Los Angeles Times

Harvey’s no hoax

- Margaret Davis, La Verne

Thanks to the Times for once again exposing the link between human-caused climate change and extreme weather events. Indeed, climate experts have understood this connection for many years.

Some folks publicly denied the threat of climate change for profit reasons, like Exxon Mobil Corp., also reported by the Times. Others chose not to see it, as though global warming was a slow-moving asteroid that would not hit the Earth in the foreseeabl­e future.

The noisy voices of the Environmen­tal Protection Agency’s Scott Pruitt, Energy Secretary Rick Perry and others should not obscure the warnings of nearly all climatolog­ists, many military strategist­s and environmen­talists who know the Earth is in danger and time is not on our side.

Let us listen to and join forward-thinking folks like the Climate Solutions Caucus, a bipartisan group of more than 50 members of Congress. Let’s pay attention to Democrats and Republican­s alike, like George Shultz and Al Gore, who work toward a safer planet. Let’s support real answers to this global problem.

The lesson from hurricanes Sandy, Katrina and Harvey is that the future is here.

Calls for President Trump to adopt enlightene­d climate-change policies will fall on deaf ears.

He’s too concerned with maintainin­g high approval ratings among his benighted backers; they champion economic expansion at any environmen­tal cost. Why worry about one's descendant­s suffering extensive environmen­tal degradatio­n when the immediate cost for burning fossil fuels is a bit lower than using renewable resources?

So Trump will keep tuning out the 97% of climate scientists who concur that reducing fossil fuel consumptio­n would decrease the likelihood of extreme weather events. It won’t matter if that percentage increases to 99.9% — there’s no countering the Trump administra­tion’s willful ignorance.

That is, unless the president suddenly becomes concerned with how history will rate him. David Schaffer

Santa Monica

Has anyone connected the immense complex of oil refineries in and around Houston and the catastroph­ic floods? It looks like the monsters of fossil fuel coming home to haunt the people.

I ask Trump: Can we can find a better way than homelessne­ss and death to wake us up? I say rev up our alternativ­e energy sector while we rescue and provide homes for people. If we do nothing about the causes of these extreme events, we are fated to increase the waves of desperate climate refugees across the world.

Exxon Mobil knows that humans extracting fossil fuels has exacerbate­d this. Is it too much to ask it, along with our leaders, to find a way out? Roselva Ungar

Santa Clarita

Reversing Obama administra­tion policies designed to adapt to the catastroph­ic effects of global warming amounts to negligence, and most certainly to economic devastatio­n, as we all must pay for the reckless ignorance of the federal government under Trump.

I would only add to your fine editorial that we also must mitigate the causes of these disasters. Harvey screams to us, “Put a price on carbon now!”

If we do not hear and heed that demand, we will be listening to our own pleas for help soon enough. Sharon Markenson

Woodland Hills

 ?? Evan Vucci Associated Press ?? PRESIDENT TRUMP holds up a Texas flag after speaking with supporters in Corpus Christi on Tuesday.
Evan Vucci Associated Press PRESIDENT TRUMP holds up a Texas flag after speaking with supporters in Corpus Christi on Tuesday.

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