Joe Biden’s climate Envoy, John Kerry, said that for people to live a “better quality of life,” they must live under strict green new deal-style climate mandates.
In an interview with the BBC this week, Kerry said, “This is not complicated! It is the way we have chosen to propel our vehicles, heat our homes, light our factories and businesses.”
“We have two choices: you either capture the emissions, or you don’t create them in the first place,” Kerry added.
Kerry said that people can only have a better quality of life if fossil fuels are eliminated completely.
“[Climate] is not something where everybody has to go, ‘Oh my God, I don’t want to do this because it’s scary as hell and because we’re not gonna live the way we did.’ No! We will have a better quality of life!” John Kerry said.
However, the new climate mandates John Kerry is talking about does not apply to the private jet-setting elites; it applies to the peasants.
Kerry also said the US needs to “cooperate with China,” which is the biggest polluter in the world, to reduce carbon emissions.
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Currently, China is the biggest producer and consumer of coal.
And while Beijing ignores calls to reduce carbon emissions, the United States is moving backward and making millions of Americans suffer because of rolling blackouts.
Another clue that Kerry has no regard for the population having a “better quality of life” came when he declared last month that 10 billion humans on the planet are “unsustainable.”
The global population hit eight billion people in November 2022, three times the figure recorded in 1950.
According to U.N. projections, the current figure is set to hit 9.7 billion humans on the planet by the middle of the century.
However, Kerry expressed fears about the current population growth, outlining his plans to the AFP.
“I don’t think it’s sustainable, personally,” Kerry said.
“We need to figure out how we’re going to deal with the issue of sustainability and the numbers of people we’re trying to take care of on the planet,” he added.
Other supporters of driving behavioral change in order to lessen population growth include The World Economic Forum, which has been pushing for meat alternatives and the consumption of bugs.