’s top economic adviser can’t contain his surprise after CEOs say his tax plan won’t make them invest more

Clark Mindock, The Independent      November 15, 2017

  https://s.yimg.com/lo/api/res/1.2/gdhCBO_9fNLc6Cdr8v9zWg--/YXBwaWQ9eW15O3c9NjQwO3E9NzU7c209MQ--/http://media.zenfs.com/en-GB/homerun/the_independent_635/d0567ae28826eb0bc3e8f42bcf403be4 White House economy adviser Gary Cohn appeared perplexed this week when a room full of CEOs said that the Trump administration’s tax plan wouldn’t inspire them to increase capital investments, but experts say that their reluctance to say they would should come at no surprise at all.

During an event for the Wall Street Journal’s CEO Council, an editor at that newspaper turned to ask the room a question: “If the tax reform bill goes through, do you plan to increase investment — your company’s investment, capital investment?” Prompted to raise their hands if so, very few shot their palms into the air. Mr Cohn, the White House Economic Council director, smiled uncomfortably at the response.

“Why aren’t the other hands up?” he asked, making a joke out of the spectacle.

But experts say that it isn’t hard to figure out why corporations might not want to take savings from cuts to the corporate tax cut and pump it back into their companies — all you have to do is look at who actually benefits financially from the cuts.

Citing a recent Moody’s report that estimate that the Trump tax plan would yield just a 0.3 percent economic growth rate for 10 years before a likely decline, Brooking Institute senior fellow William Gale noted that business leaders might be expecting declines in the long term.

“The reason there is so little growth to come out of the plan, and the reason why the executives were not so enthused to invest more, is that one of the biggest effects of the corporate tax rate cut is to provide a windfall gain to the owners,” Mr Gale told The Independent in an email.

“The rate cut rewards *old* investment, the returns to which are coming due now and being taxed as corporate income,” Mr Gale continued. “This is a very inefficient way to stimulate investment.”

In their efforts to pass a sweeping tax overhaul, Republicans have proposed a permanent and large tax cut for big businesses, even while American families would only receive a temporary tax cut that could expire as soon as 2023 (if the current House bill is approved) or 2026 (through the Senate’s current bill).

The corporate tax rate, currently at 35 per cent, would be cut to 20 per cent, which Republicans have argued will lead to faster growth, and more jobs.

In a call with reporters last month, Kevin Hassett, the chairman of the Council of Economic Advisers, said that the cuts to the corporate tax rate would boost wages because it would make it less expensive for businesses to invest in capital assets, like machines.

“More assets like machines let workers produce more, and when workers can produce more, businesses can afford to pay their workers more,” he said.

The response from Americans to the tax plan has been, generally, that the US population thinks the tax overhaul is meant to help out the rich, not the middle class. Public opinion polls, like the Quinnipiac poll released Wednesday, show that just 16 per cent of Americans think the overhaul will reduce how much they pay in taxes.

Meanwhile, a full 61 per cent say that they think the wealthy in America will benefit the most.