Earth First! (People Later)

American Thinker | David Bueche | Apr. 22, 2008

The “science” of global warming is nothing more than a cover for their irrational emotional needs. It’s religion for people who are too cool to go to church. All that yearning, the need for something bigger, transcendent: Hey the planet’s heating up and I’ve been placed here to save it!

[…]

I drove by a Protestant church recently that had the following moral exhortation on their lawn marquee:

“Saving the world, one light-bulb at a time.”

Wow! Talk about a test of faith. Don’t think you’re going to slide through the gates of heaven without renouncing Satan’s bulbs — not a chance!

Later that week a Liberal friend asked me, “Do you believe in global warming?” As I contemplated my answer I was struck with conflicting images – a Senate sub-committee, and a child asking about Santa. To his credit, he stuck with me through my multi-part response.

To wit:

  1. The world has been warming since approximately 1650 when it reached its latest low and almost dipped into a modern Ice Age. This episode is well-recorded and notable for its misery as crop yields declined, economic activity contracted, and people were generally extremely cold. On the lighter side… you could ice skate on the Thames. But all in all, not a good trend…
  2. The world is now the same temperature as it was in 1000 A.D. We’ve basically climbed out of the trough that we descended into for 650 years and now enjoy the same general climate as feudal rulers and Vikings a millennium ago. (“Beautiful day wouldn’t you say Erik? This is pillaging weather Gefhert – pass me that mace!”)
  3. Theoretically, there is some incredibly complex formula that explains weather, temperature and climate. We will probably never comprehend it in any great detail in the lifetimes of any of us. If ever.
  4. Since we’ve only been in the carbon footprint game for a short period, there are obviously other big levers which control climate, (as evidenced by the repeated warming and cooling of the planet — the majority of which preceded humans entirely).
  5. If you were omniscient and could see this formula, there would probably be a legitimate factor in the equation representing human emission of CO2 through industrial processes and agriculture. It is quite possible that this factor is a very minor influence on the equation as a whole.
  6. It is our influence on this possibly trivial climatic input that is being debated.
    I asked what brought all this to mind. In short, why the long face?

I asked what brought all this to mind. In short, why the long face?

What followed was the standard global warming litany: Crop failures, rising tides, malaria in Vermont, people dying of heatstroke during the endless summer, etc., etc., etc…

I countered each point with one of two arguments:

  • This problem already exists and can be solved more efficiently by directly focusing on it than by attempting to manipulate the global climate – (For example, malaria can currently be eradicated for pennies on the dollar, and will never be a problem in Vermont)
  • This “problem” is not really a problem at all. It either doesn’t exist, or is the lesser of two possible outcomes. (For example, a warmer world will cause a slightly higher incidence in summer heatstroke, which will be completely negated by the decrease in winter deaths due to cold. The modeling that’s been done, [for what its worth], actually shows an overall net decrease in mortality in the “warmer world” scenario due to the fact that humans adapt more readily to heat than cold).

At some point along the way I realized I was making him angry. It wasn’t that I was being abrasive or disrespectful. I was responding point by point to each of supposed global warming calamities. “We can fix all this stuff now,” I said. “No need to give up your SUV, no buildings underwater, no tribes of cannibals living in the burned out skeleton of Baby Gap.” This should be good news, correct?

That’s where you’d be wrong. The thing you need to realize is that all these supposed outcomes are a smokescreen. Most global warming activists don’t really care about people being fed or preventing malaria. If that’s what they were concerned about they would focus on that. Trying to address world hunger by worrying about CO2 levels is about as direct as trying to become a famous actor by waiting tables in a Hollywood restaurant, (actually that may be a little too pessimistic but you get the picture).

[…]

When Al Gore says, “The Earth has a fever,” no one calls him on his cartoon personification — as if the Earth has a temperature it prefers.

Compare this to GW’s comment that Jesus Christ was his favorite philosopher – “Oh what a sad misguided fool. He still believes in God. And this is the guy who’s running our country?”

To borrow a phrase, (as I have liberally in this post), from the brilliant statistician and eco-philosopher, Bjorn Lomborg, visualize the people living on Earth 100 years from now. Let’s imagine that they can reach back in time and speak to us, give us some feedback on the world we’ll be leaving them. What do you think they’d ask us to focus on? Where would they have us concentrate our scarce time and energy?

A world in which hunger and AIDS have been eradicated or a world where the sea level is 6 inches lower?

A world free of Jihad where everyone lives under some form of representative democracy, or a world that is 2.1 degrees cooler in the months between October and March?

A world with 10% more polar bear habitat or a world where even the poorest or the poor have clean water and a sanitary place to go to the bathroom?

These are our choices. We can’t do everything.

And frankly, to hear people who are so wealthy that they’re clinically obese from excess food and leisure time yammering on about what kind of light-bulbs they use, while other people are literally starving to death… It’s beyond bizarre. It speaks to a frightening level of self-deception that seemingly intelligent folks engage in en masse.

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