From vaccines to elections to climate change, denial is doing lasting damage to the country.
Peter Dykstra for the Environmental Health News
Americans have learned a lot about the concept of denial in recent years.
COVID-19 denial, where the horrible facts of a global body count of three million, including an American COVID death toll that's nearly twice the U. S. combat toll from World War II.
That fact hasn't impressed some who think the pandemic is a hoax;
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Vaccine denial, an offshoot of the widespread anti-vaccine movement, runs the risk of the U.S. never achieving herd immunity.
Mask denial, when a
public health essential is outweighed by a perception that mask mandates are a
violation of individual rights;
Election denial, where a mass delusion
championed by former President Trump becomes a national distraction at the
worst possible time;
Gun
denial, now a hardy paranoidal in American politics, pits an outlandishly
outsized proportion of U.S. gun deaths compared
to the rest of the world—from suicides to mass murders;
Insurrection
denial, on Wednesday, Congressman Andrew Clyde (R-GA) likened the January 6
Capitol riot to "a normal tourist
visit" and his colleague Ralph Norman (R-SC) said he
hadn't "seen a poll" proving that Trump supporters were among the
rioters;
Fake
News denial, when all of the above draw skeptical reviews, blame it all on the
Mainstream Media.
Climate change denial playbook
If
you follow the science and politics of climate change closely
you'll recognize the pattern of motivated reasoning. Against a flood of
scientific evidence, deniers have released barrel after barrel of red herrings.
Here
are but a few:
- Sunspots, not increasing CO2, are responsible for rising temperatures and extreme weather;
- Climate scientists are only in it for the money -- unending torrents of research grants, not to mention the gravy train of fame and glory;
- Activists have a tool to upend the world order — so do "leftist" politicians and governments.
- History repeating itself
Of
course, climate denial itself has many fathers.
Merchants of Doubt is
the groundbreaking 2010 book by Naomi Oreskes and Erik Conway. The authors
performed political archaeology, tracing climate denial back through its
ancestors—often credentialed scientists who deployed specious arguments to deny
the impacts of secondhand smoke, ozone-depleting chemicals, and more.
Bottom
line: History is repeating itself.
Before
our very eyes. Denying the results of a presidential election threatens our
democracy. Denying the ways to conquer COVID-19 threatens our health. Denying
the ways to combat climate change threatens our future.
Pick
your poison.
Peter
Dykstra is our weekend editor and columnist and can be reached at pdykstra@ehn.org or @pdykstra.
His
views do not necessarily represent those of Environmental Health News, The
Daily Climate, or publisher, Environmental Health Sciences.