‘You Can’t Regulate God’ Says Texas Republican

The U.S. House of Representatives just voted on and passed a bill providing $15.3 billion for states impacted by Hurricane Harvey, mostly Texas and Louisiana. It is now on its way to President Trump’s desk, where he is expected to sign it. The vote was 316-90. All 90 “no” votes were from Republicans, including four Republicans from Texas. No Democrats voted against it.

316-90:House PASSES $15.25B Harvey aid/CR/debt limit increase/flood insurance bill.More Dems voted Yes than Republicans; All 90 Nos were Rs. pic.twitter.com/INlgXEVGjW â€” Craig Caplan (@CraigCaplan) September 8, 2017

The legislationÂ also raises the debt ceiling for a three-month period, a vital congressional responsibility that, if not taken, would lead to the U.S. government defaulting on its debts, sending Americans and worldwide markets into a tailspin.

Nearly six out of ten House Republicans are climate change deniers. No House Democrat is.Â

“Of the 180 climate science deniers in the 115th Congress, 142 are in the House and 38 are in the Senate,” ThinkProgress reports. “Thatâ€™s more than 59 percent of the Republican House caucus and 73 percent of Republicans in the Senate that deny theÂ scientific consensusÂ that climate change is happening, human activity is the main cause, and it is a serious threat. No Democrats publicly deny the science behind climate change.”

GOPÂ Rep. Joe Barton, a Tea Party whackadoodle who earlier this year told a constituent at a town hall to “shut up,” was one of the four “no” votes from Texas. He “saidÂ this week that the deal amounted to asking lawmakers to essentially ‘sign a blank check,’ to addÂ to the nation’s nearly $20 trillion debt,” The Dallas Morning News reports.

Climate change is making hurricanes like Harvey, and now Irma, worse.Â

Climate change deniers like Rep. Barton â€“Â who actually sits on the HouseÂ Subcommittee on Environment and Economy â€“Â are part of the problem, and they now part of the problem in fixing the problems their views and actions have helped to create.

Unsurprisingly, Rep. Barton hasÂ accepted well over $2 millionÂ inÂ campaignÂ contributionsÂ from the oil and gas industry.

The “party of responsibility” has demonstratedÂ none.

Barton, by the way, once suggested that wind is a “finite resource.”

He has used the biblical great flood as evidence climateÂ change is not man-made (video above), and said in response to global warming, find some shade:

Barton also once blasted then-House Speaker Nancy Pelosi over a climate change bill, saying,Â “You can’t regulate God.”

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