We're Hot as Hell and We're Not Going to Take It Any More

by: Bill McKibben  |  TomDispatch | News Analysis

We're Hot as Hell and We're Not Going to Take It Any More
(Image: Lance Page / t r u t h o u t; Adapted: Andrew Senay, chooyutshing, TimScott)

Try to fit these facts together:

  • According to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, the planet has just come through the warmest decade, the warmest 12 months, the warmest six months, and the warmest April, May, and June on record.
  • A “staggering” new study from Canadian researchers has shown that warmer seawater has reduced phytoplankton, the base of the marine food chain, by 40% since 1950.
  • Nine nations have so far set their all-time temperature records in 2010, including Russia (111 degrees), Niger (118), Sudan (121), Saudi Arabia and Iraq (126 apiece), and Pakistan, which also set the new all-time Asia record in May: a hair under 130 degrees. I can turn my oven to 130 degrees.
  • And then, in late July, the U.S. Senate decided to do exactly nothing about climate change. They didn’t do less than they could have -- they did nothing, preserving a perfect two-decade bipartisan record of no action. Senate majority leader Harry Reid decided not even to schedule a vote on legislation that would have capped carbon emissions.

I wrote the first book for a general audience on global warming back in 1989, and I’ve spent the subsequent 21 years working on the issue. I’m a mild-mannered guy, a Methodist Sunday School teacher. Not quick to anger. So what I want to say is: this is fucked up. The time has come to get mad, and then to get busy.

For many years, the lobbying fight for climate legislation on Capitol Hill has been led by a collection of the most corporate and moderate environmental groups, outfits like the Environmental Defense Fund. We owe them a great debt, and not just for their hard work. We owe them a debt because they did everything the way you’re supposed to: they wore nice clothes, lobbied tirelessly, and compromised at every turn.

By the time they were done, they had a bill that only capped carbon emissions from electric utilities (not factories or cars) and was so laden with gifts for industry that if you listened closely you could actually hear the oinking. They bent over backwards like Soviet gymnasts. Senator John Kerry, the legislator they worked most closely with, issued this rallying cry as the final negotiations began: "We believe we have compromised significantly, and we're prepared to compromise further.”

And even that was not enough. They were left out to dry by everyone -- not just Reid, not just the Republicans. Even President Obama wouldn’t lend a hand, investing not a penny of his political capital in the fight.

The result: total defeat, no moral victories.

Now What?

So now we know what we didn’t before: making nice doesn’t work. It was worth a try, and I’m completely serious when I say I’m grateful they made the effort, but it didn’t even come close to working. So we better try something else.

Step one involves actually talking about global warming. For years now, the accepted wisdom in the best green circles was: talk about anything else -- energy independence, oil security, beating the Chinese to renewable technology. I was at a session convened by the White House early in the Obama administration where some polling guru solemnly explained that “green jobs” polled better than “cutting carbon.”

No, really? In the end, though, all these focus-group favorites are secondary. The task at hand is keeping the planet from melting. We need everyone -- beginning with the president -- to start explaining that basic fact at every turn.

It is the heat, and also the humidity. Since warm air holds more water than cold, the atmosphere is about 5% moister than it was 40 years ago, which explains the freak downpours that seem to happen someplace on this continent every few days.

It is the carbon -- that’s why the seas are turning acid, a point Obama could have made with ease while standing on the shores of the Gulf of Mexico. “It’s bad that it’s black out there,” he might have said, “but even if that oil had made it safely ashore and been burned in our cars, it would still be wrecking the oceans.” Energy independence is nice, but you need a planet to be energy independent on.

Mysteriously enough, this seems to be a particularly hard point for smart people to grasp. Even in the wake of the disastrous Senate non-vote, the Nature Conservancy’s climate expert told New York Times columnist Tom Friedman, “We have to take climate change out of the atmosphere, bring it down to earth, and show how it matters in people’s everyday lives.” Translation: ordinary average people can’t possibly recognize the real stakes here, so let’s put it in language they can understand, which is about their most immediate interests. It’s both untrue, as I’ll show below, and incredibly patronizing. It is, however, exactly what we’ve been doing for a decade and clearly, It Does Not Work.

Step two, we have to ask for what we actually need, not what we calculate we might possibly be able to get. If we’re going to slow global warming in the very short time available to us, then we don’t actually need an incredibly complicated legislative scheme that gives door prizes to every interested industry and turns the whole operation over to Goldman Sachs to run. We need a stiff price on carbon, set by the scientific understanding that we can’t still be burning black rocks a couple of decades hence. That undoubtedly means upending the future business plans of Exxon and BP, Peabody Coal and Duke Energy, not to speak of everyone else who’s made a fortune by treating the atmosphere as an open sewer for the byproducts of their main business.

Instead they should pay through the nose for that sewer, and here’s the crucial thing: most of the money raised in the process should be returned directly to American pockets. The monthly check sent to Americans would help fortify us against the rise in energy costs, and we’d still be getting the price signal at the pump to stop driving that SUV and start insulating the house. We also need to make real federal investments in energy research and development, to help drive down the price of alternatives -- the Breakthrough Institute points out, quite rightly, that we’re crazy to spend more of our tax dollars on research into new drone aircraft and Mars orbiters than we do on photovoltaics.

Yes, these things are politically hard, but they’re not impossible. A politician who really cared could certainly use, say, the platform offered by the White House to sell a plan that taxed BP and actually gave the money to ordinary Americans. (So far they haven’t even used the platform offered by the White House to reinstall the rooftop solar panels that Jimmy Carter put there in the 1970s and Ronald Reagan took down in his term.)

Asking for what you need doesn’t mean you’ll get all of it. Compromise still happens. But as David Brower, the greatest environmentalist of the late twentieth century, explained amid the fight to save the Grand Canyon: “We are to hold fast to what we believe is right, fight for it, and find allies and adduce all possible arguments for our cause. If we cannot find enough vigor in us or them to win, then let someone else propose the compromise. We thereupon work hard to coax it our way. We become a nucleus around which the strongest force can build and function.”

Which leads to the third step in this process. If we’re going to get any of this done, we’re going to need a movement, the one thing we haven’t had. For 20 years environmentalists have operated on the notion that we’d get action if we simply had scientists explain to politicians and CEOs that our current ways were ending the Holocene, the current geological epoch. That turns out, quite conclusively, not to work. We need to be able to explain that their current ways will end something they actually care about, i.e. their careers. And since we’ll never have the cash to compete with Exxon, we better work in the currencies we can muster: bodies, spirit, passion.

Movement Time

As Tom Friedman put it in a strong column the day after the Senate punt, the problem was that the public “never got mobilized.” Is it possible to get people out in the streets demanding action about climate change? Last year, with almost no money, our scruffy little outfit, 350.org, managed to organize what Foreign Policy called the “largest ever coordinated global rally of any kind” on any issue -- 5,200 demonstrations in 181 countries, 2,000 of them in the U.S.A.

People were rallying not just about climate change, but around a remarkably wonky scientific data point, 350 parts per million carbon dioxide, which NASA’s James Hansen and his colleagues have demonstrated is the most we can have in the atmosphere if we want a planet “similar to the one on which civilization developed and to which life on earth is adapted.” Which, come to think of it, we do. And the “we,” in this case, was not rich white folks. If you look at the 25,000 pictures in our Flickr account, you’ll see that most of them were poor, black, brown, Asian, and young -- because that’s what most of the world is. No need for vice-presidents of big conservation groups to patronize them: shrimpers in Louisiana and women in burqas and priests in Orthodox churches and slumdwellers in Mombasa turned out to be completely capable of understanding the threat to the future.

Those demonstrations were just a start (one we should have made long ago). We’re following up in October -- on 10-10-10 -- with a Global Work Party. All around the country and the world people will be putting up solar panels and digging community gardens and laying out bike paths. Not because we can stop climate change one bike path at a time, but because we need to make a sharp political point to our leaders: we’re getting to work, what about you?

We need to shame them, starting now. And we need everyone working together. This movement is starting to emerge on many fronts. In September, for instance, opponents of mountaintop removal are converging on DC to demand an end to the coal trade. That same month, Tim DeChristopher goes on trial in Salt Lake City for monkey-wrenching oil and gas auctions by submitting phony bids. (Naomi Klein and Terry Tempest Williams have called for folks to gather at the courthouse.)

The big environmental groups are starting to wake up, too. The Sierra Club has a dynamic new leader, Mike Brune, who’s working hard with stalwarts like Greenpeace and Friends of the Earth. (Note to enviro groups: working together is fun and useful). Churches are getting involved, as well as mosques and synagogues. Kids are leading the fight, all over the world -- they have to live on this planet for another 70 years or so, and they have every right to be pissed off.

But no one will come out to fight for watered down and weak legislation. That’s not how it works. You don’t get a movement unless you take the other two steps I’ve described.

And in any event it won’t work overnight. We’re not going to get the Senate to act next week, or maybe even next year. It took a decade after the Montgomery bus boycott to get the Voting Rights Act. But if there hadn’t been a movement, then the Voting Rights Act would have passed in… never. We may need to get arrested. We definitely need art, and music, and disciplined, nonviolent, but very real anger.

Mostly, we need to tell the truth, resolutely and constantly. Fossil fuel is wrecking the one earth we’ve got. It’s not going to go away because we ask politely. If we want a world that works, we’re going to have to raise our voices.

Bill McKibben is founder of 350.org and the author, most recently, of Eaarth: Making a Life on a Tough New Planet. Earlier this year the Boston Globe called him “probably the country’s leading environmentalist” and Time described him as “the planet’s best green journalist.” He’s a scholar in residence at Middlebury College. To hear him discuss why the public needs to lead the fight against global warming in Timothy MacBain's latest TomCast audio interview, click here or, to download it to your iPod, here.

Copyright 2010 Bill McKibben 

All republished content that appears on Truthout has been obtained by permission or license.





     

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i have no solutions but one

i have no solutions but one thing is true: democracy doesn't work in the planet's favour.
if a long-term austerity plan is required, it is NOT going to be implemented by a government which wants to be re-elected in four years!



Was France not a democracy,

Was France not a democracy, then, when it retired its coal industry in barely ten years?



A part of me really thinks

A part of me really thinks that we (the human race) really deserves this. If there is such a thing as karma, then I doubt global warming can be stopped.



We can sit here and accept

We can sit here and accept the things we can't change like the fact we are all going to burn in hell in the next ten years or we can wake up and take action. There is not really much choice, is there?



Burning Sea Turtles; What

Burning Sea Turtles; What the fuck, people?-Resist; Take back the Earth from greed. Resist the despair; You-Upgrade your grey matter; Can love rescue us? The naked truth is; Capitalism is Not; For or by the folk.



What you hear as CAPITALISM

What you hear as CAPITALISM in the main media is hijacked economic system, a bastardized capitalism in favor of the super-rich men at the expense of the working poor. Capitalism means freedom of production and distribution in a competative arena on a level field where government is the force which equalizes the field for all and controls the negative impact of the system with collective good for all. This means that government is free of the corporate influence and monopoly and no one is allowed to pollute our air, poison our water and lands without paying for its clean up. If true capitalism was invoked through Shumpeterian creative destruction, the picture would be a lot different. We should protest against oligarchy of corporations and the industrial feudalism which our society has become. The working poor gets poorer and the rich is getting richer through mergers and acquisitions, job exportation, abuse of economic power by squeezing workers to work for peanuts inhuman long hours. Result of all this a system in favor of the capital at the expense of all else, hence poisoned water, land and air and fearful labor, politicians.



Here's a possible solution

Here's a possible solution to the big "mystery" about why we're getting nowhere with this issue: at the heart of the problem is a communications blunder of epic proportions. Scientists, environmentalists, and the rest of us need to start speaking in terms more people can accept - and feel compelled to take personal responsibility for. Why not try shifting the focus away from "global warming" and "climate change" and instead cut straight to the bottom line: it's not global warming that's the problem, it's POLLUTION. Pollution is causing a whole host painfully tangible environmental problems (not the least of which is global warming), and that's what we need to stay focused on. That pollution is harmful to human health and the health of the planet is not something that requires vast amounts of data to comprehend. By starting from the standpoint of the personal and human-scale (rather than the quick-to-overwhelm global scale) detrimental effects of pollution in general, we stand a much better chance of reaching the people we hope will join us in the effort to build a healthier, cleaner world.



McKibben says, "We need a

McKibben says, "We need a stiff price on carbon, set by the scientific understanding that we can’t still be burning black rocks a couple of decades hence."

The way to achieve this is a carbon tax, not the the currently favored "carbon market" boloney. But it can't just tax carbon emissions in the US. We must tax imported goods on the basis of the amount of carbon emitted in their production. The determination of the amount of carbon emitted in the production of goods in other countries would be a good job for the CIA. The CIA probably already collects most of the information needed to estimate carbon emissions from foreign industries. Uncertainties in the estimates of emissions from any country should be resolved in favor of the environment. (I keep saying "estimate" because there is no such thing as an exact measurement. All measurements are estimates, even the ones you make with your fancy digital calipers made in China with coal-fired power)
A problem facing us here is that the United States has lost economic power during the 30 years of Reaganomics. Industries, jobs economic strength and political influence have all been exported wholesale. One area where the US still has considerable economic strength is agriculture. We should also tax exports, especially agricultural exports, to the countries based on their carbon emissions.

The Environment -- it's where we live!



It's so much simpler than

It's so much simpler than all of this. The family car needs to revert to a instrument of leisure rather than a necessity. The consumer needs to be sold "New Urbanism" in the same way the suburban lifestyle was sold to people in the fifties. All this sprawl needs to be centralized and densified so that people can walk to schools and parks and stores. Towns need to form again with sidewalks and limited car lanes so they are easier to cross. The endless sub-divisions of vacant and foreclosed homes need to be rezoned as parks surrounded by multi-use commercial/residential spaces. Multi-family homes save a lot on heating and cooling bills and give families the added income of a tenant. Multi-use zoning gives the mom and pop shop a shot, as does walkable proximity to residences. The age of the McMansion needs to end. People need to accept that they have to live closer to their jobs. And of course mass transit needs a huge investment. We as consumers have the power to make lifestyle choices that circumvent corporate and government interests.



Gratifying that some folks

Gratifying that some folks recognize that capitalism, based on greed and exploitation (if it makes a profit, do it regardless of consequences, even to our planet). With bought legislators failing to reign in their masters, scientific evidence to change immediately from reliance on fossil fuels to renewable safe energy is ignored by most--and utility profiteers do not want our becoming independent of them, nor do the nuclear investors who insist their expensive technology is safe while asking taxpayers to pick up the tab for them as well as paying for any energy they ultimately produce. We are also drained (and our young maimed or killed) by wars for oil (and bankers getting bailouts instead of the homeless). Revolting situations!



Thank you, Bill McKibben!

Thank you, Bill McKibben! Yes! Let's roll up our sleeves and begin. No more clothes driers, no more paper towels, use of walking, bicycles, and public transportation whenever possible even if it is a little inconvenient. That's at the personal level. Then move up to the local community. What can you and your neighbors and the local town council do?



are you people kidding

are you people kidding me????

do some hard research before deciding which side to believe,

the science is INCONCLUSIVE!!!!!! The clmate models are not accurate. And there are too many people with to many interests to make money, IE the carbon tax to make this issue sold.

maybe things are getting warmer but thats not like it hasnt happened in history before without so called greenhouse gas emissions.......

show me hard proof then you might get my tax dollars, not lies and data manipulation......