To Mother Earth, the real pandemic is us
The undeniable truth on the climate is that whatever we’re doing isn’t working.
CAMDEN, S.C. >> “Is Doomsday here?” Joe Biden asked Monday during a blistering speech about the West Coast fires and several tropical storms brewing offshore.
Sadly, given the season, the wildfires devastating parts of California, Oregon and Washington have only added to the political tinder as the election nears. Meanwhile, tropical storms and hurricanes in the Atlantic Ocean and Gulf of Mexico soon will flood the airways with tragic images alongside political ads and the latest COVID-19 statistics of the sick and the dead.
Biden’s speech, delivered in his hometown of Wilmington, Delaware, and obviously written for targeted effect, harnessed fears of the nation’s most-coveted constituency — the swing voters of America’s suburbs. He may as well have been galloping astride all four horses of the Apocalypse, with flames and floods chasing the thundering hoofs.
“Wildfires are burning the suburbs in the West,” he said. “Floods are wiping out suburban neighborhoods in the Midwest. Hurricanes are imperiling suburban life along our coast. If we have four more years of Trump’s climate denial, how many suburbs will be burned in wildfires? How many suburban neighborhoods will have been flooded out? How many suburbs will have been blown away in superstorms?”
I won’t be surprised if Biden wears green tights and a cape for his next speech.
Costuming aside, Biden at least was addressing what President Donald Trump basically refuses to.
So, which is most to blame for the fire and smokes blanketing the western United States? Climate change, as the left insists, or poor forest management, as Trump and others insist?
How about both things at once, asks a rare voice amid the cacophony.
Tom Mullikin, who has appeared in this space before, is an environmentalist and lawyer, who has been working in the climate-change trenches for decades. He happens to live down the street from me and is a reliable source on all things climate. Once a protege of Al Gore, the original Cassandra of climate change, Mullikin has made his own documentary, “The Whole Truth,” in response to Gore’s “An Inconvenient Truth.”
I called Mullikin to get his thoughts about Earth’s current convulsions and what our response should be.
First, he said, the wildfires are the result of a confluence of rising temperatures and poor forest management. But many West Coasters don’t want to talk about the need for logging, culling and controlled burning of forests; while others don’t want to hear about climate change.
Another problem, he said, is our inability to merge the macro (climate change is a global problem) with the micro (Oh, damn, my house is on fire!). The first seems too much to handle; the second is local in the extreme. But a truly global policy without exceptions is essential if local eruptions are to be prevented.
As for Biden’s list of planetaltering proposals, Mullikin is skeptical, and he’s right to be. There is little evidence throughout his political career that Biden ever really prioritized the environment and combating climate change. Even as vice president, he reportedly wasn’t involved in the Obama administration’s signature accomplishment of helping make the Paris climate agreement a reality.
In other words, Biden’s concern about climate change is, well, somewhat new. Then again, the Trump administration has for the last four years worked against seemingly any and every environmental initiative, even ones supported by his own party.
The undeniable truth is that whatever we’re doing isn’t working.
With 7.8 billion people crowding the planet — clearcutting forests for agriculture and development, infiltrating previously protected ecosystems and destroying Earth’s natural protective barriers — it would be naive to expect that things will get better on their own.
Earth, after all, is a living organism fighting for her life — and we humans are her pandemic.