The industrial revolution
– factories belching smoke making steel and tons of durables – made us rich. We
spent a lot of that wealth, particularly after World War II, buying
energy-consuming “stuff” to give ordinary Americans a quality of life
unparalleled in history. Unlike Europe,
which was focused on rebuilding war-torn cities, America was focused on
upgrades and consumables. “The United States, with its love of big cars, big
houses and blasting air-conditioners, has contributed more than any other country
to the atmospheric carbon dioxide that is scorching the planet.
“‘In cumulative terms, we
certainly own this problem more than anybody else does,’ said David G. Victor,
a longtime scholar of climate politics at the University of California, San
Diego. Many argue that this obligates the United States to take ambitious action
to slow global warming.” New York Times, May 31st. The resulting greenhouse
effect has desertified millions of acres of farmland, decimated humans, plants
and animals alike. Malthusian population growth has only made a truly bad
situation that much worse.
“‘It is immoral,’ said
Mohamed Adow, who grew up herding livestock in Kenya and now works in London as
a leader on climate issues for Christian Aid, a relief and development group.
‘The countries that have done the least to cause the problem are suffering
first and worst.’
“Some backers of the
[Paris climate change accord] argue that the large American role in causing
climate change creates an outsize responsibility to help fight it, including an
obligation to send billions of dollars abroad to help people in poorer
countries.” NY Times. And there has been plenty of climate change “blow back”
that directly and immediately impacts the United States and its purported
allies rather directly.
You can point to
wildfires and floods, an increase in the intensity of superstorms, migration of
insects and disease (e.g., Zika-carrying mosquitos), storm surges and coastal
land-mass loss, but most painfully, the desertification of farmland in some of
the most vulnerable, poorest regions on earth. Add political volatility to the
list. Look at the impact of the million plus people displaced from fallow and
desertified farmland in Syria and Sunni-dominated areas of Iraq (ignored by
their Shiite led-governments) – all directly related to climate change. And as
we can see in the United States, farmer values – where God brings rain,
favorable temperatures and abundance… or not – are heavily weighted in faith.
It the lens from which they view their lives and the world around them.
Millions of abandoned
people from abandoned farms – furious and left with little or nothing left to
lose – have looked to radical militants for a violent solution, many turning
their faith into rage at the rest of the world, and those who hold religious
beliefs that challenge their own. Feelings of rage and self-righteousness, not
a whole lot different from the most extreme evangelicals here or militant Jews
in Israel sinking deep roots into isolated settlements on the West Bank.
In Syria and Iraq, these
displaced farmers were easy recruitment targets for radical militants. As they
railed against uncaring governments, those self-same governments rained killer
toxins and barrel bombs on them, mostly hitting innocents simply wanting to be
left alone. For many, their choice was to leave, escape, run… migrate to what
they perceived were safer lands with opportunities to rebuild their lives. To
run from the radicals. The virulent Western reaction against these immigrants,
rapidly redefined as a cultural/assimilation incompatibility with a risk of radical
infiltration, soon escalated to a more generalized anti-“Muslim” sentiment. The
war of civilizations was well underway.
Why should we care? After
all, the new America First policy is pulling us back from international
treaties and entanglements. What’s the impact on the United States? We have
self-proclaimed ourselves as Islam’s enemy. We have sent our armies to their
countries, lent military aid to some of their oppressors and created national
policies that make it clear that they are not welcome here. Our president wants
to ban their travel here and wants those Muslims here to be responsible for any
rogue Muslims in their communities. We’ve lost thousands of lives of our own
soldiers, and more than a few American civilians, and spent trillions of dollars
in never-ending wars with deeply unsatisfying results. We think we can
eradicate ISIS and all will be good. Where have we heard that before? Forget
war. Get back to the other impacts on our daily lives.
Meanwhile, nature is
letting us know in the most unsubtle means possible, that global warming will
continue to push oceans and seas inland… not just through more intense storms…
but by adding millions and millions of square miles of new water to oceans. The
latest threat is rising in the Antarctic, a massive ice shelf (pictured above
from the BBC) known as Larson C, almost the size of the state of Delaware (if
you are British, that’s about a quarter of the size of Wales), that actually
sifted eleven miles in just six days at the end of May. The process of massive
of ice breaking off is called “calving” for obvious reasons.
“Similar calving events
on the more northerly Larsen A and Larsen B ice shelves eventually led to their
total break-up. Scientists are concerned that this same fate could now await
Larsen C… Were the shelf to collapse (and even if it did, it would still take
many years to complete), it would continue a trend across the Antarctic
Peninsula… In recent decades, a dozen major ice shelves have disintegrated,
significantly retreated or lost substantial volume - including Prince Gustav
Channel, Larsen Inlet, Larsen A, Larsen B, Wordie, Muller, Jones Channel, and
Wilkins.” BBC.com, May 31st. If you live in coastal South Florida, you already
know where this is going… first hand.
To the evangelicals who
elected “Chinese hoax” myth-spreading Donald Trump to the White House, I ask,
why is this happening if your view of the Bible, God’s purported
“post-great-flood” pledge never to wreak such global havoc again, is correct?
And why do the vast majority of evangelicals outside the United States… not to
mention the official position of the Catholic Church under the Pope’s climate
change encyclical… believe so firmly that man’s environmental abuse, the
release of greenhouse gasses into the atmosphere, is the largest contributor to
climate change? We understand large polluting manufactures not wanting
environment regulations to increase their profits, but they have no moral
compass in their lives. You tell the world that you are guided by morality…
but…
I’m Peter Dekom, and at 3:35 pm EDT, President
Donald J Trump joined the only two global holdouts to the Paris climate accord
(Syria and Nicaragua versus the 194 nations that signed) to withdraw the United
States from that accord, reinforcing our image as a global bully state gone rogue…
and thus officially resigning as the leader of the free world… saying the U.S.
might be willing, sometime in the future, to reconsider a completely
reconfigured climate accord... maybe.
No comments:
Post a Comment