Temperatures around the world are soaring to record heights. Lives are in danger. Our infrastructure cracks. The very balance of our planet tilts to a perilous extreme.
With this truth, so omnipresent and flagrant that it can no longer be denied, decades of dissembling, dismissing, and demeaning those who looked at the data and foretold our crisis are evaporating more quickly than water on scorched pavement.
Unfortunately, “we told you so” provides no relief from the sweltering summer sun.
The cowardice and complicity of the modern Republican Party (and some others) on this issue may go down in history as one of the great tragedies of our current age. The full scope and duration of the damage they inflicted is unknowable but profound — at a scale that is likely beyond our ability to comprehend.
They scapegoated science, eviscerated expertise, and basked in know-nothing shortsightedness. Infuriatingly, too many of them, even now, refuse to give up the lie.
Perhaps climate denialism should be a permanent disqualifier for public office — not by law, but in public opinion. Maybe the equivalent to denying 9/11, another existential threat to our national security.
All of which still leaves us with the question: What do we do now?
We begin by repudiating cynicism and all who use it as a weapon for undermining the truth. Many on the frontlines of the climate fight now worry about a new obstacle to progress — fatalism. That should be banished as well. Hopelessness is not helpful.
We need determination, resilience, and, yes, hope. The last of these, we acknowledge, may be hard to summon. But it is necessary.
Humans have a remarkable power to destroy — each other and our environment. But our species also has an inspiring ability to mend, create, innovate, and persevere. Think of all the seemingly intractable challenges, threats, and destructive forces our courageous ancestors labored to conquer.
This is not to diminish the daunting odds we face on the climate. Sadly, there will be untold amounts of loss and suffering. Those who are already the most vulnerable and marginalized will be hurt disproportionately. Resolving to mitigate that as much as possible should be a priority.
Also a priority is heeding the pleas of younger generations. They will be the ones with no choice but to live in this world we have left for them. They will try to raise and protect their own children and grandchildren. In fact, many are choosing not to have kids because they worry about the health of our planet. Their voices are unmistakable. They are desperately pleading that we act decisively and urgently. They are right. Many young people are gripped with despair. It is understandable even as it is paralyzing.
But we can also find a renaissance of resilience. New ways of thinking about energy, construction, transportation, consumerism, and environmental protection proliferate. Need is meeting opportunity in a generative blossoming of rethinking and reimagining. Fertile young minds who have only known an Earth of uncertainty devise new methods to restore its equilibrium. We need to seek out and elevate their stories, champion their narratives, and support their dreams. And we should do so in a way that promotes diversity, equity, and inclusion. We need everyone from everywhere if we are to build sustainable solutions.
What’s done is done. Immense damage has been perpetrated by many who still seek to wield power over our country. The danger they pose cascades like the danger they helped unleash. We bake in part because of their bad faith. But all of us bear some responsibility. Especially those who have lived the longest.
Human activity helped cause the crisis. But human ingenuity can help fix it. If we don’t have some hope amidst the heat, much more will be lost.
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So tragic that the GOP, seemingly all of them, would rather focus on Hunter Biden than any of the enormous issues facing our nation and world. I do believe that there are more people who are concerned about these issues than there are hard core Republicans/science deniers, but they vote, they are vocal and we are not. Yahoo news comes up when I check my email and there was a story about a meteorologist in Iowa I think who was fired because he spoke out too often about climate change being responsible for the bad weather. Too many people called into the station and complained. The story did not report how many people called in to thank the station for having the foresight (at this point I don't feel this counts as courage...climate change is accepted by everyone except the GOP in America) and care for the community to have this person on. We, those of us who believe in science and equality continue to be too quiet. We do not go to school board meetings and demand poem by Langston Hughes or a similar poet BE read in school, while one mother in Florida who hadn't even read the poem demanded, and got a poem by Amanda Gorman banned....one or a very few people got a principal in Florida fired for showing a statue of David. If any freedom/loving people are attending school board meetings to demand libraries contain books that reflect the true history of our nation, it sure doesn't make the news. Our inaction is allowing the GOP with their disdain for freedom and science to be in total control. ON the bright side, I do receive emails from organizations like Life Science and the Good News Network and I get amazing news every day about advances that are being made in all kinds of areas, often regarding helping the climate. And must of these advances are being made by young people, very often not in the US. I don't know if other nations do as much polling as is done here in the US, but I have to wonder if reliable polls are being done of young people to see what they think of the issues facing us. Many polls do show that at least 2/3rd of Americans feel climate change is a big issue yet the GOP can still win elections with their party platform that climate change is a hoax. Somehow we need to work harder to get more people who believe in science to vote. And we need to support science (and math...math is the basis for so much science!) in our schools...this involves getting involved at a local level and getting persons who support science elected to school boards. While I live in an area of extreme trumpism and fear for my well being if I speak out about needing science in schools (the majority of folks here do not believe in evolution) there are thousands of school districts where the efforts of science minded persons could be successful in changing the emphasis of schools.
Hopeful, balanced and “steady” as always. Wonderful writing. I am Canadian but I know you Dan Rather from years of American television. I cannot believe you are 92!!! You are beyond an icon. Thank you for continuing to write with Elliot. 🇨🇦🇨🇦🇨🇦