POINT OF VIEW
On
Katrina & Global Warming...
There are scientific warnings now of another onrushing catastrophe.
We were warned of an imminent attack by Al Qaeda; we didn’t
respond. We were warned the levees would break in New Orleans;
we didn’t respond. Now, the scientific community is warning
us that the average hurricane will continue to get stronger
because of global warming. A scientist at MIT has published
a study well before this tragedy showing that since the 1970s,
hurricanes in both the Atlantic and the Pacific have increased
in duration, and in intensity, by about 50 %. The newscasters
told us after Hurricane Katrina went over the southern tip of
Florida that there was a particular danger for the Gulf Coast
of the hurricanes becoming much stronger because it was passing
over unusually warm waters in the gulf. The waters in the gulf
have been unusually warm. The oceans generally have been getting
warmer. And the pattern is exactly consistent with what scientists
have predicted for twenty years. Two thousand scientists, in
a hundred countries, engaged in the most elaborate, well organized
scientific collaboration in the history of humankind, have produced
long-since a consensus that we will face a string of terrible
catastrophes unless we act to prepare ourselves and deal with
the underlying causes of global warming. [applause] It is important
to learn the lessons of what happens when scientific evidence
and clear authoritative warnings are ignored in order to induce
our leaders not to do it again and not to ignore the scientists
again and not to leave us unprotected in the face of those threats
that are facing us right now. [applause] The President says
that he is not sure that global warming is a real threat. He
says that he is not ready to do anything meaningful to prepare
us for a threat that he’s not certain is real. He tells
us that he believes the science of global warming is in dispute.
This is the same president who said last week, “Nobody
could have predicted that the levees would break.” It’s
important to establish accountability in order to make our democracy
work. And the uncertainty and lack of resolution, the willful
misunderstanding of what the scientific community is saying,
the preference for what a few supporters in the coal and oil
industry - far from all, but a few - want him to do: ignore
the science. That is a serious problem. The President talked
about the analogies to World War II - let me give another analogy
to World War II. Winston Churchill, when the storm was gathering
on continental Europe, provided warnings of what was at stake.
And he said this about the government then in power in England
- which wasn’t sure that the threat was real, he said,
“They go on in strange paradox, decided only to be undecided,
resolved to be irresolute, adamant for drift, solid for fluidity,
all powerful to be impotent.” He continued, “The
era of procrastination, of half measures, of soothing and baffling
expedience of delays, is coming to a close. In its place we
are entering a period of consequences.” Ladies and gentlemen,
the warnings about global warming have been extremely clear
for a long time. We are facing a global climate crisis. It is
deepening. We are entering a period of consequences. Churchill
also said this, and he directed it at the people of his country
who were looking for any way to avoid having to really confront
the threat that he was warning of and asking them to prepare
for. He said that he understood why there was a natural desire
to deny the reality of the situation and to search for vain
hope that it wasn’t really as serious as some claimed
it was. He said they should know the truth. And after the appeasement
by Neville Chamberlain, he sad, “This is only the beginning
of the reckoning. This only the first sip, the first foretaste,
of a bitter cup which will be proffered to us year by year -
unless by a supreme recovery of moral health and martial vigor,
we rise again and take our stand for freedom.” It is time
now for us to recover our moral health in America and stand
again to rise for freedom, demand accountability for poor decisions,
missed judgments, lack of planning, lack of preparation, and
willful denial of the obvious truth about serious and imminent
threats that are facing the American people. Abraham Lincoln
said, “The occasion is piled high with difficulty and
we must rise with the occasion. As our case is new, we must
think anew and act anew. We must disenthrall ourselves and then
we shall save our country.” We must disenthrall ourselves
with the sound-and-light show that has diverted the attentions
of our great democracy from the important issues and challenges
of our day. We must disenthrall ourselves from the Michael Jackson
trial and the Aruba search and the latest sequential obsession
with celebrity trials or whatever relative triviality dominates
the conversation of democracy instead of making room for us
as free American citizens to talk with one another about our
true situation, and then save our country. We must resist those
wrong lessons.
From a speech given by former Vice President Al Gore at the
National Sierra Club Convention in San Francisco on September
9, 2005 addressing the challenges and moral imperatives posed
by Hurricane Katrina and global warming.