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Intro: "With US politics paralyzed by the partisan divide on climate change, public concern about extreme weather cannot bear fruit."

Portrait, author and activist Naomi Wolf, 10/19/11. (photo: Guardian UK)
Portrait, author and activist Naomi Wolf, 10/19/11. (photo: Guardian UK)



America's Drought of Political Will on Climate Change

By Naomi Wolf, Guardian UK

09 August 12

 

s the US faces record drought and an Old Testament-level pestilential heatwave in the midwest, American environmental denialism may be starting to change. The question is: is it too late?

America has led the world in climate change denial, a phenomenon noted with amazement by Europeans, not to mention thinking people around the world. Year after year, the US has failed to sign global treaties or curb emissions, even as our status as a source of a third of the world's carbon emissions goes unchanged.

It is fairly well-known what has been behind that climate change denial in America: vast sums pumped into an ignorance industry by the oil and gas lobbies. Entire thinktanks to obfuscate manmade climate change have been funded by these interests, as have individual congressmen and women. Entirely typical, for instance, is Louisiana Representative John Fleming, whose campaigns, according to blogger John Henry, accept about $200,000 a year from oil and gas lobbyists, and who uses his social media pages to deny global warming.

It is weird to live inside that US denial about climate change. Last year, for example, as tropical storm Irene approached New York, we duly boarded up windows, put in emergency supplies, and heard endless alarming bulletins from the mayor's office about which neighborhoods were likely to be submerged if the tides surged – without ever hearing from local officials or the media a word connecting rising sea levels with manmade global warming. All the more weird because New Yorkers weren't writing off portions of their downtown neighborhoods to overflowing seawater a century ago.

It is weird, too, to watch the leaves turn red earlier and earlier in the fall in the American northeast and have absolutely everyone say, "the weather is strange" – yet never see mainstream media reflect any interest in the connection between human industrial activity and that strangeness. And this weather map shows how widespread and extensive that extreme weather is in the US.

But could our denial be cracking, this summer, as, in the heartland – that most iconic of American landscapes – broiling temperatures injure humans and cook fish in the water? This summer a crisis has occurred (though one that, again, is seldom reported on in terms of our outsize contribution to the disaster), as midwestern farmers lost vast swaths of their corn crop to scalding heat and drought. In the American unconscious of wishful ignorance, this disaster and loss was to be borne, as usual, by other people far away.

But we face some serious problems in rising out of our torpor. In "Shifting Public Opinion on Climate Change: An Empirical Assessment of Factors Influencing Concern over Climate Change in the US, 2002–2010", John Wihbey shows that Gallup surveys reveal Americans' level of concern varying widely:

"In 2004, 26% of respondents said they worried "a great deal" about the issue; in 2007 that number rose to 41%; by 2010, it had fallen to 28%. This variation comes despite consensus among scientists about the underlying data patterns and virtual unanimity of scientific opinion."

Wihbey and colleagues' study found that this fluctuation was caused by, among other factors, political polarization. In other words, when one party says global warming is a crisis and the other says all that is nonsense, and there is no cooperation between political elites at both ends of the spectrum, the net result is apathy.

"The two strongest effects on public concern are Democratic congressional action statements and Republican roll-call votes, which increase and diminish public concern, respectively. This finding points to the effect of [a] polarized political elite that is emitting contrary cues, with resulting (seemingly) contrary levels of public concern."

They found, ominously, that the level and quality of good information in the general media at large had little effect on people's levels of concern – indeed, weather events themselves had little bearing on people's levels of climate-related anxiety or interest. Only the combination of media coverage and expressed alarm from political leaders bumped up public concern.

With the oil and gas lobbies pumping money into Congress to blunt any professed concern among the political class, that motivating union of genuine concern and honest messaging can scarcely be relied on. The authors conclude, dispiritedly:

"Given the vested economic interests reflected in this polarization, it seems doubtful that any communication process focused on persuading individuals will have much impact."

I spent part of this summer looking at glaciers in Alaska; in Juneau, in Tongass National Forest, park rangers expect that a glacier there will withdraw, from effects of anticipated climate change, in 50 years. So, the federal government is planning for the effects of manmade climate change, even as the White House and US Congress remain paralysed from doing anything to arrest the warming: the very definition of denial. If we don't snap out of this stasis of stupidity, nothing can change for good.

 

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+24 # skyeman1 2012-08-09 07:14
At least, with a new Koch-funded study staying that global climate destabilization is real, perhaps we'll get the last deniers over to the acceptance side. The trick is to get the politicians, who have been on the dole for years, to finally enact adequate legislation. We need a Manhattan Project-style approach at this point.
http://thinkprogress.org/climate/2012/07/28/602151/bombshell-koch-funded-study-finds-global-warming-is-real-on-the-high-end-and-essentially-all-due-to-carbon-pollution/
 
 
+7 # gzuckier 2012-08-09 11:33
It's a riding on the tiger thing. After brainwashing their followers for years that AGW is a socialist plot to destroy the US and bankrupt the working class, how can they possibly turn around and say "now that I think about it...."?

Same thing as happened with birthism. After their party painting Obama as a foreigner, a Muslim, a Kenyan, etc. when McCain or Romney is faced with an individual at a town meeting repeating that gibberish, they can't exactly say "you idiot". So they just sort of weakly deny it and hope for the best.
 
 
+11 # Gnome de Pluehm 2012-08-09 08:03
Admitting our part in it his us in the pocketbook and everyone knows the US is all about money. Just ask Ayn Rand's followers.
 
 
+8 # JackB 2012-08-09 09:38
Of course it's about money. What did you think it was about? If money is left out of the equation how would the objectives be met?
 
 
+2 # brianf 2012-08-10 08:27
Money should not be left out of the equation. We should have acted aggressively more than 20 years ago, when scientists first became reasonably certain global warming was real, caused by humans, and extremely dangerous. Then the costs would have been much lower. The longer we wait, the more it will cost us. The stupidest thing we can do, monetarily, is keep making excuses and postponing the changes that we need to make. If we wait too long, we will lose everything.

Life is more important than money. Without life, money could not exist.
 
 
-18 # JackB 2012-08-09 10:47
The primary objective for an elected official is to get re-elected. Taking n controversial issues is a no-no. The Supreme Court deals with those issues because Congress won't even though it is their job. They are out of this discussion unless there is a major groundswell of public opinion supporting taking action.

A second problem is there is no unanimous opinion on the problem. The public sees scientists cooking the books (the e-mail event) & claiming almost every catastrophe to be caused by man-made Global Warming. But what caused those catastrophes before Global Warming? If the problems are heat related they are proof of the problem but cold related problems are cyclical events.

Addressing the problem is going to cost billions - probably trillions. Obama knows it. It is one reason he hired Chu who is a big fan of very high gas prices. When Barry started getting beat up on high gas prices he backed off & Chu amazingly woke up one morning realizing he was against them too.

The problems with the very much higher costs are threefold.

- One. Most people alive today won't live to see the benefits (assuming there are benefits). People don't invest their time, energy & resources to benefit future generations when it means big sacrifices for them.


Have to go to a second post - no more room on this one.
 
 
+7 # gzuckier 2012-08-09 11:34
"Most people alive today won't live to see the benefits"
And luckily, the further we let it go on, the fewer people will be alive!
 
 
-11 # JackB 2012-08-09 10:50
Continuation

- Two. People know the crazies will make sure the US foots most of the bill. For them there is no sacrifice too great when spending other people's money.

- Three. I do not believe anyone will say - Enough - we have solved the problem. To me the crazies are not about solving problems. They are about implementing an agenda.
 
 
+10 # Antemedius 2012-08-09 08:42
This should make it clear why this is happening.

The report presents...two distorted maps... density equalizing cartograms depicting a comparison of undepleted CO2 emissions by country for 1950-2000 versus the regional distribution of four climate sensitive health consequences (malaria, malnutrition, diarrhea, and inland flood-related fatalities).

The first image shows the world in terms of carbon emissions. America, for instance, is huge. So is China. And Europe. Africa is hardly visible.

The second map shows the world in terms of increased mortality -- that is to say, deaths -- from climate change. Suddenly, America virtually disappears. So does Europe. Africa, however, is grotesquely distended. South Asia inflates.


"Loss of healthy life years as a result of global environmental change (including climate change) is predicted to be 500 times greater in poor African populations than in European populations," states the UCL Lancet Commission report bluntly.

....

LOOK AT THE CARTOGRAMS HERE:
http://antemedius.com/content/climate-change-effects-hugely-unequal-globally
 
 
+7 # happycamper690 2012-08-09 08:45
I desperately hope she is right: that change will come as Mother Nature shows us who is in charge. Environmental issues trump all others. How we will cope on our new planet is the paramount question for the 21st century. My hope is that the one group that can beat the fossil-fuel guys, the financial/insur ance guys who will be paying the bill for climate change, will begin to see that they stand to suffer huge losses. Sooner or later they will have to protect themselves by pushing much harder for meaningful legislative action. I know it is terribly distasteful for most of us to think of ourselves as the allies of the financial world, but I am sure it is only way the Koch brothers and their cronies can be silenced.
 
 
+3 # Smokey 2012-08-09 09:16
Three points in response...

1) In 2007, 41% of the American public "worried a lot" about climate change... Three years later, DESPITE major campaigns by Al Gore and others, the percentage was down to 28%.... What happened? ANSWER: The Great Recession of 2008... We've seen this problem before.... "Environmental protection" is nice but, in the midst of an economic crisis, the public's interest declines.
Voters start to worry about jobs, housing foreclosures, the future of pension plans, student loans, etc.

2) The summer of 2012 has been pure hell for millions of Americans.... However, the message from the big conservation groups is mostly, "Stop burning fossil fuels!" If Grandma turns off the air conditioner and dies from heat exhaustion - well, give the old lady credit for helping to save Mother Earth. Grandma found a way to reduce her "carbon footprint," right?

3) The big talkers who talk about climate change are often surprisingly indifferent to human needs... So they lost political support in 2008. And they will probably lose support during the summer of 2012... Sad but true.

Note to Environmentalis ts: We need some new leadership and some new thinking in the climate change discussion.
 
 
+5 # gzuckier 2012-08-09 11:35
it also didn't help that the US was cooled off a bit by successive la nina events while the rest of the world sweltered. Now that we're playing catchup, the pace of change is getting harder to ignore.
 
 
+4 # Antemedius 2012-08-09 09:25
Heatwaves that now set records will become commonplace. Ecosystems will find themselves subject to climates far removed from those they evolved in, endangering many species. Rain will fall harder in the places where it falls today, increasing flooding; but in places already prone to drought things will by and large get drier, sometimes to the point of desertification . Ice will vanish from Arctic summers and some mountaintops, permafrost will become impermanent, sea levels will keep rising.

...As the melting ice allows access to the Arctic, Russia will become richer still in fossil fuels. For many, though, the prospects are grim. Drought and flood will put the livelihoods of hundreds of millions, mostly in developing countries, at risk. So the question is how to limit those risks.

...

The best protection against global warming is global prosperity. Wealthier, healthier people are better able to deal with higher food prices, or invest in new farming techniques, or move to another city or country, than poor ones are. Richer economies rely less on agriculture, which is vulnerable to climatic change, and more on industry and services, which by and large are not.

Richer people tend to work in air-conditioned buildings. Poor ones tend not to.

How to live with climate change
The Economist, I mean THE DELUSIONALIST
--> http://www.economist.com/node/17575027
 
 
+8 # gzuckier 2012-08-09 11:37
"Wealthier, healthier people are better able to deal with higher food prices, or invest in new farming techniques, or move to another city or country, than poor ones are."

As Jared Diamond describes the collapse of the Norse settlements in Greenland, "the wealthiest have the privilege of being the last to die of starvation and cold".
 
 
+2 # Antemedius 2012-08-09 12:14
Billmon in September of [2006] posted a story about British scientist James Lovelock and his warning that catastrophic global climate change is both imminent and unstoppable:

Within the next decade or two, Lovelock forecasts, Gaia will hike her thermostat by at least 10 degrees. Earth, he predicts, will be hotter than at any time since the Eocene Age 55 million years ago, when crocodiles swam in the Arctic Ocean.

"There's no realization of how quickly and irreversibly the planet is changing," Lovelock says. "Maybe 200 million people will migrate close to the Arctic and survive this. Even if we took extraordinary steps, it would take the world 1,000 years to recover."


It would be easy to view this as just another kooky end-of-the-worl d theory, if it weren't for the history of some of Lovelock's other kooky theories -- like the time in the late '70s when he hypothesized that chlorofluorocar bons wafted high into the stratosphere would eat great big holes in the ozone layer, exposing first the polar regions and then the rest of the earth's surface to increasingly harmful ultraviolet radiation. What a nut.

--> http://web.archive.org/web/20061018181253/billmon.org/archives/002743.html
 
 
+1 # Beckett 2012-08-09 16:11
While I agree with Lovelock on many points I wouldn't lay any stock in the claim that he predicted holes in the ozone layer in the late '70's. The ozone problem was made public in the early 70's. My father was testifying in front of congress in '74 about the destruction of ozone being done by 3M. To 3M's credit they moved fairly rapidly to change their aerosol products, but they didn't give up without a fight (denial).
 
 
+2 # Antemedius 2012-08-09 17:09
See "The Tip of the Iceberg", beginning at the bottom of page 1...


The discovery of CFCs’ environmental impact began in 1970, in the unlikely setting of a vacation home on the bucolic west coast of Ireland. James Lovelock (Fig. 3), a medical researcher turned self-employed scientist, wanted to know whether the haze obscuring the view from his home was natural or from human sources. He hypothesized that if pollution were causing the haze, then its source would be an urban area and it would contain large concentrations of synthetic chemicals. Since CFCs don’t occur naturally, Lovelock thought that looking for these chemicals in the air would be a good test. Using an instrument he’d designed himself, he detected CFCs in the haze, confirming its humanmade origins.
[snip]
Wanting to know if CFCs were building up in the atmosphere everywhere, Lovelock brought his instrument on a sea voyage from England to Antarctica, taking measurements all along the journey. Wherever he traveled, he found CFCs. Lovelock presented his findings in 1972 at a scientific meeting that aimed to bring together meteorologists and chemists—two sets of researchers which, up to this point, had mixed very little.


MORE --> http://undsci.berkeley.edu/lessons/pdfs/ozone_depletion_complex.PDF
 
 
+5 # brux 2012-08-09 20:47
we will never recover from this if it is allowed to "boil over" ... millions of animals species and habitats will be destroyed, already we have surpasssed the extinction rate of the great meteor event that killed sunlight to the planet for years .... life will continue, but human life will never really understand or be able to conceive the beauty of nature.

maybe we are such idiots that we do not deserve such a beautiful planet.
 
 
0 # shraeve 2012-08-18 21:35
"Collapse" is a great book.
 
 
+2 # rpauli 2012-08-09 13:04
"Lessons not learned, will be repeated"
Until they are learned, or not.

Humans have failed to force the changes to physical laws, now we have to adapt or die out. Not much different than countless other species. We just have Velcro and the Internet.
 
 
+2 # brux 2012-08-09 20:43
That's wishful thinking ... the fact is that humans do not learn, we for the most part follow the herd, and the conventional wisdom and how it has always been. People cannot conceive global changes over time. We don't perceive the social changes happening in American either, nor do we really do anything about it other than rant about single issues. We are basically not much smarter than chimpanzees, but we have an external memory in our technology and verbal history, the problem is that genetically we do not really trust it, we just play with it to make money and war.
 
 
+2 # valerid 2012-08-09 13:08
I love Naomi's pieces- I am hoping that she will in the future address geoengineering and global dimming in relation to climate 'change'- there are a lot of factors not covered here- to start read: these articles concern the affect of the lack of vitamin d on our populaton
Sunshine and vitamin D: “ Why Cloudy Skies are Bad for Our Health www.guardian.co.uk/society/2012/may/05/vitamin-d-deficiency-sunlight-health
Guardian.co.UK – May 4, 2012
There is a "Lack of Vitamin D" epidemic spreading across the United States. Many government agencies and universities have started to take notice of this problem which was first noticed in the early 1990s. Direct Sunlight reaching the Earth has been the main source of Vitamin D for everyone on Earth for centuries.
Now the Direct Sunlight reaching the Earth is being obscured by various Geoengineering projects falling under the name of "Solar Radiation Management".
 
 
+2 # brianf 2012-08-10 08:40
The vitamin D deficiency is mainly caused by people staying out of the sun and using sunscreen, as doctors have been recommending since at least the early 1990s in order to prevent skin cancer.

There are no large scale geoengineering projects happening yet, only a few small-scale experiments. That doesn't mean we aren't doing unintentional geoengineering though. Our release of CFCs into the atmosphere was one example. This weakened the ozone layer, causing more skin cancer, and then people had vitamin D deficiencies trying to protect themselves from skin cancer.

But the biggest unintentional geoengineering project was the release of massive amounts of greenhouse gases into the atmosphere. That project is going stronger now than ever. It is already making large and destructive climate changes. We've known many of the potential effects for decades. We know the consequences will be completely devastating if we don't stop. Yet we keep going, pretending like we don't know.
 
 
+1 # Antemedius 2012-08-09 13:42
It's very heartening to see how high up on the priority list for most people this is.

There is no chance - no chance - that industry and politicians will be able to ignore it any longer without caving to the demands of hundreds of millions of people all across the country and around the world and following Evo Morales Bolivian example of passing laws granting all nature equal rights to humans.

--> http://www.guardian.co.uk/environment/2011/apr/10/bolivia-enshrines-natural-worlds-rights

It's nice to see the people finally rising up in the millions to take back their world.

For example, just LOOK at the thousands of reader comments on this article alone here today.

It's enough to bring a tear to a old mans eye, I tell you....

Sigh.
 
 
-7 # brycenuc 2012-08-09 14:27
I am a member of a free and open climate change blog where anyone can contribute and no one is paid by any interest group on either side. The climate change skeptics outnumber the supporters by at least 5 to 1. There is a good reason for this. Science is overwhelmingly on the side of the skeptics. No one denies that CO2 can affect world temperature. But its effect is significantly limited. It cannot possibly cause a temperature 'runaway' as claimed and if all of the world's fossil fuel carbon were instantaneously inserted into the atmosphere, its temperature would stay below 3 degrees Celsius and immediately cool rapidly because of CO2 exchange with the land and ocean. No credible scenario can ever double CO2 in the atmosphere which would not raise the temperature by as much as 1 degree Celsius. The greatest credible increase in average temperature is less than 0.3 degrees Celsius. It's past time to abandon this 'faux' hysteria and concentrate on real world problems.
 
 
+4 # Antemedius 2012-08-09 17:14
You should post a link to your "free and open climate change blog" where "climate change skeptics outnumber the supporters by at least 5 to 1".

You'll be able to get that ratio up to 10 to 1 or maybe even 100 or 1000 to 1 as more people walk away shaking their heads and laughing.

Why soon you might even get it up to 100% denialists and no one else even bothering to try educating you.
 
 
+2 # Holmes 2012-08-09 18:35
Question? How come the the last time the World CO2 level was at 400pmm as it is now in the Arctic, that the temps were higher than today and sea levels about 25 - 40 mm higher? Warming up the oceans just a bit will release more methane which is farm more effective than CO2 as a GHG. The system is not linear.

Note that the Australian wheat crop is in the balance, not enough rain so far, some of the Indian monsoon is only at 30% of normal, and the USA drought is still going. The last time food went up, we had the Arab Spring, what this time?

Also not that the models used in the 70's for this part of the world suggested a 20% drop in winter rainfall which has come to pass.
 
 
+7 # reiverpacific 2012-08-09 19:22
Quoting brycenuc:
I am a member of a free and open climate change blog where anyone can contribute and no one is paid by any interest group on either side. The climate change skeptics outnumber the supporters by at least 5 to 1. There is a good reason for this. Science is overwhelmingly on the side of the skeptics. It's past time to abandon this 'faux' hysteria and concentrate on real world problems.

Aye well, you are living in a country that is at least 50 years behind other "Civilized" nations in health care, death penalty, public education, geographical knowledge, # of passports per capita, political engagement, religious zealotry, military worship -shall I continue?
There are probably quite a few "Flat Earthers" out there too.
I don't know if the site is international but skeptics is one thing; scientific engagement is quite another and from what I've read and heard, UTTERLY CONTRARY to your contention, scientists are up in the high 90% of realists who acknowledge the proven fact of human-caused climate disruption.
This on top or the revival of the "safe" nuclear industry and "Clean coal" is just another head in the sand nail in the human denial of it's own culpability for wrecking our little unique gem of a planet floating a very tiny "Goldilocks zone (not my term)" which can actually support intelligent life. But we're fuckin' it up right royally, ain't we!?
Maybe we don't deserve the gift of life.
 
 
+3 # brux 2012-08-09 20:38
Science is not democratic, who cares what people vote, that is not good logic.

The problem is the science is all models and there is no model that is real except reality, ... so we wait ... and as we wait the one thing we know is that if there is a problem, then by the time we acknowledge it it will be too late.

The error we human made is in thinking that the Earth can accept such huge perturbations in its systems and just keep going the same forever.

The Sahara desert used to be a lush jungle, since that is where people have lived the longest it is very likely it was human interference that helped create it. Same with smaller areas as well, we human have never anywhere dealt with this kind of thing because it is too big for us to conceive. Human beings are crisis driven, and think we can go somewhere else or come up with a technological quick-ix.
 
 
+2 # brux 2012-08-09 20:39
I'm curious, just what real world problems do you think we can solve any better than global warming ?
 
 
+4 # brianf 2012-08-10 08:42
It's time for you to learn the real, peer-reviewed science and stop believing the junk science put out by the deniers.
 
 
+3 # Flowers 2012-08-09 18:11
This article makes important points about the lack of action by lawmakers to address climate change. However, the political elites from both dominant political parties have actually been cooperating quite well with the industries responsible for the climate crisis, acting to protect the profits of these corporate interests at a great cost to the future of all living things on the planet. The climate crisis must be solved by the people because the political elites are incapable of it.
 
 
+3 # brux 2012-08-09 20:33
Good article.

> The question is: is it too late?

Well, considering that most of the CO2 and greenhouse gasses are not yet totally active it may be way way way too late.

No human civilization seems to have done the right thing when it comes to the environment. Mostly despite some of the tricks we have developed to kill each other and the fact that we wear clothes, people are still animals and we are in deep denial about how intelligent we are.

It's just not in our human DNA to make deep and sweeping changes based on our intellect, otherwise quitting smoking, losing weight, substance abuse or psychological problems would be a snap to fix. We have truly entered the world of post-knee of the exponential curve and our minds, but especially the minds of our leaders are just not up to the responsibility, in fact we seem to be driven in the other direction, an unconscious bahavioral spasm or abuse and exploitation.

What we really should do is to realize how well life has gone for human beings and the planet when we work with nature, because as smart as we think we are, we do not have the accumulated wisdom of millions of years that nature does, and we are arrogant and stupid to think we know better.
 
 
+3 # brianf 2012-08-10 08:49
The question "is it too late?" is incomplete. You need to specify "too late for what?" Otherwise that question is meaningless.

For example, it probably is too late to prevent 2 degrees of warming, without making changes so large in such a short time that they would be pretty painful (so we probably won't do this). But it probably is not too late to prevent the human species from becoming extinct. In between those two results there is a wide range of possibilities.

It is always too late for something. But it is never too late to make the future better than it would have been, or worse. We have the power. We just have to use it.
 
 
0 # brux 2012-08-21 20:53
The question is it too late to avoid pushing every living system on the planet into some kind of critical extinction event ... and then consider than in his book "The Third Chimpanzee", Jared Diamond says that in the last hundred year the rate of species extinction has surpassed the rate of extinctions during the great meteor extinction event in the past. People are killing the systems of this planet, and finally we have put the noose around the neck of the whole planet.
 
 
0 # shraeve 2012-08-18 21:41
Would it be possible to re-forest the Earth?
 
 
0 # brux 2012-08-21 20:51
Anything is possible, but is that the best thing to do, and in doing it could we actually accomplish what we think we would.?
 

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