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Have no fellowship with the unfruitful works of darkness, but rather reprove them - Ephesians 5-11
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Saturday, April 27, 2019
California Demands Restaurants Charge Customers 1% 'Climate Change' Fee
That's one way to shove a programming agenda deep in your subconscious and earn some illicit coin while in the process.
Global Warming or whatever it is they are calling it this week has been well-proven in this site for the total mind control scam that it is. It's about Agenda 21/30. If you don't know what that is, then how can you possibly understand what is going on around you?
Any establishment that does this, either by choice or force, loses my business. Bet they don't announce the fee, it just appears there as some kind of service charge.
DB
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As
the state with one of the highest costs of living, largely due to its
'green' regulations on vehicle emissions and other initiatives that have
earned it the nickname 'taxifornia', the last thing most Californians
want to do is pay even more in unnecessary surcharges, fees and taxes.
Yet that's exactly what one militant climate-change advocacy group is asking them to do.
According to CBS Sacramento,
a group called the Perennial Farming Initiative is asking restaurateurs
to sign up for passing an "optional" 1% surcharge along to their
patrons. The money will be funneled to the California Air Resource
Board, and spent on plans to implement "carbon plans on farms and
ranches."
The plan, called the Restore California Renewable Restaurants,
ultimately aims to take carbon emissions out of the air and transplant
them into the soil, where they can help plants grow.
But unsurprisingly, people in liberal-leaning Sacramento appeared to be split on the plan.
"There’s always going to be the people who say, why is this on the bill? I don’t want to pay it. I don’t care what it’s for. I don’t want to pay it," Christopher Barnum-Dann, the owner of Localis, said.
Though the group argued that the 1% surcharge would be insignificant
to most people, and diners relying on a fixed income can avoid it by
simply preparing their meals at home.
"We’re not asking our fixed-income people to pay that on their
property tax. We’re asking that of someone who had made a choice to go
out and spend money," another resident, John Peters, said.
Also, because the program is intended to be 'optional', diners who
don't want to contribute to saving the environment can simply ask the
have it taken off the bill (that is, if they even notice it's there).
Still, for all the talk about how the 1% charge is 'insignificant', one resident pointed out that California is already 'pretty freaking expensive', and
that asking people to keep paying new fees and surcharges in a state
with one of the highest tax burdens in the country is tantamount to
asking them to spend money that they don't have.
"Well I live in California and I don’t know if you know this or not it’s pretty freaking expensive here. One
percent to somebody who doesn’t make that much money ain’t a lot but
it’s a lot more than they have," resident Mike Mattingly said.
Undeterred by these complaints, the campaign's organizers are
pressing ahead: They hope to have 200 restaurants signed up by the end
of the year. Ultimately, one organizer said that if they can get 40,000
of the state's nearly 90,000 restaurants to sign up, they'd be pulling
in "a decent chunk of money".