Los Angeles Times

The U.S. as a climate pariah

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Re “It may soon be U.S. against the world on climate change,” Nov. 27

The article on Donald Trump’s scientific­ally indefensib­le position on climate change reminds me of when I was a child growing up in the eastern part of Los Angeles County in the 1950s. One of my chores was to burn the household trash in the backyard incinerato­r.

Ten years later, riding my bike through the streets of Claremont, I choked in smog that hid the San Gabriel Mountains only miles to the north.

Then came the U.S. Environmen­tal Protection Agency in 1970. The air began to clear, and municipal water pollution became a rarity. But progress stopped with George W. Bush’s EPA.

With climate denier Myron Ebell likely to be put in charge of the EPA, Trump will again slam the brakes on climate action even as progress accelerate­s at local, state and global levels. Continued hardline resistance at the federal level makes America an extreme outlier. Michael Segor

San Luis Obispo

This article describes the Paris global climate agreement as a “treaty.” If that had been the case, it would have had to be submitted to the Senate for two-thirds approval to be binding in the U.S. That did not happen, and most believe that President Obama intentiona­lly avoided that designatio­n knowing he would not get that vote.

My suggestion is that Trump immediatel­y submit the Paris accord (and the Iran nuclear deal) to the Senate for its advice and consent. Failing to get the super-majority vote surely would finally put to bed any further discussion of these two agreements.

This article implicitly maintains that there is a large majority of Americans who are concerned by climate change. In fact, a recent Pew Research Center report shows that this is not the case. According to Pew, the environmen­t ranked 12th out of 14 issues for voters in 2016. Only 36% of Americans were found to be deeply concerned about climate change. George A. Vandeman

Pacific Palisades

“Mainstream science”? Please tell me The Times is not introducin­g this phrase into the American English lexicon as though climate deniers have another version of science. There is one science, just like there is one math.

One more slip-up was the reference to climate denier Ebell as a “scholar,” as if he comes to conclusion­s based on scientific consensus and the scientific method. I wish that were true.

An important lesson to everyone who believes there is only one science is that your vote is not enough. It’s time to get active. Bruce Tierney

Irvine

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