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Trump’s EPA is checking off an anti-environment wish list. Here’s who will suffer.

Joel Clement: Trump’s EPA is checking off an anti-environment wish list. Here’s who will suffer.

For Americans who value the environment, public land protections and science, the past couple of years have been difficult to take, to say the least. This is no accident, of course, because those values stand in the way of industry profit, and the Trump administration has made no secret of its desire to boost industry profits at the expense of American well-being.

It’s hard to believe that the executive branch would act against the needs and values of everyday Americans and intentionally reduce penalties for those who seek to pollute our air and water. And yet, this is exactly what the current administration is doing. In fact, there has been no effort to hide the anti-environment wish lists behind recent executive actions. To the contrary, federal agencies seem to be competing with one another to be the biggest boosters of big industry.

Rudy Giuliani is same

North Jersey.com: Rudy Giuliani is same

Reactions from Giuliani’s former associates about his new role as Trump’s defender-in-chief run the gamut from dismay to full-throated support. Giuliani has squandered the sense of goodwill he engendered after he led the city following the 9/11 attacks, one camp says. The other says the ex-mayor is doing the job the media won’t: exposing corruption among Democrats and revealing that the years-long investigation into Russia’s role in the 2016 presidential race was a witch hunt targeting Trump.

“He’s not doing anything that he hasn’t done his whole career,” said longtime Giuliani ally and former New York City police commissioner Bernard Kerik, who in 2010 was sentenced to four years in federal prison after admitting he used his position to get a company to pay for renovations of his home. “He’s very aggressive. He’s a very smart attorney. He is defending his client the best way he sees fit. If I was in the president’s position, I wouldn’t want anyone else in that position over him.”

Walter Mack is an attorney who worked under Giuliani in the U.S. attorney’s office as chief of its organized crime unit, and later as a deputy police commissioner during Giuliani's first term as mayor. Giuliani ousted him from both jobs. Giuliani canned him the first time after Mack openly criticized him for seeking too much publicity, which The Village Voice’s Tom Robbins in 2006 compared to “trying to tell Donald Trump to stay out of tabloid gossip columns.”