It’s hard to wrap my mind around 129 degrees Farenheit, a temperature so hot that meteorologists have had to add a new color to the heat spectrum to represent it.
The pictures coming out of Australia this week have been nightmarish.
You’ve probably seen them too: the charred sheep, the family taking desperate shelter under a dock while ash and sparks fly around them, the huge red sandstorm wall looming over the ocean.
This is the push-back of Mother Earth.
There is only so far you can push her, and 2012 seems to have been the threshold beyond which there can be no further illusion of business as usual continuing.
Even some of the most hard-nose politicians are getting it now: I was heartened to hear Governor Andrew Cuomo of New York speak of the urgent need to plan for climate change disasters in his State of the State speech this week.
But he is still on the fence as far as fracking New York goes, which shows he has yet to fully put two and two together.
Two and two cannot equal two, Mr. Cuomo.
In other words, you can’t continue to expand the fossil fuel industry and not expect the blowback of climate change to worsen.
A lot of people are getting this now.
Not the ones who have their heads so deeply buried in the technology sands that all they can think about is the excitement of the next app, MOOC or tablet.
Not the ones who are riding the current stock market wave to scary new heights, buoyed by who knows what fictitious understanding of the relationships between real people and real goods—referred to in finance-speak as “market shares” and “bundled securities.”
Not the 1%, still sitting comfortably above it all, looking down on the disturbances below like vultures surveying the activities of scurrying mice.
But down here at ground level, people are starting to look at each other and know, even without speaking, not only that things are wrong, but that we cannot rely on others to make it right.
That can be the only explanation for the sudden groundswell of support for the Idle No More movement, which, just like Occupy, tapped into the resistance of ordinary people to the bulldozers of global capitalism, now coming to a forest or a farm field near you.
The lure of short-term gains has led many a politician, businessman, landowner or Native tribe down the daisy path of signing off on legislation and leases giving Big Fossil Fuel the right to do whatever the hell they want.
But we’re wising up now.
We look at the way Chevron left Ecuador when it was done extracting all the oil it could, and we listen to the story of how relentlessly their lawyers fought against giving even the least amount of their vast profits towards reparations for the toxic environment they created, and we know we could be next.
Now they’re coming right here in the Northeast—in the watersheds of New York and Pennsylvania, buying up those fallow farm fields and bringing in their huge fracking drills.
They’re down in Texas, building the first leg of the proposed transAmerican oil pipeline that will bring the dirty sludge of tar sands oil down to the Gulf of Mexico refineries, crossing over aquifers and farmland, by cities and pristine national parks.
And they’re up in Alberta with their giant bulldozers and dump trucks, razing the fragile boreal forest to get at the oozing tar underneath.
But in all these places, people are stirring. People are rising in protest. People are seeing that the short-term gains from these destructive fossil-fuel driven industries are going to quickly burn up, driving the stock market temporarily higher only to set up an even bigger crash in the future; keeping our homes warm and light today, only to set up bigger and worse climate-related disasters down the road.
A few brave souls have been sitting in the trees in Texas to block the pipeline, a resistance strategy pioneered in the 1990s when Julia Butterfly Hill sat in Luna, a giant California redwood, for more than a year to keep the loggers from cutting her and her neighbors down.
The First Nations are on the march in Canada in a movement that is spreading like wildfire across the world, protesting the poisoning of the environment by the fat cats in boardrooms who arrogantly believe that they exist on another plane, a modern-day Mount Olympus that is impervious to the environmental destabilization they are wreaking on the world.
Students are rolling out an urgent campaign to get their college and university trustees to divest their portfolios from the fossil fuel industry.
Thanks to the World Wide Web, these efforts can be beamed across the globe instantly, refracted and amplified through the networks of hundreds of millions of kindred spirits worldwide.
The dissenting power of the many that Hannah Arendt wrote of back in the late 20th century has never been more powerful, in part because resistance can now take place virtually.
We don’t have to go out and brave the guns and tear-gas, although probably in the end it will have to come to that.
We can build our networks at home, working quietly but steadily until they are so big that to arrest us all would be, as Marx predicted, to undermine the capitalist structure itself—throw all the workers in jail, and who’s going to do the work?
Right now all of these protest movements are disparate, each working on their own perceived goals. What I hope to see in the coming year is more solidarity, more recognition that we’re all really fighting the same grand battle to keep our planet from being so devastated that it can no longer support life as we know it.
Life will continue on Earth, there is no doubt of that. But whether humans, elephants, songbirds and frogs will be able to persist on a super-heated planet is quite uncertain.
It is imperative that we build an unstoppable grassroots movement to prevail on our elected representatives to represent the people rather than the corporations, and do what’s right.
How many catastrophic hurricanes, out-of-control wildfires, drought-stricken fields, bleached out corals will it take before we make use of our power as denizens of the world and say NO MORE?
Jim
/ January 11, 2013Well put! The tipping point is here, only the fat cats with their fat wallets can benefit for a while. It’s looking like another year of severe drought in America’s breadbasket – what then for food prices, etc?
Jennifer Browdy de Hernandez
/ January 11, 2013Yes, well, there is nothing like an empty stomach to get people motivated and mobilized! Revolution is in the air…like it or not!
Anna
/ January 11, 2013It was a miserably hot summer in the Southeast last year. I had planted flowers in my vegtable garden to attract honeybees, but in fact there were few to be seen. Honeybees don’t do well in extreme heat.
“Colony collapse disorder” (CCD) has already caused the disappearance of half the world’s honeybees. The toxic fields of corporate agriculture, where bees are farmed out, wreak havoc on their immune system. Can weakened, disoriented bees adapt to global warming?
“Every third bite we consume in our diet is dependent on a honeybee to pollinate that food,” said Zac Browning, vice president of the American Beekeeping Federation.
http://farmprogress.com/story-heat-and-honey-bees-dont-mix-well-9-18480
Jennifer Browdy de Hernandez
/ January 11, 2013Yes indeed, I’ve been thinking about this too, with great sadness:
https://bethechange2012.wordpress.com/2011/12/18/the-silence-of-the-bees/
pendantry
/ January 12, 2013Another very well-written article, Jennifer. I do, however, have to take issue with:
Life will continue on Earth, there is no doubt of that.
According to Hansen, there most certainly is doubt of that. I don’t believe that Venus is capable of supporting any form of life. Well, not as we know it.
billmckibbenn
/ January 18, 2013Very good analysis! hope everyone is coming to DC for Feb 17!
Jennifer Browdy de Hernandez
/ January 18, 2013Oh Bill! You’re my hero!! Thanks for reading, and you bet I will be helping to get the word out for Feb 17!
Jim
/ January 18, 2013Hi Bill. Looking forward to your visit to Hayward in February. We are at Teal Lake. They just cancelled the Classic Race, and it looks “iffy” for the Birkie at this point. How many years out of the last 15 or so, have been “touch & go” for Birkie planning due to lack of snow? It should be easy for your message to reach home up here!
Jim D