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January 2, 2008

Joe Biden on on science education

Joe Biden for President: Strengthening Our Education System: Moving Toward A Sixteen Year System

Joe Biden would replace the 20th century 12-year school system with a 16-year system. He would start education earlier so that every parent who wants to can send their child to two years of preschool and make sure that students can afford at least two years of higher education.

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December 3, 2007

Joe Biden on climate change

From the candidate’s energy, climate change plans:

There is scientific consensus that our climate is warming and human activity is driving it. Global warming not only has serious consequences for our environment, it poses a serious national security threat. We not only need to act at home to cap greenhouse gas emissions, we also need to work toward a global solution.

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Joe Biden on energy policy

From Joe Biden's Energy, Climate Change, and Environment Plans

Global competition over oil is going to intensify. The United States imports about 14 million of the 21 million barrels of oil we consume daily. We have less than 2 percent of the world’s oil reserves. The extraordinary growth of China and India insures that demand in the world will outpace the discovery of new supplies. China alone is expected to add 120 million vehicles in the next 5 years. Unless we develop a realistic and effective energy policy our nation will become even more vulnerable to oil price increases, more dependent on oil imports and less able to pursue our national interests.

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Joe Biden on nuclear weapons

Council for a Livable World: On whether the US should push for a nuclear-weapon-free world, as proposed by former Secretary of State Henry Kissinger, former Secretary of State George Shultz, former Senator Sam Nunn, and former Secretary of Defense William Perry.

This policy defines a new center in American politics, where realist conservative Republicans and tough minded Democrats find common ground. It reminds us that America must listen to the concerns of other countries regarding nuclear weapons if we expect their cooperation in preventing proliferation. Some parts of the op-ed may prove difficult in practice - I look forward to the authors' follow up conference this fall to hear them talk about how they would
implement their ideas and I've invited all four to testify before the Senate Foreign Relations Committee.

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