The Mercury News

Climate change is now on Republican don’t say list

- By Leonard Pitts Jr. Leonard Pitts Jr. is a Miami Herald columnist.

You are, perhaps, already familiar with the Republican List of Things You Cannot Say. If not, here’s a quick refresher:

1. “Vagina.” That’s a definite no- no. Three years ago, Republican­s in the Michigan statehouse banned Democratic Rep. Lisa Brown from speaking after she used the v- word.

2. “Condom.” The Bush administra­tion sought to ban sex- ed teachers from mentioning the c- word or, indeed, any contracept­ive method but abstinence.

3. “Gun.” A 2011 Florida law prohibits pediatrici­ans from asking if parents have a g- word in the house. Mind you, they can ask about swimming pools, tobacco, seat belts, lead paint and other potential homebased threats to children’s health. But not firearms.

To that list, a new term has now been added. In Florida, you may not say “climate change.”

Now, you’d think the Sunshine State would be using the double c- word quite a bit just now. Florida is, of course, a lowlands state, home to the largest subtropica­l wilderness in the United States, i. e., the Everglades, and as such, one of the most environmen­tally vulnerable places in the country. That confluence of facts represents a challenge to which a governor can respond in one of two ways: 1) grapple with the problem and look for ways to solve it; or 2) ignore the problem and silence those who dare to bring it up.

Gov. Rick Scott has chosen the second option. The state now operates under an unwritten gag order banning environmen­tal officials from using the double c- word in any Florida Gov. Rick Scott reportedly issued orders for certain state agencies to not to use the term “climate change” or “global warming” in any official communicat­ions. official email, correspond­ence or report to discuss the threat from humancause­d planetary warming and rising seas.

The governor, for the record, denies any such rule exists. But Scott’s words are simply not credible in the wake of a withering report published last week by the Miami Herald. In it, multiple former state Department of Environmen­tal Protection officials describe how they were, in fact, censored by their superiors. “We were told not to use the terms ‘ climate change,’ ‘ global warming’ or ‘ sustainabi­lity,’” said former DEP attorney Christophe­r Byrd.

No, the GOP is not the only party to regulate what its officials may say. Yes, the Obama administra­tion has lately come out against language conflating Islam and terrorism in order, it says, to deny gangs of criminal thugs the legitimacy of religious underpinni­ngs. You may or may not find that reasoning persuasive, but give the White House this much credit: The ban seems designed to make a philosophi­cal point — not to forestall discussion of terrorism.

What we see in Gov. Scott, on the other hand, amounts to little more than a reality- avoidance scheme . The governor has previously tried denying the reality of global warming. He has used the “I’m not a scientist” dodge that the GOP adopted in lockstep last year. But this may be his most effective means yet: Commandeer the language, rendering discussion impossible.

It is not, however, the debate about global warming that threatens to submerge downtown Miami, but global warming itself. It turns out that, contrary to what we believed as children, if you ignore a thing, it doesn’t go away. And as guns, condoms and vaginas continue to exist despite GOP silencing, so too does the threat to Florida, the country and the planet from rising seas and temperatur­es.

Yet in the face of that existentia­l danger, the GOP continues its strategy of sowing doubt, denial and delay. It is a depressing sign that Florida’s governor exerts so much energy to manage the language of catastroph­e.

Here’s a thought: Address the catastroph­e and the language will take care of itself.

 ?? JOE RAEDLE/ GETTY IMAGES ??
JOE RAEDLE/ GETTY IMAGES

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