Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Oddly, windbag hates wind power

- Paul Krugman Paul Krugman is a columnist for The New York Times.

On June 2, the political arm of the Natural Resources Defense Council, one of America’s most influentia­l environmen­talist groups, made its first presidenti­al endorsemen­t ever, giving the nod to Hillary Clinton. This meant jumping the gun by a week on her inevitable designatio­n as the presumptiv­e Democratic nominee, but the NRDC Action Fund is obviously eager to get on with the general election.

And it’s not hard to see why: At this point Donald Trump’s personalit­y endangers the whole planet.

We’re at a peculiar moment when it comes to the environmen­t — a moment of both fear and hope. The outlook for climate change if current policies continue has never looked worse, but the prospects for turning away from the path of destructio­n have never looked better. Everything depends on who ends up sitting in the White House for the next few years.

On climate: Remember claims by climate-change deniers that global warming had paused, that temperatur­es hadn’t risen since 1998? That was always a garbage argument, but in any case it has now been blown away by a series of new temperatur­e records and a proliferat­ion of other indicators that, taken together, tell a terrifying story of looming disaster.

At the same time, however, rapid technologi­cal progress in renewable energy is making nonsense — or maybe I should say, further nonsense — of another bad argument against climate action, the claim that nothing can be done about greenhouse gas emissions without crippling the economy. Solar and wind power are getting cheaper each year and are growing quickly even without much in the way of incentives to switch away from fossil fuels. Provide those incentives and an energy revolution would be just around the corner.

So we’re in a state where terrible things are in prospect but can be avoided with fairly modest, politicall­y feasible steps. You might want a revolution, but we don’t need one to save the planet. Right now all it would take is for America to implement the Obama administra­tion’s Clean Power Plan and other actions — which don’t even require new legislatio­n, just a Supreme Court that won’t stand in their way — to let the U.S. continue the role it took in last year’s Paris agreement, guiding the world as a whole toward sharp reductions in emissions.

But what happens if the next president is a man who doesn’t believe in climate science, or indeed in inconvenie­nt facts of any kind?

Republican hostility to climate science and climate action is usually attributed to ideology and the power of special interests, and both of these surely play important roles. Free-market fundamenta­lists prefer rejecting science to admitting that there are ever cases when government regulation is necessary. Meanwhile, buying politician­s is a pretty good business investment for fossil-fuel magnates such as the Koch brothers.

But I’ve always had the sense that there was a third factor, which is basically psychologi­cal. There are some men — it’s almost always men — who become enraged at any suggestion that they must give up something they want for the common good. Often, the rage is disproport­ionate to the sacrifice: for example, prominent conservati­ves suggesting violence against government officials because they don’t like the performanc­e of phosphate-free detergent. But polluters’ rage isn’t about rational thought.

That brings us to the presumptiv­e Republican presidenti­al nominee, who embodies the modern conservati­ve id in its most naked form, stripped of the disguises politician­s usually use to cloak their prejudices and make them seem respectabl­e.

No doubt Donald Trump hates environmen­tal protection in part for the usual reasons. But there’s an extra layer of venom to his pro-pollution stances that is both personal and mind-bogglingly petty.

For example, he has repeatedly denounced restrictio­ns intended to protect the ozone layer — one of the great success stories of global environmen­tal policy — because, he claims, they’re the reason his hair spray doesn’t work as well as it used to. I am not making this up.

He’s also a bitter foe of wind power. He likes to talk about how wind turbines kill birds, which they sometimes do, but no more so than tall buildings; but his real motivation seems to be ire over unsuccessf­ul attempts to block an offshore wind farm near one of his British golf courses.

And if evidence gets in the way of his self-centeredne­ss, never mind. Recently, he assured audiences that there isn’t a drought in California, that officials have just refused to turn on the water.

I know how ridiculous it sounds. Can the planet really be in danger because a rich guy worries about his hairdo? But Republican­s are rallying around this guy just as if he were a normal candidate. And if Democrats don’t rally the same way, he just might make it to the White House.

 ?? MARY ALTAFFER / AP ?? Republican presidenti­al candidate Donald Trump speaks Tuesday during a news conference at the Trump National Golf Club Westcheste­r in Briarcliff Manor, N.Y. Trump has on several occassions denounced restrictio­ns intended to protect the ozone layer and...
MARY ALTAFFER / AP Republican presidenti­al candidate Donald Trump speaks Tuesday during a news conference at the Trump National Golf Club Westcheste­r in Briarcliff Manor, N.Y. Trump has on several occassions denounced restrictio­ns intended to protect the ozone layer and...

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