Friday, June 21, 2024

MAGA MORON STATE SENATOR RYAN FATTMAN holds up ENERGY BILL!

"R" voters are conspicuously UNINFORMED! 
It's time to gather FACTS & stop blindly following.


There is something seriously wrong with these uninformed MASS GOP CLOWNS 

who regurgitate FOSSIL FUEL PROPAGANDA and are incapable of INFORMING 

themselves. If the information is widely available, they are simply BLIND or in 

DENIAL or maybe campaign contributions blind them.

GRANDSTANDING & GENUFLECTING TO DIRTY ENERGY! 

BRAIN DEAD STATE SENATOR RYAN FATTMAN HELD UP THE ENERGY BILL 

BECAUSE HE'S TOO DUMB TO INFORM HIMSELF!

This BRAIN DEAD SENATOR was among 3 MASS GOP EXTREMISTS who rushed 

to endorse Fascist Ron DeSantis, the BOOK  BANNER who slashed STORMWATER 

FUNDING and FLORIDA is now underwater. 

The other 2 MAGA DIMWITS are PETER DURANT and State Rep. KELLY PEASE. 

They're just TOO DUMB to inform themselves about the massive destruction in 

FLORIDA caused by FLORIDA REPUBLICANS & DESANTIS. 

Informed MASSACHUSETTS VOTERS do NOT elect REPUBLICANS for good 

reason. 

CLEAN ENERGY, RENEWABLE ENERGY are CHEAPER and CREATE JOBS, 

something REPUBLICANS want to ignore. 

In this venue, there are far too many articles and studies - FACTS - that the EXTREMIST UNINFORMED MAGA CLOWNS ignore. 

- SEARCH FEATURE on the RIGHT

GAS???? 

GAS = METHANE! They don't even comprehend the meaning. FATTMAN missed that 

science class. 

GAS is obtained through FRACKING. There is adequate evidence that addresses the 

hazards of FRACKING & that TOXIC CHEMICALS & EXCESS WATER COMSUMPTION 

are serious environmental issues - apparently ignored by the MAGA UNINFORMED. Those FRACKING CHEMICALS have destroyed DRINKING WATER. 


GAS? There are pages of articles that address the issue of GAS STOVES that FATTMAN 
can't seem to locate. 



The Health Risks of Gas Stoves Explained

SCIENTIFIC AMERICAN

‘No safe amount of exposure’ to gas stove pollution

HARVARD T.H. CHAN


 








FROM: 

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By Ella Adams & Keith Regan


While the Boston Celtics are parading down Tremont this afternoon, just up the hill, Bay State senators will be gaveling in for a rare Friday session.


Yesterday afternoon, just as the Senate was getting ready to discuss a siting and clean energy bill, Republican Sen. Ryan Fattman made a motion to lay the proposal on the table. The move postponed consideration of the climate bill until today at 1 p.m.


Fattman said on the floor that he's concerned the bill would drive up utility rates, and that the restrictions on natural gas in the bill that could impact the economy were "incredibly concerning."


The bill was introduced Monday  a timeline Fattman argued was too cramped to get lobbyist or public input on the proposal. His concerns reflect those of some other coalitions and associations, who this week spoke out in opposition to pieces of the bill. 


Some groups are fretting about the limitations that would be put on natural gas service  and what they say would be rate increases as a result  during the clean energy transition. The bill's advocates argue, however, that measure will instead keep energy costs down for Bay Staters.


The motion to lay a bill on the table serves as a way to outright postpone a bill's consideration. Fattman invoked Senate Rules, using the enshrined right among senators to delay the measure without question and push the topic to the following session. 


It could very well happen again: such motions are allowed three times in the Senate. And if the energy siting bill gets pushed into next week, senators might find themselves in the position of taking up that dense measure only a couple of days or hours before a massive housing bond bill expected to emerge.


This climate bill is one of numerous bills Democrats across both chambers have waited until the final two months of the session to introduce, which also includes a plastics regulation bill the Senate passed earlier Thursday.


With a Republican in the Senate exercising his power against the Democrat-backed energy proposal, Fattman could be providing some foreshadowing for the jammed weeks ahead. It'll be a long road if this is any indication of how other, far larger bills may fare. — Ella Adams

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