They Knew In Advance–How The Ballot Steal Evolved…Ballots VS Voters And Votes…The Six Prongs of Election Subterfuge…Trump Jumps The Shark…Litigation About To Erupt (and it should)…Headshaking Ratatat

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“The clock is ticking,” said U.N. Secretary-General António Guterres in a speech kicking off this year’s United Nations Climate Change Conference, or COP27. “We are in the fight of our lives—and we’re losing.”

I’m in Sharm el-Sheikh this week, as more than a hundred world leaders convene at this Red Sea resort town in Egypt to discuss how to manage the climate crisis. More than 40,000 people are attending this year, and one imagines the delegates are driven by ambition, hope, and a desire for change. But when you listen to the speeches from world leaders here, it can feel as if you’ve heard it all before. The clock, after all, has been ticking for decades. 

The very fact that there is a COP27 means that we’ve been here 26 times before. Climate conferences have come to follow a pattern: Rich countries call for decarbonization; poor countries ask for funding to do so; lukewarm agreements are arrived at; the minimal promises made are rarely kept. And this year, the leaders of three of the four most populous countries—China, India, and Indonesia—are not even attending. 

Is it all doom and gloom? Yes and no. For starters, the movement to keep global warming below 1.5 degrees Celsius has likely failed. We’re more than halfway there, and the trend lines don’t look great. But that doesn’t mean it’s not worth continuing to fight to reduce emissions and prevent things from getting even worse. 

Simultaneously, two other issues are likely to get significant airtime in Sharm el-Sheikh this week in a way that wasn’t politically feasible in the past. The first of these is adaptation: Climate change is already devastating the world, whether it’s flooding in Pakistan or typhoons in the Americas, and countries need to build resilience to deal with the world’s reality. The second is the idea of dealing with our carbon legacy. While efforts must be made to limit new emissions, we need to fund measures to capture the immense amounts of carbon already in the atmosphere. Both these ideas once seemed as if they would get in the way of efforts to reduce emissions. The mood has now changed; the world needs an “all of the above” approach. 

As always, it’ll come down to the money: how to finance these projects, how to unlock public- private partnerships, and, perhaps most of all, how to ensure leaders deliver on the things they promise.—Ravi Agrawal, FP editor in chief

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  • Meet Iran’s Gen Z: With a rise in repression, the selection of a hard-line government, and a rotten economy that benefits only the well-connected elite, those in power in Iran are telling Iranian youth that their lives don’t matter. Frustrated and angry with the status quo, Iran’s Generation Z is shaking up the aging clerical establishment to a degree not seen since the country’s 1979 revolution. Read “Meet Iran’s Gen Z: the Driving Force Behind the Protests.”
  • U.S. Midterms: If, as predicted, Republicans gain control of the U.S. Congress, the consequences will be felt all over the world. Will U.S. support for Ukraine continue apace? Will a beleaguered President Joe Biden get tougher on China and Saudi Arabia? Executive editor Amelia Lester posed these and other questions to FP’s team of reporters on FP Live. Read a condensed transcript of the conversation
  • The Taiwan Question: Since the start of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine this year, there has been plenty of analysis of the conflict’s possible lessons for future wars, including implications for a potential military confrontation between the United States and China over Taiwan. Yet military planners and decision-makers are better served by focusing on the supposed lessons from Russia’s war about what they should avoid. Read “6 Wrong Lessons for Taiwan From the War in Ukraine.”

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Link to previous major COVID shows:

September 11, 2021

September 18, 2021

September 25, 2021

2 Responses to “They Knew In Advance–How The Ballot Steal Evolved…Ballots VS Voters And Votes…The Six Prongs of Election Subterfuge…Trump Jumps The Shark…Litigation About To Erupt (and it should)…Headshaking Ratatat”

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  1. Lisa Glauner says:

    Another outstanding show! In Wyoming, the head of the elections/corporations committee of the legislature (Dan Zwonitzer) moved out of his district, gerrymandered the district so his new home was in his old district, He voted using a PO Box as his address. He needs to be investigated.

    • Reid says:

      Thank you lisa!

      You are exactly correct. Not only do his shenanigans –some of which you outline in your comment– need to be investigated, but the Committees’ attempts to take away certain powers of the Secretary of State, the new WY SOS being an America First, election integrity proponent, need to be both investigated and throttled. The corruption and subterfuge that will be discovered, and the trail of money donations will link all these concerns. Getting this American mess turned around starts with the state legislatures in every state.. it is they and they only under the Constitution that can promulgate the laws that govern elections and who controls elections in each and every state.

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