The Climate-Change Depressives
They made the mistake of believing the "science."
Some on the left are so convinced by claims of flood, drought, and fire that they now deem the problem unsolvable. Of course, if all the doomsday tales were actually true, then these climate-change depressives would be dead right. Lucky for all of us, they’ve merely been taken in by a publicity campaign gone wild.
Not to worry. Franzen is a pragmatic apocalyptic: “If you accept the reality that the planet will soon overheat to the point of threatening civilization, there’s a whole lot more you should be doing.” Naturally, he’s got his own ideas about to how to prepare for the big melt. A lot of it involves being nice. “Kindness to neighbors and respect for the land—nurturing healthy soil, wisely managing water, caring for pollinators—will be essential in a crisis and in whatever society survives it,” he writes.
A recent article in the Washington Post by Chris Mooney and John Muysken also suggests we’re past the point of no return: “Numerous locations around the globe…have warmed by at least 2 degrees Celsius over the past century,” Mooney and Muysken write. “That’s a number that scientists and policymakers have identified as a red line if the planet is to avoid catastrophic and irreversible consequences. But in regions large and small, that point has already been reached.”
At the Week, Noah Millman offered “4 inconvenient truths about climate change. Number 4 is a doozy: “It’s already too late to prevent climate change.”
Apparently, Democratic presidential candidate Andrew Yang agrees. “This is going to be a tough truth, but we are too late,” he said during CNN’s climate town hall. “We need to do everything we can to start moving the climate in the right direction, but we also need to start moving our people to higher ground.”
If you’re on the left, this won’t do. The political, economic, academic juggernaut that is climate-change activism depends on there being both an imminent climate catastrophe and a just-out-of-reach solution in perpetuity.
Franzen and the others, poor souls, they thought it was all real. But 2 degrees Celsius doesn’t really mean 2 degrees Celsius. It means 2.1 or 2.2 or whatever’s politically feasible at the moment that you’re called on to say something scary. When Al Gore said, in 2006, that we had 10 years to cut greenhouse-gas emissions or face certain catastrophe, he didn’t mean 10 years; he meant “10 years.” When he said, a year later, that the Arctic sea ice could disappear by 2013, he didn’t mean 2013; he meant “2013.” And so on.
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