Vation City (AP) – Arnold Schwarzenegger played the climate skepticism of the Trump government on Tuesday and thrown its weight behind the Vatican’s environmental initiative. The individual choice, the local regulations and the moral leadership of the Catholic Church were far more vital to “terminate” global warming.
Schwarzenegger was in the Vatican to lead a three -day climate conference on the 10th anniversary of Pope Francis’ pioneering environmental cycle, Laudato Si (praised). The document, one of Francis’ main violations, threw the creation of God as an urgent moral imperative and started a broad basic movement that completely hugged Pope Leo XIV.
Schwarzenegger, the former Republican governor of California, has dedicated time for environmental causes since leaving the political office in 2011. His Schwarzenegger climate is one of the supporters of the Vatican Conference, which takes place on the newly opened environmental center of the Holy Path in Castel Gandolfo South von Rome from the Holy Way.
At a press conference, Schwarzenegger was asked about the recent comments by President Donald Trump for the United Nations General Assembly, where he mistakenly said that climate change was a “fraud”. Trump has long been a critic of climate science and the guidelines to support the world switch to green energies such as wind and solar. His administration has thrown back the landmarks, withdrawn the financing of the climate project and instead strengthened support for oil and gas production in the name of an agenda “American Energy Dominance”.
“Don’t use the federal government as an excuse,” Schwarzenegger told the Vatican Briefing. “It’s a simple way out.”
He remembered his legal battles with the Bush government on the environmental regulations in California as governor and a special victory in which “We said ‘Hasta La Vista, Baby’,” said Schwarzenegger and quoted his renowned line from “Terminator 2.”.
Schwarzenegger said that much more vital is individual decisions about the elimination of lights if they leave a space and a state directive to promote solar energy. With its 1.4 billion people, the Catholic Church also has a critical mass of people who can support environmental initiatives, he said.
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