One-Time Alarmist James Lovelock Recants A Bit On Global Warming - Investor's Business Daily - Editorials 6-25-2012
Hysteria:
The scientist who brought us the Gaia theory that Earth is a living
being, which has led to a bizarre planet worship, has decided that
global warming alarmists have gone too far. It's nice to see some clear
thinking.
James Lovelock admitted on MSNBC in April that he had
overstated the case for man-made global warming and conceded that "we
don't know what the climate is doing."
The 92-year-old Lovelock
said: "We thought we knew 20 years ago. That led to some alarmist books —
mine included — because it looked clear-cut, but it hasn't happened."
Lovelock
explained that "the world has not warmed up very much since the
millennium. Twelve years is a reasonable time" for the warming to occur.
Yet the temperature "has stayed almost constant, whereas it should have
been rising" as carbon dioxide was rising.
More recently, as
revealed in an interview with the British Guardian, Lovelock disclosed
other points of contention with those he calls "greens."
He has
come to support fracking to produce more natural gas to fire electric
power plants. He's rebuked environmentalists for creating a "green
religion" that "is now taking over from the Christian religion." And he
has called the idea of sustainable development through renewable energy
"meaningless drivel."
Moreover, Lovelock has cast doubt on the article of faith that the science on global warming is settled.
Are any among the alarmist movement listening?
Unlikely.
They don't want to hear one of their patriarchs confess that "the
schemes" for development through renewable energy "are largely
hopelessly inefficient and unpleasant."
Or that he's "very cross
with the greens for trying to knock" natural gas fracking, which he sees
as a preferred alternative to coal.
And they sure want to ignore
that he said in reference to the "settled science" on global warming
that the "one thing that being a scientist has taught me is that you can
never be certain about anything."
He said: "You never know the truth. You can only approach it and hope to get a bit nearer to it each time."
No,
the alarmists are still listening to the 2006 Lovelock, who predicted
that "before this century is over, billions of us will die and the few
breeding pairs of people that survive will be in the Arctic where the
climate remains tolerable."
The environmental left and its allies
in the media and Democratic Party desperately want to keep the hysteria
boiling. Stirring up an environmental doomsday furthers the politics of
envy, sets up conditions that allow more government control over the
economy and the freedom of movement, and serves a biased press that
enjoys fanning class warfare and promoting heavy-handed government
policies.
Consequently, any honest effort regarding conservation
has been run over by a political movement that loathes capitalism,
deemed private property an abomination and taken advantage of
well-meaning people who have not been fully informed.
Lovelock says he still believes that man is causing the planet to warm but just not as sharply as he predicted it would.
The greens will latch onto that, too. But they had better not hold on too tightly.
The statement sounds a lot like a wind-down for a scientist who has indeed gotten "a bit nearer" the truth.
THE
ABOVE EPIPHANY IS DELIGHTFUL, AS IS THE FOLLOWING. FROM THE NOT TOO
DISTANT (SADLY, POSTHUMASLY) PAST, THERE IS THIS QUITE COGENT
OBSERVATION -- JOHN B.
Michael Crichton - Science as Religion -- Remarks to the Commonwealth Club -- San Francisco -- September 15, 2003
I
have been asked to talk about what I consider the most important
challenge facing mankind, and I have a fundamental answer. The greatest
challenge facing mankind is the challenge of distinguishing reality from
fantasy, truth from propaganda. Perceiving the truth has always been a
challenge to mankind, but in the information age (or as I think of it,
the disinformation age) it takes on a special urgency and importance.
We
must daily decide whether the threats we face are real, whether the
solutions we are offered will do any good, whether the problems we're
told exist are in fact real problems, or non-problems. Every one of us
has a sense of the world, and we all know that this sense is in part
given to us by what other people and society tell us; in part generated
by our emotional state, which we project outward; and in part by our
genuine perceptions of reality. In short, our struggle to determine what
is true is the struggle to decide which of our perceptions are genuine,
and which are false because they are handed down, or sold to us, or
generated by our own hopes and fears.
As an example of this
challenge, I want to talk today about environmentalism. And in order not
to be misunderstood, I want it perfectly clear that I believe it is
incumbent on us to conduct our lives in a way that takes into account
all the consequences of our actions, including the consequences to other
people, and the consequences to the environment. I believe it is
important to act in ways that are sympathetic to the environment, and I
believe this will always be a need, carrying into the future. I believe
the world has genuine problems and I believe it can and should be
improved. But I also think that deciding what constitutes responsible
action is immensely difficult, and the consequences of our actions are
often difficult to know in advance. I think our past record of
environmental action is discouraging, to put it mildly, because even our
best intended efforts often go awry. But I think we do not recognize
our past failures, and face them squarely. And I think I know why.
I
studied anthropology in college, and one of the things I learned was
that certain human social structures always reappear. They can't be
eliminated from society. One of those structures is religion. Today it
is said we live in a secular society in which many people---the best
people, the most enlightened people---do not believe in any religion.
But I think that you cannot eliminate religion from the psyche of
mankind. If you suppress it in one form, it merely re-emerges in another
form. You can not believe in God, but you still have to believe in
something that gives meaning to your life, and shapes your sense of the
world. Such a belief is religious.
Today, one of the most
powerful religions in the Western World is environmentalism.
Environmentalism seems to be the religion of choice for urban atheists.
Why do I say it's a religion? Well, just look at the beliefs. If you
look carefully, you see that environmentalism is in fact a perfect 21st
century remapping of traditional Judeo-Christian beliefs and myths.
There's
an initial Eden, a paradise, a state of grace and unity with nature,
there's a fall from grace into a state of pollution as a result of
eating from the tree of knowledge, and as a result of our actions there
is a judgment day coming for us all. We are all energy sinners, doomed
to die, unless we seek salvation, which is now called sustainability.
Sustainability is salvation in the church of the environment. Just as
organic food is its communion, that pesticide-free wafer that the right
people with the right beliefs, imbibe.
Eden, the fall of man, the loss of grace, the coming doomsday---these are deeply held mythic structures.
They
are profoundly conservative beliefs. They may even be hard-wired in the
brain, for all I know. I certainly don't want to talk anybody out of
them, as I don't want to talk anybody out of a belief that Jesus Christ
is the son of God who rose from the dead. But the reason I don't want to
talk anybody out of these beliefs is that I know that I can't talk
anybody out of them. These are not facts that can be argued. These are
issues of faith.
And so it is, sadly, with environmentalism.
Increasingly it seems facts aren't necessary, because the tenets of
environmentalism are all about belief. It's about whether you are going
to be a sinner, or saved.
Whether you are going to be one of the
people on the side of salvation, or on the side of doom. Whether you are
going to be one of us, or one of them.
Am I exaggerating to make a
point? I am afraid not. Because we know a lot more about the world than
we did forty or fifty years ago. And what we know now is not so
supportive of certain core environmental myths, yet the myths do not
die. Let's examine some of those beliefs.
There is no Eden. There
never was. What was that Eden of the wonderful mythic past? Is it the
time when infant mortality was 80%, when four children in five died of
disease before the age of five? When one woman in six died in
childbirth? When the average lifespan was 40, as it was in America a
century ago.
When plagues swept across the planet, killing millions in a stroke. Was it when millions starved to death?
Is that when it was Eden?
And
what about indigenous peoples, living in a state of harmony with the
Eden-like environment? Well, they never did. On this continent, the
newly arrived people who crossed the land bridge almost immediately set
about wiping out hundreds of species of large animals, and they did this
several thousand years before the white man showed up, to accelerate
the process. And what was the condition of life? Loving, peaceful,
harmonious? Hardly: the early peoples of the New World lived in a state
of constant warfare. Generations of hatred, tribal hatreds, constant
battles. The warlike tribes of this continent are famous: the Comanche,
Sioux, Apache, Mohawk, Aztecs, Toltec, Incas. Some of them practiced
infanticide, and human sacrifice. And those tribes that were not
fiercely warlike were exterminated, or learned to build their villages
high in the cliffs to attain some measure of safety.
How about
the human condition in the rest of the world? The Maori of New Zealand
committed massacres regularly. The dyaks of Borneo were headhunters. The
Polynesians, living in an environment as close to paradise as one can
imagine, fought constantly, and created a society so hideously
restrictive that you could lose your life if you stepped in the
footprint of a chief. It was the Polynesians who gave us the very
concept of taboo, as well as the word itself. The noble savage is a
fantasy, and it was never true. That anyone still believes it, 200 years
after Rousseau, shows the tenacity of religious myths, their ability to
hang on in the face of centuries of factual contradiction.
There
was even an academic movement, during the latter 20th century, that
claimed that cannibalism was a white man's invention to demonize the
indigenous peoples. (Only academics could fight such a battle.)
It
was some thirty years before professors finally agreed that yes,
cannibalism does inbdeed occur among human beings. Meanwhile, all during
this time New Guinea highlanders in the 20th century continued to eat
the brains of their enemies until they were finally made to understand
that they risked kuru, a fatal neurological disease, when they did so.
More
recently still the gentle Tasaday of the Philippines turned out to be a
publicity stunt, a nonexistent tribe. And African pygmies have one of
the highest murder rates on the planet.
In short, the romantic view
of the natural world as a blissful Eden is only held by people who have
no actual experience of nature. People who live in nature are not
romantic about it at all. They may hold spiritual beliefs about the
world around them, they may have a sense of the unity of nature or the
aliveness of all things, but they still kill the animals and uproot the
plants in order to eat, to live. If they don't, they will die.
And
if you, even now, put yourself in nature even for a matter of days, you
will quickly be disabused of all your romantic fantasies. Take a trek
through the jungles of Borneo, and in short order you will have
festering sores on your skin, you'll have bugs all over your body,
biting in your hair, crawling up your nose and into your ears, you'll
have infections and sickness and if you're not with somebody who knows
what they're doing, you'll quickly starve to death. But chances are that
even in the jungles of Borneo you won't experience nature so directly,
because you will have covered your entire body with DEET and you will be
doing everything you can to keep those bugs off you.
The truth
is, almost nobody wants to experience real nature. What people want is
to spend a week or two in a cabin in the woods, with screens on the
windows. They want a simplified life for a while, without all their
stuff. Or a nice river rafting trip for a few days, with somebody else
doing the cooking. Nobody wants to go back to nature in any real way,
and nobody does. It's all talk-and as the years go on, and the world
population grows increasingly urban, it's uninformed talk. Farmers know
what they're talking about. City people don't. It's all fantasy.
One
way to measure the prevalence of fantasy is to note the number of
people who die because they haven't the least knowledge of how nature
really is. They stand beside wild animals, like buffalo, for a picture
and get trampled to death; they climb a mountain in dicey weather
without proper gear, and freeze to death. They drown in the surf on
holiday because they can't conceive the real power of what we blithely
call "the force of nature." They have seen the ocean. But they haven't
been in it.
The television generation expects nature to act the
way they want it to be. They think all life experiences can be tivo-ed.
The notion that the natural world obeys its own rules and doesn't give a
damn about your expectations comes as a massive shock. Well-to-do,
educated people in an urban environment experience the ability to
fashion their daily lives as they wish. They buy clothes that suit their
taste, and decorate their apartments as they wish. Within limits, they
can contrive a daily urban world that pleases them.
But the
natural world is not so malleable. On the contrary, it will demand that
you adapt to it-and if you don't, you die. It is a harsh, powerful, and
unforgiving world, that most urban westerners have never experienced.
Many
years ago I was trekking in the Karakorum mountains of northern
Pakistan, when my group came to a river that we had to cross. It was a
glacial river, freezing cold, and it was running very fast, but it
wasn't deep---maybe three feet at most. My guide set out ropes for
people to hold as they crossed the river, and everybody proceeded, one
at a time, with extreme care. I asked the guide what was the big deal
about crossing a three-foot river. He said, well, supposing you fell and
suffered a compound fracture. We were now four days trek from the last
big town, where there was a radio. Even if the guide went back double
time to get help, it'd still be at least three days before he could
return with a helicopter. If a helicopter were available at all. And in
three days, I'd probably be dead from my injuries. So that was why
everybody was crossing carefully. Because out in nature a little slip
could be deadly.
But let's return to religion. If Eden is a
fantasy that never existed, and mankind wasn't ever noble and kind and
loving, if we didn't fall from grace, then what about the rest of the
religious tenets? What about salvation, sustainability, and judgment
day? What about the coming environmental doom from fossil fuels and
global warming, if we all don't get down on our knees and conserve every
day?
Well, it's interesting. You may have noticed that something has been left off the doomsday list, lately.
Although
the preachers of environmentalism have been yelling about population
for fifty years, over the last decade world population seems to be
taking an unexpected turn. Fertility rates are falling almost
everywhere. As a result, over the course of my lifetime the thoughtful
predictions for total world population have gone from a high of 20
billion, to 15 billion, to 11 billion (which was the UN estimate around
1990) to now 9 billion, and soon, perhaps less. There are some who think
that world population will peak in 2050 and then start to decline.
There are some who predict we will have fewer people in 2100 than we do
today. Is this a reason to rejoice, to say halleluiah? Certainly not.
Without a pause, we now hear about the coming crisis of world economy
from a shrinking population. We hear about the impending crisis of an
aging population. Nobody anywhere will say that the core fears expressed
for most of my life have turned out not to be true. As we have moved
into the future, these doomsday visions vanished, like a mirage in the
desert. They were never there---though they still appear, in the future.
As mirages do.
Okay, so, the preachers made a mistake. They got one prediction wrong; they're human. So what.
Unfortunately,
it's not just one prediction. It's a whole slew of them. We are running
out of oil. We are running out of all natural resources. Paul Ehrlich:
60 million Americans will die of starvation in the 1980s.
Forty
thousand species become extinct every year. Half of all species on the
planet will be extinct by 2000. And on and on and on.
With so
many past failures, you might think that environmental predictions would
become more cautious. But not if it's a religion. Remember, the nut on
the sidewalk carrying the placard that predicts the end of the world
doesn't quit when the world doesn't end on the day he expects. He just
changes his placard, sets a new doomsday date, and goes back to walking
the streets. One of the defining features of religion is that your
beliefs are not troubled by facts, because they have nothing to do with
facts.
So I can tell you some facts. I know you haven't read any
of what I am about to tell you in the newspaper, because newspapers
literally don't report them. I can tell you that DDT is not a carcinogen
and did not cause birds to die and should never have been banned. I can
tell you that the people who banned it knew that it wasn't carcinogenic
and banned it anyway. I can tell you that the DDT ban has caused the
deaths of tens of millions of poor people, mostly children, whose deaths
are directly attributable to a callous, technologically advanced
western society that promoted the new cause of environmentalism by
pushing a fantasy about a pesticide, and thus irrevocably harmed the
third world. Banning DDT is one of the most disgraceful episodes in the
twentieth century history of America. We knew better, and we did it
anyway, and we let people around the world die and didn't give a damn.
I
can tell you that second hand smoke is not a health hazard to anyone
and never was, and the EPA has always known it. I can tell you that the
evidence for global warming is far weaker than its proponents would ever
admit. I can tell you the percentage the US land area that is taken by
urbanization, including cities and roads, is 5%. I can tell you that the
Sahara desert is shrinking, and the total ice of Antarctica is
increasing. I can tell you that a blue-ribbon panel in Science magazine
concluded that there is no known technology that will enable us to halt
the rise of carbon dioxide in the 21st century. Not wind, not solar, not
even nuclear. The panel concluded a totally new technology-like nuclear
fusion-was necessary, otherwise nothing could be done and in the
meantime all efforts would be a waste of time. They said that when the
UN IPCC reports stated alternative technologies existed that could
control greenhouse gases, the UN was wrong.
I can, with a lot of
time, give you the factual basis for these views, and I can cite the
appropriate journal articles not in whacko magazines, but in the most
prestigeous science journals, such as Science and Nature. But such
references probably won't impact more than a handful of you, because the
beliefs of a religion are not dependant on facts, but rather are
matters of faith. Unshakeable belief.
Most of us have had some
experience interacting with religious fundamentalists, and we understand
that one of the problems with fundamentalists is that they have no
perspective on themselves. They never recognize that their way of
thinking is just one of many other possible ways of thinking, which may
be equally useful or good. On the contrary, they believe their way is
the right way, everyone else is wrong; they are in the business of
salvation, and they want to help you to see things the right way. They
want to help you be saved. They are totally rigid and totally
uninterested in opposing points of view. In our modern complex world,
fundamentalism is dangerous because of its rigidity and its
imperviousness to other ideas.
I want to argue that it is now
time for us to make a major shift in our thinking about the environment,
similar to the shift that occurred around the first Earth Day in 1970,
when this awareness was first heightened. But this time around, we need
to get environmentalism out of the sphere of religion. We need to stop
the mythic fantasies, and we need to stop the doomsday predictions. We
need to start doing hard science instead.
There are two reasons why I think we all need to get rid of the religion of environmentalism.
First,
we need an environmental movement, and such a movement is not very
effective if it is conducted as a religion. We know from history that
religions tend to kill people, and environmentalism has already killed
somewhere between 10-30 million people since the 1970s. It's not a good
record. Environmentalism needs to be absolutely based in objective and
verifiable science, it needs to be rational, and it needs to be
flexible. And it needs to be apolitical. To mix environmental concerns
with the frantic fantasies that people have about one political party or
another is to miss the cold truth---that there is very little
difference between the parties, except a difference in pandering
rhetoric. The effort to promote effective legislation for the
environment is not helped by thinking that the Democrats will save us
and the Republicans won't.
Political history is more complicated
than that. Never forget which president started the EPA: Richard Nixon.
And never forget which president sold federal oil leases, allowing oil
drilling in Santa Barbara: Lyndon Johnson. So get politics out of your
thinking about the environment.
The second reason to abandon
environmental religion is more pressing. Religions think they know it
all, but the unhappy truth of the environment is that we are dealing
with incredibly complex, evolving systems, and we usually are not
certain how best to proceed. Those who are certain are demonstrating
their personality type, or their belief system, not the state of their
knowledge. Our record in the past, for example managing national parks,
is humiliating. Our fifty-year effort at forest-fire suppression is a
wellintentioned disaster from which our forests will never recover. We
need to be humble, deeply humble, in the face of what we are trying to
accomplish. We need to be trying various methods of accomplishing
things. We need to be open-minded about assessing results of our
efforts, and we need to be flexible about balancing needs. Religions are
good at none of these things.
How will we manage to get
environmentalism out of the clutches of religion, and back to a
scientific discipline? There's a simple answer: we must institute far
more stringent requirements for what constitutes knowledge in the
environmental realm. I am thoroughly sick of politicized so-called facts
that simply aren't true. It isn't that these "facts" are exaggerations
of an underlying truth. Nor is it that certain organizations are
spinning their case to present it in the strongest way. Not at
all---what more and more groups are doing is putting out is lies, pure
and simple. Falsehoods that they know to be false.
This trend
began with the DDT campaign, and it persists to this day. At this
moment, the EPA is hopelessly politicized. In the wake of Carol Browner,
it is probably better to shut it down and start over.
What we
need is a new organization much closer to the FDA. We need an
organization that will be ruthless about acquiring verifiable results,
that will fund identical research projects to more than one group, and
that will make everybody in this field get honest fast.
Because
in the end, science offers us the only way out of politics. And if we
allow science to become politicized, then we are lost. We will enter the
Internet version of the dark ages, an era of shifting fears and wild
prejudices, transmitted to people who don't know any better. That's not a
good future for the human race. That's our past. So it's time to
abandon the religion of environmentalism, and return to the science of
environmentalism, and base our public policy decisions firmly on that.
Thank you very much.
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