Thank you, Hurricane Sandy

Hurricane Sandy did the planet a favor by hitting hard right at some of our most elite enclaves.

This time it’s not the poor residents of the Ninth Ward facing the horror of flooding, it’s the wealthy owners of some of the most valuable coastal property in the country.

When I heard Mayor Bloomberg of New York, one of the richest men on the planet, finally come and out say the words “climate change” with urgency, I had to smile despite the seriousness of the context, because it meant that at last the rich and powerful are getting the message that the status quo cannot go on—at least, not if we expect to survive as a civilization into the 22nd century.

The truth is that Americans in the ruling class—the business owners, the politicians, the finance and computer wizards, the media producers, the educators, even the artists–have been living in a luxurious gated community our whole lives.

We have been watching the travails of those outside, including the accelerating extinction of other species and the poisoning of the environment, from what has seemed like a safe, secure vantage point, behind several layers of bullet-proof glass.

Americans have watched impassively as people in other parts of the world have been forced to deal with terrible storms, flooding, and droughts with increasing regularity over the past decade.

As long as the electricity stays on and the supermarkets and gas stations are full and open for business, we just don’t pay much attention to what’s going on with the weather.  As long as our homes are heated in the winter and cooled in the summer, what’s the problem?

People like James Hansen, Bill McKibben, and Elizabeth Kolbert have been knocking futilely on the windows for years, trying to get the ruling class to wake up and pay attention to the looming threat of climate change before it’s too late.

They’ve made little progress up to now.

But Hurricane Sandy is a game changer.  Blowing into town the week before the Presidential elections, she put climate change on to the front page of the New York Times at last.  She forced her way into the bland discourse of Presidential politics.

She tossed her windy head and in just a few hours paralyzed the “greatest city on Earth,” creating $50 billion of damage that will take weeks if not months to clean up.

All of a sudden, city planners are talking seriously about flood gates, and some are saying it might be foolish to rebuild in the same way, right down along the coast.

I don’t hear many in our ruling class yet saying what needs to be said, which is that our entire lifestyle has been built up in an unsustainable way, and must be changed if we are to leave a livable legacy to our children and grandchildren.

We must wean ourselves from the addiction to fossil fuels.  We must shift from highways and cars to mass transit.  We must immediately start reducing emissions in every way possible, with special attention to the agriculture sector, which has to be completely redesigned with sustainability and health—our own, and that of the animals and plants we cultivate—in mind.

We must build a much more resilient, collaborative culture.  Competition and aggression may have been the watchwords of the capitalist and imperialist 19th and 20th century, but following their star has landed us in our current grave circumstances. We can’t go any further down that path.

For thousands of years prior to the Christian era, human beings lived tribally and cooperatively in harmony with the land.  Our population has now grown so large that we are reduced to fighting each other for increasingly scarce resources.

Going forward, if we are to survive, we must transcend the pettiness of national boundaries and ethnic differences, recognize our common goals as humans, and start to work together to provide strategically for the good of all.

This may seem like an impossibly idealistic goal, but if there is one thing that I believe can unite human beings, it is the awareness now dawning about how interconnected we are through our dependence on the life support of our planet.

It is sad that the Earth has had to sink to such an unbalanced, depleted state before we began to pay attention.  I would not wish a Hurricane Sandy on anyone.  But it seems that we need wake-up calls of her magnitude to get us up and out of the stupor of denial and inaction.

As I step over the threshold into my sixth decade today, I can feel a new resoluteness building in me; a new determination to use my time in a more focused way.

I vow to give the best of myself to the struggle for a sustainable future, and to encourage others to join me in this effort.  There is nothing more important any of us can be doing now.

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10 Comments

  1. jimbob

     /  November 2, 2012

    Happy birthday! I enjoy your writing style and substance.

    Reply
  2. leavergirl

     /  November 2, 2012

    Ditto! 🙂

    Reply
  3. We, too, were heartened (and surprised) to read and hear Mayor Bloomberg come out with unambiguous statements on climate change. As to sustainability… for those who haven’t read Gary Snyder’s Pulitzer Prize winning collection of poems and essays “Turtle Island,” written over 30 years ago…

    Reply
  4. And thank YOU, Jennifer! Perfect, and shared around. I hope your whole country reads this, along with all of the first world. I hope it’s translated for the emerging capitalist economies.
    Now that climate change has hit the policy agenda of the electoral campaigning, I’ll join the 82% of Ozzies hoping Obama returns. (As you know I was so dismayed with his avoidance of this issue i could see no hope other than voting for Stein in spite of the risks. It really felt like, oh whatever, we are screwed. So all the best with your continued campaigning for a viable future for us all.
    And Happy Birthday – enjoy and be proud!
    Angie

    Reply
    • Jennifer Browdy de Hernandez

       /  November 3, 2012

      Thank you, Angie! I am glad to hear from you this week, it had been a while!

      “It really felt like, oh whatever, we are screwed.”

      I have moments when I feel this way too, but for better or worse I have a sense of hope that won’t die, and as long as there is the possibility of change, I will continue to work for it. As for the Stein/Obama question, I still think a vote for Stein is a vote for Romney, and we can’t afford that, not at all. The Romney crew are truly frightening, Bush/Cheney on steroids.

      Let’s hope Sandy did Obama a favor too, by bringing him into the public eye in a different way, showing his caring and efficient leadership style…

      love to you and your family,
      Jennifer

      Reply
  5. susan popielaski

     /  November 3, 2012

    The 9th ward can’t really compare to all the states this hurricane hit. And Staten Island is by no means the ‘elite’ and the population is much larger then new orleans. I agree that this is a taste of things to come! Warmer oceans create larger more powerful hurricanes.

    Reply
  6. bob connors

     /  November 5, 2012

    If anyone in NY or NJ etc. is suffering from effects of Hurricane Sandy and wishes to temporarily stay at our 3BR+ home in upstate NY,(Columbia County) contact me: xfiles34@aol.com This will be a needs-based prioritized offer and is meant to benefit the truly needy. Please repost this message anywhere that you think is appropriate!

    Reply
  7. Hurricane Sandy did the planet a favor by hitting hard right at some of our most elite enclaves.Agree,this will spice up the presidential election and let people decide better.

    Reply
  8. Givita Rest.

     /  December 1, 2012

    Like anywhere in the world facing climate disasters Hurricane Sandy hit the poor hardest. The rich went to hotels, have insurance, can afford to get in contractors or even rebuild. Meanwhile there were elderly people in housing projects with no heat and no electricity unable to walk down 20 flights of stairs to get food or water WEEKS after Sandy hit.

    Reply
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