By Bob Plain in Rhode Island’s Future
That’s the language of an amendment Rhode Island Senator
Sheldon Whitehouse squeezed into a bill on the Keystone Pipeline, which was
overwhelmingly approved – and even co-sponsored by Oklahoma Sen. James Inhofe.
No small feat, considering Inhofe, an infamous climate change denier,
once wrote a book called, “The Greatest Hoax: How the
Global Warming Conspiracy Threatens Your Future.”
Whitehouse
chalked it up as a victory. “This resolution marks a historic shift for many of
my Republican colleagues,” he said in a statement. “While a number of
Republicans have long acknowledged that climate change is real, including
Senator Graham who spoke once again today, many others either denied the
science or refused to discuss it.”
But
the beltway media suggests the idea may have backfired.
Inhofe
countered that there exists “Biblical evidence” of climate change and blocked a
vote on whether or not humans are contributing.
“It
was a nifty, if insincere, bit of politics,” wrote the Washington Post. “There’s no question that a
vote against a flat statement that climate change is real could have been
problematic for candidates down the road — especially for those various
Republican senators quietly preparing for the big election in 2016. With
Inhofe’s re-framing the question, the Democrats, trying to engineer a gotcha
moment, ended up empty-handed on the vote, with neither the satisfaction of
nailing down opposition to scientific consensus and without a point of leverage
for future discussions of addressing the warming planet.”
Whitehouse
was pleased to have at least gained some consensus. “I was glad to see almost
every Republican, including Senator Inhofe, acknowledge the reality of climate
change today,” he said, “and I hope this means we can move on to discussing not
just whether climate change is real, but what we should do about it.”
Bob Plain is the
editor/publisher of Rhode Island's Future. Previously, he's worked as a
reporter for several different news organizations both in Rhode Island and
across the country.