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President Obama Rejects Keystone XL Pipeline, Mayor Blake Expresses Disappointment

Keystone XL pipeline, President Obama

President Obama recently announced his decision to reject the Keystone XL pipeline project application, a decision that has been in the works for 7 long years. Just hours after the decision was announced Fort McMurray Mayor Melissa Blake expressed her disappointment with the decision. Blake explained that Obama’s decision was not a big surprise but that it was a setback and a disappointment for the region. “It sort of had lead indicators all along that it probably wouldn’t find success. I think it’s unfortunate, because it doesn’t really round out (with) the evidence.” Many in Wood Buffalo and the United States believe that the decision by President Obama was motivated by politics instead of evidence and sound science.

The announcement about the Keystone XL pipeline by President Obama stated “Today we’re continuing to lead by example. Ultimately, if we’re going to prevent large parts of this earth from becoming not only inhospitable but uninhabitable in our lifetimes, we’re going to have to keep some fossil fuels in the ground rather than burn them.” Obama also called the oil product “dirtier crude oil.”. According to John Kerry, the U.S. Secretary of State, the pipeline would “facilitate transportation into our country of a particularly dirty source of fuel.” The decision comes as no surprise. Many have accused the Obama administration of playing fast and loose with the true facts involved in climate change and the role that oil and natural gas play in this change. Mayor Blake stated “Fundamentally, I would expect that people become a lot more informed than what they have been. It (shouldn’t) be a simple point-the-finger at the oilsands and blame them, it should be looking at the holistic approach and saying how do we as a nation make improvements in our (environmental) performance.”

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Politics U.S.

President Obama Announces Cybersecurity Plan, Many Say It Is Simply Past Proposals Revamped

cybersecurity, President Obama, past proposals
cybersecurity, President Obama, past proposals

The latest cybersecurity plan was recently announced by President Obama, but critics say that the leader of the USA is simply revamping past proposals which have failed or been highly controversial. The two biggest components so far seem to be information sharing and notification when breaches occur. Both of these proposed solutions have come up in the past and been dismissed for a number of reasons. Right now there is no national data breach notification law, and each state has their own laws on the books. This has led to a patchwork and companies may become confused about what laws apply to them, especially if a company operates in more than one state. The second controversial plan by President Obama would resurrect a cybersecurity bill from 2011 that was very controversial from the state.

The 2011 cybersecurity bill which is one of the past proposals that President Obama wants to revive has been dismissed by critics because it poses a serious threat to the privacy of Americans. Neither of the past proposals ever made it through Congress, and it is highly doubtful that either plan will make it through this time around either. The ideals and philosophies behind both of the plans are good, but few trust the US government when it comes to collecting or storing information after all of the spying on US citizens that has happened by government agencies in recent years. Since Edward Snowden revealed a number of secret programs and helped the public realize just how much information the government already collects even lawmakers have been wary.

 

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Politics U.S.

Can US Congress Stop President Obama From Acting on Immigration?

Can US Congress Stop President Obama From Acting on Immigration?
US Congress, President Obama

President Obama, the elected leader of the United States, is moving forward with his plans to act alone on immigration and to make major changes using an executive order. After the midterm election results this is a bold move, and perhaps a foolish one as well. Can the US Congress stop the president though, or are they helpless to do anything about the move that some say is presidential overreach? The United States Congress does have some options, but none that are without drawbacks and disadvantages though. Congress does control funding, and it is possible that the new Republican majority in both houses of the US Congress may decide to keep President Obama from any real changes to immigration by cutting off his access to funding for the programs that he is planning.

From all the reports so far neither President Obama nor the US Congress wants to shut down the government. This happened last year when both parties could not agree, and both sides received some blame and lost credibility and trust with the American public. This is not a scenario that anyone who is elected to their current position wants to revisit. There is talk of suing the president, but some believe there is a better solution. If the US Congress passes laws that make the executive orders from President Obama obsolete then this could be a winning solution for Republicans. A law restricting the number of work permits or green cards, or even a law requiring that immigration laws are enforced as written could solve the issue.