Monday, August 19, 2019
Greenland? What About Alaska?
Czarist Russia was desperate for
cash; they approached the United States. Wanna buy Alaska? It was an obsession
by then-U.S. Secretary of State William H. Seward, started during the James
Buchanan administration, implemented during the Andrew Johnson presidency,
passing the Senate by a single vote. “Seward’s Folly.” “Seward’s Icebox.” But
on April 9, 1867, for the paltry sum of $7 million, the United States purchased
Alaska from Russia; the transfer occurred six months later. The laughter
subsided when gold, lots of it, was discovered in 1868. Alaska’s natural
resources have provided enormous benefits for the lower 48 from inception.
I am reasonably confident that Donald
Trump is dramatically unaware of how Alaska became part of the United States.
The idea emanated from the seller, a monarchy facing severe economic problems.
When the Soviets took Russia in 1917, they disavowed the Czar’s right to have
sold precious Russian land, which they stated belonged to the people.
Even to this day, there are significant Russian interests that believe that
Alaska still belongs to Russia, reinforced by Russian forays and claims to
Arctic lands, their construction of a strong nuclear ice breaker force designed
to dominate the Northwest Passage as it thaws.
Trump’s off-handed suggestion that
the United States should consider buying the largest island on earth is filled
with ironies and evoked waves of derision from both Greenlanders and their
parent country, Denmark. “Crazy” was oft repeated. One Danish parliamentarian
suggested that perhaps Denmark might consider buying California, a political
question that might yield a strong positive local vote if it came down to
choosing between Denmark and living within Donald Trump’s vision of America.
Like Alaska, Greenland is a vast
storage ground of natural resources, increasingly accessible as global warming
melts tundra and glaciers at alarming speed. China has also been interested in
opening vast tracts of Greenland to resource exploitation contracts. The United
States maintains it northern-most air base (Thule), 750 miles north of the
Arctic Circle and 947 miles south of the North Pole. The above map illustrates
how U.S. surveillance patrols routinely watch naval and other military
developments in Russia from that base.
What is particularly ironic, however,
is how some of the worst damage to the rest of the world has been born in these
northern territories. Melting tundra releases trapped organically generated
methane, a greenhouse gas that is over 23 times denser and more damaging than
carbon dioxide. Melting polar ice, from glaciers to surface ice and snow, are
steadily adding massive ocean water, adding most significantly to rising tides
and eroding coastlines. Alaska just happens to be a red state that is
particularly aware that climate change is not a Chinese hoax. The symptoms are
hardly subtle, making Greenlanders mockingly aware that Donald Trump may be the
most inappropriate world leader to offer to “buy” land that most clearly
reflects these mega-warming realities.
Welcome to reality, Alaska-style
(reflective of parallel occurrences in Greenland): “July was Alaska’s warmest
month ever, according to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration… Sea
ice melted. Bering Sea fish swam in above-normal temperatures. So did children
in the coastal town of Nome. Wildfire season started early and stayed late.
Thousands of walruses thronged to shore.
“Unusual weather events like this
could become more common with climate warming, said Brian Brettschneider, an
associate climate researcher at the University of Alaska Fairbanks’
International Arctic Research Center. Alaska has seen ‘multiple decades-long
increases’ in temperature, he said… ‘It becomes easier to have these unusual
sets of conditions that now lead to records,’ Brettschneider said.
“Alaska’s average temperature in July
was 58.1 degrees. That’s 5.4 degrees Fahrenheit (3 degrees Celsius) above
average and 0.8 degrees (0.4 Celsius) higher than the previous warmest month of
July 2004, NOAA said.
“The effects were felt from the
Arctic Ocean to the world’s largest temperate rainforest on Alaska’s Panhandle…
Anchorage, the state’s largest city, hit 90 degrees on July 4 for the first
time, 5 degrees higher than the city’s previous recorded high of 85… Sea ice
off Alaska’s north and northwest shore and other Arctic regions retreated to
the lowest level ever recorded for July, according to the National Snow and Ice
Data Center at the University of Colorado Boulder.
“Arctic sea ice for July set a record
low of 2.9 million square miles. That was a South Carolina-size loss of 30,900
square miles beyond the previous record low July in 2012… Sea ice is the main
habitat for polar bears and a resting platform for female walruses and their
young. Several thousand walruses came to shore July 30, the first time they’ve
been spotted in such large numbers before August.” Los Angeles Times, August 18th.
In the end, Trump’s suggestion is
very much in line with his dramatic ignorance of history and global politics, a
complete lack of understanding of even the most basic economic principles, a
willingness to ignore hard facts to placate a base that prefer their own
“interpretations” of the New Testament instead and his fundamental to self-aggrandizing
irresponsibility. For those who believe that this is an essential tenet of
evangelicalism, those of Trump’s evangelical supporters who deny man-induced
climate change only represent a very small segment of the global evangelical
movement that accept the predominant view of climate change.
I’m
Peter Dekom, and it’s hard to navigate by applying common sense to a government
that is so mired in mythology and unsupported doctrinaire beliefs that reality
is simply not relevant.
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