The largest climate march in history will be highlighted by a massive march in New York City on Sunday, September 21st. (photo: Reuters)
Climate Change You Can Believe In
20 September 14
ust
as Sunday’s big People’s Climate March and next week’s UN global summit
on climate converge here in New York City, the nation and world are
experiencing weather of an intensity that should rattle the stubborn
false convictions of even the most fervent climate change denier.
Terrible flooding in India and Pakistan, the worst in
more than a century, with heavy monsoon rains, 500 lives lost and
hundreds of thousands left stranded… thousands of wildfires ignited by
severe drought in California and the West… flashfloods in Arizona… the
punch of a hurricane pounding Mexico’s Baja coast, the strongest in
nearly fifty years, battering locals and trapping tourists in their
hotels without electricity.
We know it’s important not to confuse day-to-day
weather patterns with climate, which measure variations of things like
temperatures and humidity over long periods of time, but it’s clear that
these disasters are made more powerful by global warming. The pain is
only going to get worse for us and for future generations, unless we act
now. Our governments must reduce those carbon emissions that are
heating up the atmosphere before it’s too late.
But up to now, world leaders have refused to give
global warming the crisis treatment that’s needed, even as the evidence
mounts day by day. A draft report from the UN’s Intergovernmental Panel
on Climate Change says that the vast amounts of greenhouse gases being
released into the atmosphere will have “severe, pervasive and
irreversible impacts,” and that we’re already seeing the effect in heat
waves, floods and rising sea levels. Another UN report, this one from
the World Meteorological Organization, says that amounts of carbon
dioxide — the gas that traps heat in our atmosphere — are increasing
even faster than scientists predicted, more than in the last 800,000
years at least. The accounting firm PriceWaterhouseCoopers has crunched
the numbers and spots an “unmistakable trend” that puts us just twenty
years away from catastrophe. “In a highly globalized economy,” they
write, “no country is likely to be spared as the impacts of climate
change ripple around the world…”
If for some reason you don’t believe the scientists
and the accountants, listen to the birds. Last week, the National
Audubon Society reported that of some 650 bird species studied in the
United States and Canada, “more than half are… at risk from global
warming.” The study’s chief author, Gary Langham, told The New York
Times, “The notion that we can have a future that looks like what our
grandparents experienced, with the birds they had, is unlikely.” Imagine
a world without birdsong.
But climate change deniers persist in telling us it
just ain’t so, like the tobacco industry claiming for decade after
decade that nicotine wasn’t addictive or that cigarettes couldn’t kill
you. It’s been more than a decade since Oklahoma Republican James
Inhofe, once chair of the US Senate’s committee on the environment and
public works, told us that “man-made global warming is the greatest hoax
ever perpetrated on the American people.” He still says he thinks so
and so do many of his allies.
Slick public relations and advertising campaigns are
underwritten to fool the public and smear the truthtellers. Foundations
and think tanks have been created by industry just to create doubt and
hammer away against the overwhelming evidence of climate disruption.
Last year, the British newspaper The Guardian reported that between 2002
and 2010, via two right-wing groups, Donors Trust and Donors Capital
Fund, billionaires had given nearly $120 million to more than 100
anti-climate change groups. And the progressive Center for Media and
Democracy revealed that a web of right-wing think tanks called the State
Policy Network, affiliated with the notorious American Legislative
Exchange Council (ALEC) and funded to the tune of $83 million by
companies including Facebook, AT&T and Microsoft, was pushing a had
right agenda that includes opposition to climate change rules and
regulations.
A new study from two groups, Forecast the Facts Action
and the SumOfUs.org, says that since 2008, businesses have given
campaign contributions to the 160 members of Congress who have rejected
climate change that amount to more than $640 million. That includes
Google, eBay, Ford and UPS; in fact, 90 percent of the cash came from
outside the fossil fuel industry.
Many of the naysayers are not in total denial; they
either say climate change is happening more slowly than we think — the
so-called “lukewarmers” — or they insist that global warming actually is
good for you! Here’s a headline from the conservative Heartland
Institute: “Benefits of Global Warming Greatly Exceed Costs, New Study
Says.” And here’s a statement responding to that new UN report on carbon
dioxide from Chip Knappenberger, assistant director of the Cato
Institute’s Center for the Study of Science. Cato has received funding
from the Koch brothers — much of whose billions have come from fossil
fuels — and Exxon Mobil. We should, Knappenberger said, be proud of
those greenhouse gases and “applaud our progress in energy expansion
around the world,” and he noted a previous statement of his in which he
exulted that the rise in carbon dioxide “is cause for celebration.”
Much of this has little to do with the reality of
science, some has to do with fundamentalist religious beliefs but most
has to do with, you guessed it, money and politics. A study by the
journal Climatic Change finds that the more wealthy Republicans are, the
more likely they are to think that rising global temperatures are
non-existent or no big deal. After all, the industries that are causing
the problem — especially anything to do with the extraction or use of
fossil fuels — are making them filthy rich. And many of them actually
believe further climate change could be good for business. Those melting
icecaps and glaciers are opening up waterways in the north, you see.
And the defense contractor Raytheon Industries sees big profit
opportunities because “climate change may cause humanitarian disasters,
contribute to political violence and undermine weak governments.” We’re
not making this up.
So intense is the political and corporate opposition
to the concept of manmade climate change — despite a majority of
Americans who accept it as reality — that some of the more rational
officeholders and local governments quietly are trying to work around
the resistance, preparing for the worst without mentioning the dreaded
words climate change or global warming. In Grand Haven, Michigan, AP
reports, officials are preparing for heat waves and storm erosion
without saying anything about you-know-what. In Florida, communities are
taking steps to protect towns against rising sea levels without getting
into a fight over what’s causing them. In Tulsa, Oklahoma — where
Senator Jim Inhofe used to be mayor — flood control and drought
prevention are sought in the name not of warming but of disaster
preparedness.
Meanwhile, some of the media finally are coming
around, catching up with public opinion. Once enslaved to the notion of
having to give equal weight to both sides despite the overwhelming
evidence supporting climate change, they’re changing their tune. A few
months ago, the independent BBC Trust said that the British broadcaster
was giving “undue attention to marginal opinion” when it came to airtime
for climate deniers and should adjust accordingly. The Los Angeles
Times announced it would no longer print climate change denial letters
to the editor – contrast that with Rupert Murdoch’s Wall Street Journal,
which last year ran more anti-climate change letters than any other
major newspaper. And last month, The Washington Post, long criticized
for the space given such climate deniers as columnist George Will, ran a
week’s worth of climate change editorials, declaring, in the words of
its editorial page editor, “an existential threat to the planet.”
So we have to ask, how long will we allow the climate
deniers the prominence and weight that lets them give our political
leaders cover to run and hide from reality?
Two men in Massachusetts decided: No longer. This past
May, they used their lobster boat – the Henry David T., as in Henry
David Thoreau – to block a coal freighter from docking at a
Massachusetts power station. They turned themselves in and faced charges
that could have resulted in two years in jail and thousands of dollars
in fines.
But last week, the local district attorney, Sam
Sutter, stood on the courthouse steps and announced that he had dropped
the criminal charges. “Climate change is one of the gravest crises our
planet has ever faced,” he said. “In my humble opinion, the political
leadership on this issue has been gravely lacking.”
He then announced his intention to be at the People’s Climate March in New York.
Pope Francis would say “Amen” to that. “Safeguard
Creation,” he warned, just around the same time the Henry David T. was
blocking that coal freighter. “Because if we destroy Creation, Creation
will destroy us!”
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