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Bill McGibben: The Planet Wreckers

by Richard Matthews
June 5, 2012
in Other
0

It’s been a tough few weeks for the forces of climate-change
denial. First came the giant billboard with Unabomber Ted Kacynzki’s face plastered across it: “I Still Believe in Global Warming. Do
You?” Sponsored by the Heartland Institute, the nerve-center of climate-change
denial, it was supposed to draw attention to the fact that “the most prominent
advocates of global warming aren’t scientists. They are murderers, tyrants, and
madmen.” Instead it drew attention to the fact that these guys had over-reached,
and with predictable consequences.

A hard-hitting campaign from a new group called Forecast the Facts
persuaded many of the corporations backing Heartland to withdraw $825,000 in funding; an entire wing of the Institute, devoted to helping the insurance industry, calved off to form its own nonprofit. Normally friendly politicians like Wisconsin Republican Congressman Jim
Sensenbrenner announced that they would boycott the group’s annual conference
unless the billboard campaign was ended.

Which it was, before the billboards with Charles Manson and Osama bin Laden
could be unveiled, but not before the damage was done: Sensenbrenner spoke at
last month’s conclave, but attendance was way down at the annual gathering, and
Heartland leaders announced that there were no plans for another of the yearly
fests. Heartland’s head, Joe Bast, complained that his side had been subjected to the most
“uncivil name-calling and disparagement you can possibly imagine from climate
alarmists,” which was both a little rich—after all, he was the guy with the
mass-murderer billboards—but also a little pathetic. A whimper had replaced the
characteristically confident snarl of the American right.

That pugnaciousness may return: Mr. Bast said last week that he was finding new corporate sponsors,
that he was building a new small-donor base that was “Greenpeace-proof,” and
that in any event the billboard had been a fine idea anyway because it had
“generated more than $5 million in earned media so far.” (That’s a bit like
saying that for a successful White House bid John Edwards should have had more
mistresses and babies because look at all the publicity!) Whatever the final
outcome, it’s worth noting that, in a larger sense, Bast is correct: this tiny
collection of deniers has actually been incredibly effective over the past
years.

The best of them—and that would be Marc Morano, proprietor of the website
Climate Depot, and Anthony Watts, of the website Watts Up With That—have fought
with remarkable tenacity to stall and delay the inevitable recognition that
we’re in serious trouble. They’ve never had much to work with. Only one even
remotely serious scientist remains in the denialist camp. That’s MIT’s Richard
Lindzen, who has been arguing for years that while global warming is real it
won’t be as severe as almost all his colleagues believe.

But as a long article in the New York Times detailed last
month, the credibility of that sole dissenter is basically shot. Even the peer
reviewers he approved for his last paper told the National Academy of Sciences that it didn’t merit
publication. (It ended up in a “little-known Korean journal.”)

Deprived of actual publishing scientists to work with, they’ve relied on a
small troupe of vaudeville performers, featuring them endlessly on their
websites. Lord Christopher Monckton, for instance, an English peer (who has been
officially warned by the House of Lords to stop saying he’s a member) began his speech at Heartland’s annual conference by boasting
that he had “no scientific qualification” to challenge the science of climate
change.

He’s proved the truth of that claim many times, beginning in his
pre-climate-change career when he explained to readers of the American Spectator that
“there is only one way to stop AIDS. That is to screen the entire population
regularly and to quarantine all carriers of the disease for life.” His personal
contribution to the genre of climate-change mass-murderer analogies has been to
explain that a group of young climate-change activists who tried to take over a
stage where he was speaking were “Hitler Youth.”

Or consider Lubos Motl, a Czech theoretical physicist who has never published
on climate change but nonetheless keeps up a steady stream of web assaults on
scientists he calls “fringe kibitzers who want to become universal dictators”
who should “be thinking how to undo your inexcusable behavior so that you will
spend as little time in prison as possible.” On the crazed killer front, Motl
said that, while he supported many of Norwegian gunman Anders Breivik’s ideas,
it was hard to justify gunning down all those children—still, it did demonstrate that “right-wing people… may even be more
efficient while killing—and the probable reason is that Breivik may have a
higher IQ than your garden variety left-wing or Islamic terrorist.”

If your urge is to laugh at this kind of clown show, the joke’s on
you—because it’s worked. I mean, James Inhofe, the Oklahoma Republican who has
emerged victorious in every Senate fight on climate change, cites Motl
regularly; Monckton has testified four times before the U.S. Congress.

Morano, one of the most skilled political operatives of the age—he “broke the
story”
that became the Swiftboat attack on John Kerry—plays rough: he
regularly publishes the email addresses of those he pillories, for instance, so
his readers can pile on the abuse. But he plays smart, too. He’s a favorite of
Fox News and of Rush Limbaugh, and he and his colleagues have used those
platforms to make it anathema for any Republican politician to publicly express
a belief in the reality of climate change.

Take Newt Gingrich, for instance. Only four years ago he was willing to sit
on a love seat with Nancy Pelosi and film a
commercial
for a campaign headed by Al Gore. In it he explained that he
agreed with the California Congresswoman and then-Speaker of the House that the
time had come for action on climate. This fall, hounded by Morano, he was forced
to recant again and again. His dalliance with the truth about carbon dioxide
hurt him more among the Republican faithful than any other single “failing.”
Even Mitt Romney, who as governor of Massachusetts actually took some action on
global warming, has now been reduced to claiming that scientists may tell us “in fifty
years” if we have anything to fear.

In other words, a small cadre of fervent climate-change deniers took control
of the Republican party on the issue. This, in turn, has meant control of
Congress, and since the president can’t sign a treaty by himself, it’s
effectively meant stifling any significant international progress on global
warming. Put another way, the various right wing billionaires and energy companies who have
bankrolled this stuff have gotten their money’s worth many times over.

One reason the denialists’ campaign has been so successful, of course, is
that they’ve also managed to intimidate the other side. There aren’t many
senators who rise with the passion or frequency of James Inhofe but to warn of
the dangers of ignoring what’s really happening on our embattled planet.

It’s a striking barometer of intimidation that Barack Obama, who has a clear
enough understanding of climate change and its dangers, has barely mentioned the
subject for four years. He did show a little leg to his liberal base in
Rolling Stone earlier this spring by hinting that climate change could
become a campaign issue.  Last week, however, he passed on his best chance to
make good on that promise when he gave a long speech on energy at an Iowa wind
turbine factory without even mentioning global warming. Because the GOP has
been so unreasonable, the President clearly feels he can take the environmental
vote by staying silent, which means the odds that he’ll do anything dramatic in
the next four years grow steadily smaller.

On the brighter side, not everyone has been intimidated. In fact, a spirited
counter-movement has arisen in recent years. The very same weekend that
Heartland tried to put the Unabomber’s face on global warming, 350.org conducted
thousands of rallies
around the globe to show who climate change really affects. In a year of mobilization, we also managed to
block—at least temporarily—the Keystone pipeline that would have brought the dirtiest of
dirty energy, tar-sands oil, from the Canadian province of Alberta to the Gulf
Coast. In the meantime, our Canadian allies are fighting hard to block a similar
pipeline that would bring those tar sands to the Pacific for export.

Similarly, in just the last few weeks, hundreds of thousands have signed on to demand an end
to fossil-fuel subsidies. And new polling data already show more Americans worried about our
changing climate, because they’ve noticed the freakish weather of the last few
years and drawn the obvious conclusion.

But damn, it’s a hard fight, up against a ton of money and a ton of inertia.
Eventually, climate denial will “lose,” because physics and chemistry are not
intimidated even by Lord Monckton. But timing is everything—if he and his ilk, a
crew of certified planet wreckers, delay action past the point where it can do
much good, they’ll be able to claim one of the epic victories in political
history—one that will last for geological epochs.
___________________________________

Bill McKibben is Schumann Distinguished Scholar at Middlebury College,
founder of the global climate campaign
350.org, a TomDispatch regular, and the author, most
recently, of
Eaarth: Making a Life on a Tough New Planet.

Source: EcoWatch

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