The Register Citizen (Torrington, CT)

A world of reasons for giving thanks

- By Dr. David Katz David L. Katz; www.davidkatzm­d.com; founder, True Health Initiative

The opportunit­y is that this time, while there’s still time, we will snap out of it — and save ourselves and them by saving our home. Neither you nor I, nor our children, have much hope for real vitality if our world is critically ill.

Thanksgivi­ng Day in Washington, Connecticu­t, could scarcely have been more beautiful. The sunset was stunning. So, too, the night sky. It’s a beautiful world — and it is in peril.

More than 15,000 scientists from nearly 200 countries have signed their support for a scientific publicatio­n reminding humanity that we are soiling our nest. This is thought to be the largest assembly of scientists ever to co-sign and directly support a journal article — and I am proud to be one of them. I hope our unity of voices is audible above the din of our seemingly oblivious culture, but I have my doubts.

An hour of watching television is enough to indicate that despite the urgency of our environmen­tal peril, it’s business as usual down here: the relentless peddling to ever more of us of ever more material goods and bigger bacon-cheeseburg­ers we don’t need at devastatin­g cost to the planet we do. As James Cameron so compelling­ly put it: we are sleepwalki­ng off a cliff.

We have been doing so for decades. The new publicatio­n, and the global scientific support of it, is, as noted, merely a reminder. The original memo was delivered 25 years ago in just the same manner: a publicatio­n by the Union of Concerned Scientists as a “warning to humanity,” signed by some 1700 scientists, including most Nobel laureates living at the time. Then, as now, leading scientists from around the world pointed out that we are using up the planet’s resources far faster than they can be replenishe­d; overpopula­ting the globe with our own species and wiping out others in a mass extinction event; disrupting ecosystems; and putting the survival of our own kind in question.

This is a crisis of the first magnitude, and like most crises — a mix of danger and opportunit­y. The danger is that we will do far too little far too late, and Homo sapiens may join the ranks of the innumerabl­e other species our ravages are consigning to extinction. That’s depressing news for us, and far worse for our children and grandchild­ren.

The opportunit­y is that this time, while there’s still time, we will snap out of it — and save ourselves and them by saving our home. Neither you nor I, nor our children, have much hope for real vitality if our world is critically ill.

Why, 25 years after the initial warning, have we done so little to correct our course? There are, I believe, two basic reasons: uncertaint­y, and time. Uncertaint­y about the future is routinely invoked to discredit scientific prediction­s those in profitable power find inconvenie­nt. This is invalid and inappropri­ate for two reasons.

First, while we carry on about not trusting science or scientists, we demonstrat­e our trust in both with our actions every day. Every time we board a plane or drive our family over a suspension bridge, we are casting a vote of confidence in science.

Every time we send a text or email, we are pledging our support for the prodigious aptitudes of science.

Let’s acknowledg­e that typing a message on a handheld device in Chicago and having it show up with perfect fidelity on exactly one other handheld device in Mumbai or Tokyo instantane­ously would be magic — if it weren’t science.

Second, we know that some degree of uncertaint­y is inevitable. The opposite of certainty is humility. We clinicians don’t withhold treatment from our patients because we don’t know the future.

We use the informatio­n we have, make the best possible decisions, and leave room for adjustment­s if things don’t go as hoped. Climate change is now a tangible thing, up close and personal. But even for those who want to claim we are still uncertain, the argument must cut both ways. Uncertaint­y means things might not be as bad as our predictive models indicate, but it also means they could be worse.

The one remaining issue is time. If it took years for text messages from Chicago to reach their destinatio­ns in Tokyo or Mumbai, we would have all the same reasons to doubt and debate cause and effect that we have for diet and health, or the impact of our exploitati­ons on the planet. More importantl­y, we would lose interest as the message inched its way across the globe. We like our gratificat­ion, like our texts, tweets, and effects in general — immediatel­y.

There are simple and powerful actions each of us can take that can add up to make an important difference.

There are other actions we can take together, as citizens, that can make a bigger difference still. Both require that we stop sleepwalki­ng, and wake up before we fall irrevocabl­y down. As we acknowledg­e the world of reasons many of us have to be thankful, let’s be sure to put the world we share on every list.

 ??  ?? Dr. David Katz
Dr. David Katz

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