Global Climate Protection Act of 1987
On January 20, 1987, Senator Joe Biden introduced in the Senate, S.420 – A bill to initiate a United States strategy, and to further multilateral action, in response to the problem of global warming. The bill was introduced as the Global Climate Protection Act of 1987. After introduction there was no further action. Instead, this legislation was slipped into a Foreign Relations Appropriations bill – H.R. 1777 as Title XI that became Public Law 100-204, 12/22/1987.
Text of S.420:
Global Climate Protection Act of 1987 – Directs the President to establish a Task Force on the Global Climate to research, develop, and implement a coordinated national strategy on global climate. Requires such Task Force to transmit a United States Strategy on the Global Climate to the President within a year. Requires the President to then report to specified Members of Congress on such report.
Directs the President to appoint an ambassador at large to coordinate Federal efforts in multilateral activities relating to global warming.
Directs the Secretary of State to promote the early designation of an International Year of Global Climate Protection.
Urges the President to give climate protection high priority on the agenda of U.S.-Soviet relations.
When you look at Title XI in the appropriations bill HR 1777 (pdf page 77), you’ll see that they expanded on the concepts and named the Secretary of State and the EPA as leading the effort.
It’s not coincidence that the Secretary of State and EPA would be named as the regulatory managers. In 1983, President Ronald Reagan signed a treaty with Mexico creating an international zone on the border for the purpose of environmental cleanup of the border area. The Secretary of State and the EPA were designated to lead this effort.
As this writer sees it, this was a coup d’etat on America. It was the State Department in collusion with the CEQ-EPA for the internationalization and stealth regulatory capture by means of environmental regulation.
Pollution Prevention Act of 1990
On October 25, 1990, H.R. 5931, the Pollution Prevention Act of 1990 was introduced in the House of Representatives by Howard Wolpe (D-MI).
The legislation was referred to Committee. It was never voted on by Congress as policy legislation. It was put into an Appropriations bill (H.R. 5835) by Leon Panetta. The Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act of 1990 became Public Law 101-508 on November 5, 1990.
The EPA accepted it as law and began regulating as if it was the policy of the United States even though the Congress never voted on it as policy – only as authorization for money to be spent.
H.R. 776 – Energy Policy Act of 1992, no doubt written by the Department of Energy became Public Law 102-486, October 10, 1992. The scientific dictatorship is established and the mandates on the states and domestic corporations are stunning.
The responsibility for Title XI (Secretary of State and the EPA) corresponds to the responsibility assignment for the international zone on the border between Mexico and the United States. That international zone was established by the treaty signed by Ronald Reagan and de la Madrid in 1983.