Anonymous ID: 59fcba Dec. 3, 2019, 5:17 p.m. No.7422040   🗄️.is 🔗kun

https://theconservativetreehouse.com/2017/06/03/u-s-paid-1-billion-to-paris-agreement-green-fund-all-other-nations-combined-0/

 

The Paris Treaty was/is always about distribution of economic wealth; and the convenient use of “climate phrases” as branding instruments used to create political policy favorable to multinational corporate interests who control the shifting of economic wealth.

 

Listen to the responses from participating EU corporate comptrollers discussing climate and the entire purpose of the Paris Treaty becomes self-evident. Example:

 

“The preservation of our competitive position is the precondition for successful climate protection. This correlation is often underestimated.”

 

~ Matthias Wissmann, President of German Auto Industry Group VDA

 

The preservation of Germany’s competitive auto manufacturing position is contingent upon the U.S. exporting it’s wealth and handcuffing itself to a faux-climate treaty. Do not take my word for it, read Wissmann’s own interview. The Paris Treaty is nothing about climate, and everything about economics and multinational corporate interests.

 

Forbes on Fox had an interesting discussion segment earlier today where some of the panel participants explained and discussed this exact issue. The Paris Climate Treaty was never about “climate” it was fundamentally about “economics”.

 

https://theconservativetreehouse.com/2017/06/02/it-begins-german-auto-makers-fear-losing-competitive-advantage-over-u-s/

 

For those following along over the past two years this will not come as a surprise. European manufacturers understand the entire foundation for the Paris Treaty was about economics, economic advantages and the transfer of economic strength away from the U.S., not climate. Specifically for Germany the outlook is especially troubling.

 

First, Germany will be the primary EU country to fill the financial void from the U.K. leaving the EU (Brexit); that financial hole is approximately €15 billion per year. Secondly, Germany will be faced with having to renegotiate trade deals with the U.S. while they remain encumbered with the regulatory burden of the Paris treaty, while the U.S. negotiators are not. This is a large advantage for Team America.