We have a winner
(loser?)
In an administration
loaded with thoroughbred climate deniers, Secretary of State Mike Pompeo took a
novel approach to say the gobsmackingly dumbest thing about the climate crisis
yet.
He acknowledged one of
the major consequences of climate change, then slathered a planet's worth of
lipstick on this particular pig.
Without actually
uttering the "c" word, Pompeo told a gathering of the Arctic Council last
week:
"Steady reductions in sea ice are opening new passageways and new opportunities for trade. This could potentially slash the time it takes to travel between Asia and the West by as much as 20 days. Arctic sea lanes … could [become] the 21st Century Suez and Panama Canals."What?? This marries the effete denialism of let them eat cake with the cheap grifters' trick of two 10s for a five.
Two other remarkable
things came from this vacuous statement. By all news reports, the Arctic
Council delegates received Mr. Pompeo with uncommon politeness.
And save for a few on-the-scene dispatches, the news got buried under the daily load of a dozen other Trump-related absurdities.
And save for a few on-the-scene dispatches, the news got buried under the daily load of a dozen other Trump-related absurdities.
Pompeo is eager to get at the Arctic's resources, without a glimmer of acknowledgement that the competition up there, particularly with the Russians, is a potential new global security flashpoint.
Or that the plundering of melting poles will be an opportunity for modern man to run the table on ecological plunder.
Or that the loss of Arctic
ice could unleash a chain reaction of wind, weather, and current changes that
could theoretically put Europe in a deep freeze while warming, drying, and
burning other parts of the northern hemisphere.
Or that the melting of
land-based ice atop Greenland and elsewhere could submerge coastal populations
from Myanmar to Mar-a-Lago.
This isn't honest
political dissent. It's suicidal. Stupid. Blissfully vacant. And for Americans,
deeply embarrassing. And it's not overkill to point out that prior to his ascent
in the Trump regime, Pompeo was the home Congressman for the Wichita-based Koch
Brothers.
Pompeo's turn as Marie
Antoinette harkens back to a 1990 global climate conference where J.D.
Spradley, a U.S. delegate on loan from his day job as an oil lobbyist, dropped some knowledge on
his concerned colleagues from Bangladesh.
"The situation is not a disaster; it is merely a change. The area won't have disappeared; it will just be underwater. Where you now have cows, you will have fish."
The notion of
undermining the torrent of climate science with faint praise wasn't exclusive
to Spradley, either.
A coal industry front
group, the Global Climate Coalition, produced a half-hour documentary, The Greening of Planet Earth, in
1992. It's a big-brained look at how drastic increases in atmospheric CO2 could
bring us a bounty of farm crops – and maybe even permit the citizens of
Winnipeg to stay home for Spring Break.
Intensive agricultural
areas like south central Florida would prosper (except that non-quackery
science tells us that south central Florida will be under several feet of salt
water.)
It's deeply disturbing
to know that such screaming ignorance has worked its way up the ladder from
fringe nonprofits and a rank-and-file delegate to Secretary of State, even as
the climate crisis deepened and the on-the-ground evidence mounted under
Pompeo's clueless nose.
NOAA reported this week
that May 2018 to April 2019 were the wettest 12 months in recorded
history in the U.S, and a stunning United Nations report
projected a million-species march into extinction due to climate change and
other modern pressures.
It's even worse to know
that we were better off two years ago, when our chief diplomat was the guy from
ExxonMobil.
The world cannot
meaningfully address climate change without assertive U.S. leadership, let
alone having the U.S. pull in the opposite direction.
I'm not a big fan of
placing an expiration date on Earth – 12 years, or anything else – but if the
gentleman from Kochland is laying out America's path for the third decade of
the 21st Century, we're deeply screwed.