Climate
change makes floods worse. Climate change makes droughts worse.
Climate change makes forest fires worse. Climate change makes hurricanes
worse.
Category
5 hurricane Dorian devastated the Bahamas Monday and Tuesday,
leaving a trail of utter destruction in its wake.
Alexandria
Ocasio-Cortez tweeted, "This is what climate change looks like:
it hits vulnerable communities first."
Greta
Thunberg, tweeted "How many more nations in ruins do we need to
see?"
The
Union of Concerned Scientists explained
earlier this year how experts believe the human-caused climate crisis
is causing more intense hurricanes:
“While hurricanes are a natural part of our climate system, recent research suggests that there has been an increase in intense hurricane activity in the North Atlantic since the 1970s. In the future, there may not necessarily be more hurricanes, but there will likely be more intense hurricanes that carry higher wind speeds and more precipitation as a result of global warming. The impacts of this trend are likely to be exacerbated by sea level rise and a growing population along coastlines.”
"While the science has yet to come in on the specifics of just how much worse climate change made Dorian, we already know enough to say that warming worsened the damage," Michael Mann, a professor at Pennsylvania State University, and Andrew Dessler, a professor at Texas A&M University, wrote. Global warming made Hurricane Dorian bigger, wetter and more deadly
Although
Hurricane Dorian exemplifies what climate scientists have been
warning about, U.S. media are failing to connect the climate crisis
to the strongest Atlantic storm ever to hit land, Public Citizen
explained in an analysis Tuesday.
The
consumer advocacy group found that "between Friday and Monday,
climate or global warming was mentioned in just 7.2 percent of the
167 pieces on ABC,
CBS,
NBC,
CNN,
MSNBC,
and Fox.
The top 49 newspapers by circulation didn't do much better. Of them,
32 covered Dorian in their print editions, but only eight papers
connected Dorian to climate. Of 363 articles about Dorian in those
papers' print editions, just nine (2.5 percent) mentioned climate
change."
Natural
disasters are escalating because of climate change, but too few
reporters are willing to make that connection clear to the public.
"It
is mind-boggling that major media outlets can report about a storm of
epic proportions that is exactly what climate scientists have warned
about yet fail to mention two key words: 'climate change," said
Allison Fisher, outreach director for Public Citizen's Energy
Program. "We can't address the looming climate catastrophe if we
aren't talking about it."
New
York Times
columnist David Leonhardt wrote
Tuesday, "much of the conversation about Hurricane
Dorian—including most media coverage—ignores climate change."
According to him, "That's a mistake. It's akin to talking about
lung cancer and being afraid to mention smoking, or talking about
traffic deaths and being afraid to talk about drunken driving."
Catastrophic
climate change is already costing tens of billions in damage,
displacing more and more people, causing more and more casualties
from California fires to the increasing force of hurricanes, the
spread of desert and drought. While we can’t control whether or not
we get hit by hurricanes or tornadoes, we can control being prepared
If
we are all going to survive and prosper tomorrow we cannot let
capitalist interests to dictate social and economic policies. As
radical as it sounds the Green New Deal and many other reforms don't
go far enough to resolve the causes of global warming. if we want to
have a meaningful impact on climate change we will have to confront
the capitalist system. We need to think about socialism if we are to
end the global threat climate change poses to humanity. If we don't
work together, we are going to suffer together. We need to address
the root reasons for the environmental crises. We won't see an
improvement unless profound structural changes are put into place. We
need a transformation in the way we run our economic system. It is
vital to embed ecological sustainability at the heart of our economic
system. We believe that climate justice will not be possible without
abolishing capitalism, a system reliant on the exploitation of the
environment. The Socialist Party has critique the false solutions
offered by the proponents of ‘green capitalism’ and government
legislation and regulatory controls. The real solution to the looming
ecological disaster is the socialist revolution.
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