Dianne Feinstein reaction is why young people desperately want new leadership in Congress

“You come in here, and you say it has to be my way or the highway. I don’t respond to that.”
— U.S. Sen. Dianne Feinstein, D-Calif., responding to a group of children

Some morons thought they would try to force Dianne Feinstein to support the New Green Deal by tossing propagandized kids at her and recording it, and Feinstein slapped them down in glorious fashion!! 

Even Republicans are loving this one! BEHOLD:

This is how Sen. Feinstein reacted to children asking her to support the resolution -- with smugness + disrespect.

This is a fight for our generation's survival. Her reaction is why young people desperately want new leadership in Congress.
She’s like, “kids, I’m 200 years old I don’t really give a damn anymore.”
Man, Feinstein is so old she probably thought she was talking to Ocasio-Cortez directly! LOL!
She is so condescending, you can tell she just isn’t putting up with this BS that Ocasio-Cortez is trying to sell to the dems. And I love it!!

Comments

  1. Dianne Feinstein scolds kids who pushed her to back Green New Deal: 'I know what I'm doing'

    Democratic Sen. Dianne Feinstein pulled rank Friday when a group of kids tried to school her on climate change.

    After the group sought her support for the Green New Deal, the 85-year-old senior senator from California let them know she wasn't about to be bossed around by a bunch of youngsters.

    "You know what’s interesting about this group?," Feinstein said, in an interaction that was captured on video. "I’ve been doing this for 30 years. I know what I’m doing.

    “You come in here, and you say it has to be my way or the highway. I don’t respond to that,” Feinstein continued. “I’ve gotten elected, I just ran. I was elected by almost a million-vote plurality. And I know what I’m doing. So you know, maybe people should listen a little bit.”

    Sunrise Movement, an organization that describes itself as wanting to “stop climate change,” shared a clip of the exchange on its Twitter page Friday.

    “This is how @SenFeinstein reacted to children asking her to support the #GreenNewDeal resolution -- with smugness + disrespect. This is a fight for our generation's survival. Her reaction is why young people desperately want new leadership in Congress,” the tweet with the video said.

    The video begins with the group explaining that they wanted to present a letter to Feinstein and ask her "to vote yes on the Green New Deal.” It then cuts to a shot of the group standing before the U.S. senator from California, expressing their request.

    In response to their request, Feinstein informs them that “We have our own Green New Deal.” And then came the point where Feinstein drew the line.

    The sides then devolve into a back-and-forth until someone reminds Feinstein that they are “the people who voted” for her and part of her job is to hear their concerns.

    “How old are you?” Feinstein asks.

    “I’m sixteen. I can’t vote,” the girl replies.

    “Well, you didn’t vote for me,” the lawmaker retorts.

    In another portion of the video, Feinstein is heard telling the kids that she’s “trying to do the best” that she can, “which was to write a responsible resolution.”

    “Any plan that doesn’t take bold, transformative action is not going to be what we need,” a female in the crowd says.

    Feinstein then replies: “Well, you know better than I do. So, I think one day you should run for the Senate. And then you can do it your way.”

    Feinstein later addressed the exchange in a news release, confirming that she met with a group of children, young adults and parents from the Sunrise Movement who sought her backing for the resolution.

    “Unfortunately, it was a brief meeting but I want the children to know they were heard loud and clear. I have been and remain committed to doing everything I can to enact real, meaningful climate change legislation,” she wrote.

    “We had a spirited discussion and I presented the group with my draft resolution that provides specific responses to the climate change crisis, which I plan to introduce soon,” she continued. “I always welcome the opportunity to hear from

    ReplyDelete
  2. Feinstein knows Green New Deal is an impossible dream – Gives students lesson in reality

    When you find yourself further to the left than uber-liberal Sen. Dianne Feinstein, D-Calif., you know you’ve left common sense and reality far behind and gone way, way off the deep end and entered Fantasy Land.

    That happened Friday when a group of middle school and high school students confronted Feinstein in her San Francisco office and demanded she support the Green New Deal – a nonbinding resolution before Congress that’s a collection of impossible dreams that are impossible to achieve and impossible to pay for.

    The visit by the children was organized by a radical environmental group called the Sunrise Movement.

    The Green New Deal is a nonbinding resolution introduced in Congress by democratic socialist Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, D-N.Y., and Sen. Ed Markey, D-Mass. It’s supposed to be a successor to the New Deal created by President Franklin Delano Roosevelt in 1933 to lift America out of the Great Depression.

    Yet several Democratic presidential candidates – including Sens. Cory Booker of New Jersey, Kirsten Gillibrand of New York, Kamala Harris of California, Bernie Sanders of Vermont and Elizabeth Warren of Massachusetts – have endorsed the Green New Deal resolution.

    But the Green New Deal is far more ambitious – and unrealistic – than Roosevelt’s New Deal. Instead of creating jobs, as the New Deal did, the Green New Deal would destroy them. And instead of lifting America out of a Great Depression, the Green New Deal would likely plunge us into one.

    Among many other radical steps, the Green New Deal would eliminate nearly all fossil fuels in the United States in just 10 years. It would require every building in the United States – including every home – to be retrofitted for energy efficiency.

    The Green New Deal would require cattle to be eliminated because the gas they emit speeds up climate change. High speed trains would replace air travel. Everyone would be given a guaranteed income, even if they were able-bodied but too lazy to work.

    And the trillions and trillions of dollars needed to pay for all this would come from sky-high taxes and by printing a virtually endless supply of money.

    All that’s missing from the resolution is a requirement to change the name of our country to the People’s Republic of La-la Land and to add a bust of Karl Marx onto Mount Rushmore.

    ReplyDelete
  3. When the children called on Feinstein to support the Green New Deal, she responded: “There’s no way to pay for it.”

    “We have our own Green New Deal” Feinstein said, referring to her own much more modest draft resolution that she later said “provides specific responses to the climate change crisis.”

    One child in the group then told Feinstein the Green New Deal must be passed because “some scientists have said that we have 12 years to turn this around” and avert a climate change catastrophe.

    After Feinstein explained that “it’s not going to get turned around in 10 years” – a core element of the Green New Deal – a woman accompanying the children scolded the senator, telling Feinstein that “you’re looking at the faces of the people who are going to be living with these consequences.”

    Feinstein, clearly frustrated, fired back.

    “You know what’s interesting about this group?” Feinstein said. “I’ve been doing this for 30 years. I know what I’m doing.”

    The Sunrise Movement, which helped Ocasio-Cortez develop her Green New Deal resolution, has its roots in other far-left eco-socialist groups, as well as a long history of trying to bully lawmakers into supporting its radical climate change agenda.

    Last November the Sunrise Movement organized a sit-in at the office of now-House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., to try to force her to support an earlier version of the Green New Deal.

    So it isn’t surprising to see these radical environmentalists – who regularly exploit impressionable children to support their policy agenda – try to pull a similar stunt with Feinstein.

    But even the far-left Feinstein acknowledges the Green New Deal’s 10-year timetable and dramatic goals are wildly unrealistic.

    The Green New Deal would destroy – at minimum – 3.4 million jobs in the oil, gas, and coal industries. It would also drastically increase energy costs, likely obliterating millions of additional jobs in manufacturing and other industries. And it would create a slew of new socialist welfare programs.

    Among the new government programs would be a free-tuition college plan, a federal jobs guarantee, single-payer health care, and guarantees for “universal access” to health foods and “economic security.”

    Ocasio-Cortez and Markey’s socialist scheme would cost tens of trillions of dollars in just the first decade. The Mercatus Center estimates the single-payer health care provision alone would cost $32 trillion in the first 10 years.

    Yet several Democratic presidential candidates – including Sens. Cory Booker of New Jersey, Kirsten Gillibrand of New York, Kamala Harris of California, Bernie Sanders of Vermont and Elizabeth Warren of Massachusetts – have endorsed the Green New Deal resolution.

    Ocasio-Cortez has floated the idea of increasing the top tax rate for those earning $10 million or more to 70 percent as one way to fund the plan, but an analysis by the Tax Foundation found that this huge tax increase would, at best, raise less than $300 billion over a decade – nowhere near enough for the multitrillion-dollar Green New Deal.

    The United States cannot afford to finance this insane proposal. The national government is already $22 trillion in debt, and it adds hundreds of billions of dollars in additional debt every year.

    But even if Americans could afford it, pulling millions of gasoline-powered vehicles off U.S. roadways, building thousands of new solar panels and wind farms, “upgrading” every home and business building in the country, and constructing nationwide high-speed rail lines cannot be achieved in 10 years.

    No one knows this better than Feinstein. California was recently forced to abandon its plan for a high-speed rail line that would have connected Los Angeles to San Francisco. Instead, the line might never reach either city, after 11 years of construction and nearly $100 billion in costs.

    ReplyDelete

  4. If Democrats can’t manage to build a single high-speed rail line between two of America’s largest and wealthiest cities in 11 years, why would anyone believe it’s possible to accomplish even a miniscule amount of what’s being proposed in the Green New Deal in just a single decade?

    The Green New Deal is nothing more than a fantasy concocted by the growing socialist wing of the Democratic Party. We have a better chance of stumbling on a unicorn or finding that elusive pot of gold at the end of a rainbow than we do of achieving the Green New Deal’s proposed mandates.

    Even the normally unrealistic, extremely liberal Dianne Feinstein gets it. Why doesn’t the rest of the Democratic Party?

    ReplyDelete

Post a Comment

Popular posts from this blog

NBC Washington Correspondent Yamiche Alcindor and former U.S. Attorney Barbara McQuade join Andrea Mitchell to discuss key challenges facing the January 6 Committee ahead of their primetime hearings this week: getting a "distracted nation" to pay attention and understand what's at stake. “I think the biggest challenge for lawmakers here, as they talk about these sort of huge ideas of American democracy and sort of the experiment that we're all living in, benefiting from, possibly being brought to his knees, is whether or not they can make people care,” says Alcindor. “The American public has been groomed to expect high value quick entertainment,” says McQuade. "I think putting together a polished show can be very important."

Cuomo, Lemon discuss Trump's comments on race

Alan Dershowitz and Matt Bevin discuss the Covington Catholic High School student's $250 million lawsuit