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Friday, May 12, 2017

An Important Letter


The following is a letter dated May 5, 2017 from the National Black Chamber of Commerce to President Trump asking him to withdraw from the Paris Climate Agreement.  You will not see this letter on the Mainstream Media.  

James H. Rust, professor of nuclear engineering (ret. Georgia Tech)

                                                                              
 NATIONAL BLACK CHAMBER OF COMMERCE
                               4400 Jennifer St NW Suite 331 Washington, DC 20015
                                                  202-466-6888 Fax 202-466-4918
                                        www.nationalbcc,.org.info@nationalbcc.org
                                              Open Letter to President Trump
May 5, 2016
The President 
The White House       
1600 Pennsylvania Avenue, N.W. Washington, DC   20500

Dear Mr. President:

You were swept into office on a tide of campaign promises that were aimed at ushering America into an era of renewed prosperity, leadership, and strength.  Since taking office, you have kept the faith of American voters and honored those promises through your actions.  On behalf of the millions of African Americans who have a stake in the businesses represented by the National Black Chamber of Commerce, I respectfully call on you today to keep yet another critical promise to the American people: Withdraw the United States from the Paris Agreement on climate change.

Our nation’s families and businesses depend on affordable, reliable energy every single day.  It is the lifeblood of our economy, it is fundamental to our modern society, and it is essential to our future strength, security, and growth.  Our continued participation in the Paris Agreement, however, threatens to undermine that very foundation of our strength.

Remaining in the Paris Agreement will keep us party to a deal that was skewed against America and her allies from the start.  Regardless of whether the United States’ Intended Nationally Determined Contribution (INDC) remains at the current 26 to 28 percent emissions reduction target, the Agreement itself unfairly demands stringent measures from the U.S. and other developed nations – measures that experts estimate will cost trillions of dollars and hundreds of thousands of jobs – while allowing nations like China and India to continue increasing their emissions and moving their economies forward. 

The U.S. will always have a seat at the table with the United Nations and, given our membership in the UNFCCC, with entities such as the Green Climate Fund.  What we cannot afford, however, is to willingly sacrifice our place as global economic leader to appease international bureaucrats who would seek to dictate what kinds of energy we use in America and how, when, and why we use them.  

We applaud you for taking important steps during the first 100 days of your presidency to begin dismantling many of the economically harmful energy regulations – couched as environmental policies, although they would provide minimal environmental benefits – put forward by the previous administration. 

Our entry into the Paris Agreement, however, was predicated on exactly those policies.  Keeping the United States a party to the Agreement would thus only serve to legitimize those misguided mandates and regulations.  Furthermore, doing so would provide credibility to a deal that seeks to better the economic fortunes of our international competitors at the expense of America’s strength and standing in the global marketplace.  That’s something we can’t afford.

Thank you for your consideration, and I look forward to your decision on this very important issue in the coming weeks.
Respectfully,  
Harry C. Alford President/CEO
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Note:  We thank Dr. Rust, one of our more frequent contributors, for this document.  It is an important indication of the motion of the tide in the national mind on this most important issue.  AV

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