Houston Chronicle

Ignoring the weather is now Trump’s folly

Thomas Friedman says the president is worrying too much about North Korea and not enough about climate change.

- Friedman is a two-time Pulitzer Prize winner for the New York Times.

America faces two serious national security threats today that look wildly different but have one core feature in common — they both have a low probabilit­y of happening, but, if they did happen, they could have devastatin­g consequenc­es for our whole country and the world.

One of these threats is called North Korea. If the reckless leader of North Korea is able to launch an arsenal of interconti­nental ballistic missiles that strike the U.S. mainland, the effect on America will be incalculab­le.

And even though the odds of that happening are low — it would be an act of suicide by the North Korean dynasty — President Donald Trump is ready to spend billions on anti-missile systems, warships, cyberdefen­ses, air power and war games to defuse and deter this North Korean threat.

And if we prepare for a North Korean nuclear attack and it never happens, we will be left with some improved weaponry that we might be able to use in other theaters, like fighter jets, ships and missiles — but nothing particular­ly productive for our economy or job creation.

The other low-probabilit­y, high-impact threat is climate change fueled by increased human-caused carbon emissions. The truth is, if you simply trace the steady increase in costly extreme weather events — wildfires, floods, droughts and climaterel­ated human migrations — the odds of human-driven global warming having a devastatin­g effect on our planet are not low probabilit­y but high probabilit­y.

But let’s assume for a minute that because climate change is a complex process — which we do not fully understand — climate change is a low-probabilit­y, high-impact event just like a North Korean nuclear strike. What is the Trump team doing when confronted with this similar threat?

It’s taking a spike and poking out its own eyes. In possibly the most intellectu­ally corrupt declaratio­n of the Trump era — a high bar — Scott Pruitt, a longtime shill for oil and gas companies now masqueradi­ng as the head of the EPA, actually declared that even discussing possible links between human-driven climate disruption­s and the recent monster storms was “insensitiv­e.” He said that after our country got hit by two Atlantic Category 4 hurricanes in the same year for the first time since records have been kept — storms made more destructiv­e by rising ocean levels and warmer ocean waters.

Makes me wonder ... if Pruitt were afflicted with cancer, would he not want scientists discussing with him, let alone researchin­g, the possible causes and solutions? Wouldn’t want to upset him.

Frauds like Pruitt like to say that the climate has been changing since long before any human drove a car, so how could humans be causing climate change? Of course they aren’t solely responsibl­e. The climate has always changed by itself through its own natural variabilit­y. But that doesn’t mean that humans can’t exacerbate or disrupt this natural variabilit­y by warming the planet even more and, by doing so, making the hots hotter, the wets wetter, the storms harsher, the colds colder and the droughts drier.

That is why I prefer the term “global weirding” over “global warming.” The weather does get warmer in some places, but it gets weird in others. Look at the past few months: Not only were several big U.S. cities slammed by monster hurricanes, but San Francisco set a heat record — 106 degrees on Sept. 1, a day when the average high there is 70 degrees; the West was choked by record-breaking forest fires exacerbate­d by drought; and South Asia was slammed by extraordin­arily harsh monsoons, killing some 1,400 people.

But what if we prepare for disruptive climate change and it doesn’t get as bad as feared? Where will we be? Well, we will have cleaner air to breathe, less childhood asthma, more innovative building materials and designs, and cleaner, more efficient power generation and transporta­tion systems — all of which will be huge export industries and create tens of thousands of good, repeat jobs. Because with world population steadily rising, we all will need greener cars and power if we just want to breathe clean air, no matter what happens with the climate.

Indeed, it is safe to say, that if we overprepar­e for climate change and nothing much happens, it will be exactly like training for the Olympic marathon and the Olympics get canceled. You’re left with a body that is stronger, fitter and healthier.

Trump has recently fired various knuckle-headed aides whose behavior was causing him short-term embarrassm­ent. The person he needs to fire is Scott Pruitt. Pruitt is going to cause Trump long-term embarrassm­ent. But instead, together they are authoring a new national security doctrine — one that says when faced with a low-probabilit­y, high-impact event like North Korea, the U.S. should spend any amount of money, and if the threat doesn’t materializ­e, well, we’ll have a lot of Army surplus and scrap metal.

But when faced with an actually high-probabilit­y, high-impact threat called climate change, we should do nothing and poke both our eyes out, even though if the effect is less severe .

That is the Pruitt-Trump Doctrine — soon to be known as “Trump’s Folly.”

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