[image: image.png] –Message of Ray Bradbury. “When I was 19 years old I couldn’t go to college because I came from a poor family. We had no money, so I went to the library at least. Three days a week I read every possible book. At the age of 27 I have actually completed almost the entire library instead of university. So I got my education in the library and for free. When a person wants something, they will find a way to achieve it. I would like to remind you one thing: Humans should never forget that we have been assigned only a very small place on earth, that we live surrounded by nature that can easily take back everything that has ever given to man. It costs absolutely nothing in her way to one day blow us all off the face of the earth or flood the waters of the ocean with her single breath, just to remind man once again that he is not as all-powerful as he still foolishly thinks. ” Part One: Jennie C. Stephens is a climate justice scholar, activist, and author. She is the Dean’s Professor of Sustainability Science and Policy at Northeastern University Why the Fed should treat climate change’s $150B economic toll like other national crises it’s helped fight. Part Two:Slate reporter Mark Stern The Sad Ending of Sandra Day O’Connor’s Judicial Legacy The Supreme Court Has Figured Out How to Gut a Bunch of Crucial Federal Laws at Once. Listen online at www.wnhnfm.org/live Listen anytime to the podcast at www.podomatic.com/podcasts/staff74238 <www.podomatic.com/podcasts/staff74238> Attitude with Arnie Arnesen,Ray Bradbury, Libraries, Jennie Stephens, The Fed, Climate Crisis, Mark Stern, Sandra Day O’Connor, federal agencies, US Supreme Court, federal government, enforcement powers