A George Soros-funded government attorney in Texas has been leading the charge against a chemical manufacturing company that stands accused of jeopardizing the public safety.
Soros has been contributing to the campaigns of district attorneys in the past few election cycles through his Safety and Justice PAC. On the surface, the Soros donations appear to be geared toward achieving progressive policy changes in the realm of criminal justice.
Where Ogg is concerned, her lawsuit against Arkema North America provides some insight into where climate change activism figures into the equation.
Flood waters from Hurricane Harvey, which struck Southeast Texas in August 2017, knocked out a refrigeration system that stored organic peroxides at a company plant in Crosby, Texas, located about 25 miles from Houston, the county seat of Harris County.
Soros has a long history of supporting environmental activism detached from sound science that essentially weaponizes claims of manmade disaster and climate change against industry.
"In the absence of any compelling evidence that the company was negligent, much less criminally negligent, Ogg's case appears to be little more than ambulance-chasing by a public prosecutor seeking publicity to forward her political career," Cohen says.
It is worth recalling that funding from Soros went to support several left-leaning advocacy groups that figured prominently in People's Climate March held in Washington D.C. These same Soros-backed groups have also been operating in collusion with state attorneys general as part of a coordinated effort to prosecute energy companies and to silence climate skeptics who have made considerable headway in recent years.
https://spectator.org/soros-money-standing-behind-climate-activism-in-texas/
Soros has been contributing to the campaigns of district attorneys in the past few election cycles through his Safety and Justice PAC. On the surface, the Soros donations appear to be geared toward achieving progressive policy changes in the realm of criminal justice.
Where Ogg is concerned, her lawsuit against Arkema North America provides some insight into where climate change activism figures into the equation.
Flood waters from Hurricane Harvey, which struck Southeast Texas in August 2017, knocked out a refrigeration system that stored organic peroxides at a company plant in Crosby, Texas, located about 25 miles from Houston, the county seat of Harris County.
Soros has a long history of supporting environmental activism detached from sound science that essentially weaponizes claims of manmade disaster and climate change against industry.
"In the absence of any compelling evidence that the company was negligent, much less criminally negligent, Ogg's case appears to be little more than ambulance-chasing by a public prosecutor seeking publicity to forward her political career," Cohen says.
It is worth recalling that funding from Soros went to support several left-leaning advocacy groups that figured prominently in People's Climate March held in Washington D.C. These same Soros-backed groups have also been operating in collusion with state attorneys general as part of a coordinated effort to prosecute energy companies and to silence climate skeptics who have made considerable headway in recent years.
https://spectator.org/soros-money-standing-behind-climate-activism-in-texas/
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