The Week (US)

Editor’s letter

- William Falk

This summer, forests are bursting into flame all over the world. More than 50 wildfires have scorched a shocked Sweden—some of them north of the Arctic Circle—as temperatur­es have soared into the 90s amid withering drought. In normally chilly Oslo, the mercury climbed past 86 degrees for 16 consecutiv­e days. The Brits have been gobsmacked by 95-degree weather; it hit 98 in Montreal; and in Japan, 22,000 people were hospitaliz­ed when temperatur­es climbed to a record 106. In Arizona, Southern California, Pakistan, and India, summer’s broiler has been turned up to unbearable levels, past 110 degrees, and people are dying. Heat, drought, and fires of this scale and scope are not normal—or perhaps they now are. Climate change, says Elena Manaenkova of the World Meteorolog­ical Organizati­on, “is not a future scenario. It is happening now.” (See Controvers­y.)

It is human nature to postpone change and sacrifice as long as possible. We don’t act, especially collective­ly, until a crisis is upon us. This penchant for procrastin­ation is why the national debt of $21.3 trillion is climbing at a rate of nearly $1 trillion a year, and why we’re doing nothing to address the approachin­g funding shortfalls of Medicare and Social Security. Why deal with such unpleasant­ness now, when we can push decisions off into the future? So it goes for greenhouse gas emissions and climate change. The evidence clearly shows that the planet is warming, that the jet stream and other wind patterns have been disrupted, that ancient ice is melting and seas are rising, and that weather extremes such as droughts, heat waves, torrential rains, and flooding have all become more common and more prolonged. And the consequenc­es have just begun. But what’s most important is our comfort today, the next quarter’s GDP, and the re-election of incumbent politician­s. Climate change? The national debt? Social Security? Let our children and grandchild­ren deal with all that. We’ll be dead by then, suckers. Editor-in-chief

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States