A
year of hurricanes, wildfires, and a bombshell climate report has hardly budged
two key groups.
Let's
start with a multiple choice: If we were to turn the clock back 30 years, which
of these two things did you think would happen, and which two did you think
would not?
- The Chicago Cubs would win their first World Series in a century, and the Boston Red Sox would win four.
- A bombastic, controversial real estate magnate named Donald Trump would get elected President. Of the United States.
- All corners of a strong, diligent national media would process an avalanche of science data and recognize climate change as a global crisis.
- The durable core of ideologues and coal-burning politicians would give up the ghost on the flimsy talking points of climate denial.
Back
in 1988, when we gave a landslide victory to a Republican who vowed to be
"the environmental president," concerted action on climate change
seemed right around the corner. The late George H.W. Bush also said "Those
who think we are powerless to do anything about the greenhouse effect forget
about the 'White House effect.'"
Of
course, those were only campaign promises. The national media's response to
climate crises present and future has been mixed at best, and the willingness
of Republicans remains nearly monolithic in failing to acknowledge even the
possibility of a problem.
As
for the multiple choice, we now know that the unlikely success of the Cubs, Red
Sox and Trump are real. The climate reckoning of news media and political
conservatives are not.
The liberal media watchdog group Media Matters for America tracked how often national newscasts connected the dots between climate change and the monstrous California wildfires earlier this month, concluding that ABC, NBC and CBS "dropped the ball" on mentioning climate change's impact. The left-leaning nonprofit gave more credit to local California news outlets for making the link.
Hurricanes
Florence and Michael saw similar criticism of the networks and their cable
competitors.
Meanwhile, hardy perennial deniers like Rush Limbaugh offered their own Category Five spin on the storms: "For those of you asking, "What's the politics of a hurricane?" Climate change is the politics of a hurricane. And the forecast and the destruction potential doom and gloom is all to heighten the belief in climate change."
Meanwhile, hardy perennial deniers like Rush Limbaugh offered their own Category Five spin on the storms: "For those of you asking, "What's the politics of a hurricane?" Climate change is the politics of a hurricane. And the forecast and the destruction potential doom and gloom is all to heighten the belief in climate change."
Limbaugh
and his conservative cohorts have invested decades of gab into long-discredited
denial memes. When the White House released, then dissed, the National Climate
Assessment this past week, the most popular theme seemed to be that climate
scientists are only in it for the money.
CNN
had no less than three high profile deniers trot this one out: Two of its paid
conservative pundits, former Senator Rick Santorum and economist Steven Moore,
dove right in, joining Tom DeLay, the disgraced former House Majority Leader
and ex-con.
And
Fox News? Ever the denier-friendly network, Fox was also outed this week
by The Daily Beast for staging an interview with then-EPA boss
Scott Pruitt in which EPA staff helped fashion questions for
the Fox & Friends morning show, teeing up Pruitt's answers
and even scripting an intro for the segment.
Exceptions
to the broadcast rule
MSNBC,
true to its liberal brand, has skewered the Trump Administration's reflexive
climate denial. CNN's John Avlon, too, has done a few particularly strong "Reality Check"
segments.
But
sadly and once again, the late night comics and satire shows have outperformed
their straight-faced counterparts, including this Q&A with The
Daily Show's Trevor Noah and former Vice President Al Gore.
Newspapers
outperform cable news
Print-based
institutions like the Washington Post and New York
Times have staffed up and performed admirably. The Times splashed
its coverage of the National Climate Assessment over
the entire top half of its front page. Non-broadcasters, including the
Associated Press, have been far less shy about making the climate-extreme
weather link.
Nonprofits,
including those dedicated solely to reporting on climate and environment, have
performed well, though generally to an audience that's already well aware of
the problem.
Party
of denial
Asked
about the stark verdict of his government's National Climate Assessment,
President Trump could only offer a dog-ate-my-homework answer: "I've seen
it, I've read part of it, and it's fine."
Dude, really? I seriously doubt you've read the Executive Summary. Or even the cover.
Dude, really? I seriously doubt you've read the Executive Summary. Or even the cover.
This
came only days after the now-obligatory Presidential tweet that an unusually
cold Thanksgiving on the U.S. East Coast could only be regarded as the ultimate
refutation of all climate science.
Staunch
climate deniers like Ted Cruz were returned to the Senate. Marsha Blackburn,
the Tennessee congresswoman perhaps best known for her jihad against more
efficient lighting, was elevated from House to Senate. Florida Governor Rick
Scott won a tight Senate race despite his consistent climate denial.
Dana
Rohrabacher, a 15-term Representative from Southern California and Deputy Chair
of the House Science Committee, lost, with his climate denial a likely factor.
But there are few other glimmers among Republican incumbents that hostility to
climate science won't be a pillar of the party.
A
few conservative pundits and think tankers have taken the plunge.
Max
Boot, who recently left his longtime perch on the Wall Street
Journal editorial page, recently outed himself in a Washington Post op-ed. And Jerry Taylor, a
longtime go-to guy for libertarian skeptics in Washington, is opening some eyes with
a newfound acknowledgement that we have a potentially existential problem.
S.E. Cupp, a conservative CNN pundit and New York Daily News columnist, broke with orthodoxy this week with a piece calling on her right-wing compadres to give up the "conservative climate delusion."
S.E. Cupp, a conservative CNN pundit and New York Daily News columnist, broke with orthodoxy this week with a piece calling on her right-wing compadres to give up the "conservative climate delusion."
Despite
a few cracks in the climate ceiling, we have a President, Cabinet, and
political party who still don't see a downside to denying climate change. And a
media too timid to treat the issue with the same urgency that they devote to
missing cheerleaders.
We
don't have the many years it could take to change this.