Tag Archives: Climate religion

Bidenomics and energy

From CFACT

By Frank Lasee

A big part of Bidenomics is the financial pain and future loss of choices caused by his climate policies. Joe Biden has said he wants to end fossil fuels and attempting it at great cost and risk. Biden has weaponized the entire federal government and filled it with climatistas. They put radical climate policies above the interests of poor and middle-class Americans.

The people who can least afford the $2,300 increase in energy costs. Or the double-digit inflation caused by the borrowing that increases our $34.7 trillion national debt, the higher energy prices that make everything more expensive, as do the never-ending stream of climate regulations. Nothing is immune from these climate change addled meddlers.

Despite the climatistas multi-decade efforts. More coal, natural gas, and oil was used and emissions than ever before in history. The eight billion of us humans use a lot of energy and billions of us need much more. Because affordable, abundant, reliable energy is the cornerstone of health and prosperity. Without energy, life would be shorter, less prosperous, and not fun.

The Biden climate agenda doesn’t recognize the fact that Americans, as former climate czar John Kerry said, “could go to net zero and it wouldn’t make any difference at all.” (Net zero is no net CO2 emissions). This is one thing John Kerry said that is true.

Last year the people of the world used about 37 billion barrels of oil, 4 trillion cubic meters of natural gas and 8.5 billion tons of coal, which is equivalent to about 41 billion barrels of oil. These fuels provide 81% of the world’s total energy. Wind and solar just 3%.

China uses more than half of the coal in the world and the U.S. uses about 20% of the oil, or about 20 million barrels a day. Is it senility, deliberate blindness, the climate religion, or some other agenda, which has people feeling that we can just end 83% of the world’s energy in the next 25 years (by 2050) without horrendous consequences for all of us?

No sane person who wants to keep their good health and vibrancy would just end the foods (fuel for the body) that provides 83% of their calories for energy needs. The wise person would have a plan to replace food before ending their primary food sources. There workable plan or costs for replacing the energy fossil fuels provide us.

Fossil fuel energy is the food that feeds our civilization. Without it, we lose our vibrancy, and many will die. It is time that we admit that wind and solar cannot meet the energy needs of our advanced civilization.

Even if wind and solar could, it wouldn’t make any difference. Because India and China with 2.8 billion people between them are using more coal to increase energy availability for their people. Where literally 100s of millions are energy underserved.

Both of these countries get more than half of their total energy, not just their electricity, from coal. This is unlikely to change in the coming decades because they are ramping up their coal usage by opening more mines and building more coal electricity plants. Coal is abundant in most countries in the world, it is low cost, and provides reliable electricity. There is at least 500 years of coal in the ground.

Reliable electricity is a cornerstone of prosperity. There is no way to build the hundreds of thousands of wind towers and thousands of square miles of solar panels fast enough to phase out even 10 or 20% of the energy supplied by fossil fuels over the next 25 years.

Even if we could build them fast enough, which we are not, we’d still have a problem. What provides electricity when the wind doesn’t blow, and the sun doesn’t shine? Nope, it’s not batteries. They’re far too expensive and we don’t have the supply chains to manufacture them during this century.

And the international bully, Communist China controls the wind, solar, and battery supply chains from the beginning to end. It is not in our national best interest to drive up our national debt and energy prices to purchase and rely on a powerful rival country like China for our critical needs.

Any time something that is necessary, like energy or food is in short supply, the prices rise. When energy prices rise, all other prices rise, including food, because energy is required for everything that we do. The inflation causing profligate spending and the endless climate regulations are features of Bidenomics.

We need to change direction soon. If we do not, our electric rates will at least triple, everything will cost even more, and we will have to get used to blackouts or brownouts on a regular basis. Our ability to defend ourselves will be compromised. And we are losing out around the world to China, as it helps countries develop their fossil future, while we are attempting to force them to remain in the Dark Ages, burning wood and dung for fuel.

Americans can do better. We need to change our energy course before it is too late.

This article originally appeared at Real Clear Energy.

“Climate Envoy” John Kerry resigns

From CFACT

By Peter Murphy

White House climate “Special Envoy,” John Kerry, announced last week he is resigning his White House climate position to join President Biden’s campaign for re-election.

Count me a climate “czar” skeptic. Surely there is more to this resignation, which I suspect is a combination of the failure of climate change policies to take hold nationally and globally under Kerry’s watch and that more salient events have transcended the issue including regional conflicts and a teetering global economy. It’s hard to get taken seriously on esoteric climate warnings decades into the future when contemporary wider wars are simultaneously threatening eastern Europe, the Middle East, and in the Taiwan Strait.

Mr. Kerry himself, who last month turned 80 years of age, may be getting tired of being ignored and showing nothing for his efforts these last three years. With ample personal wealth from his second marriage to an heiress of the Heinz ketchup fortune, why bang your head against a climate wall, if you can still windsurf?

Before he heads off to help President Biden’s attempt at re-election, Mr. Kerry is taking one last climate junket, this one to Davos Switzerland for that annual bastion of self-importance and groupthink, the World Economic Forum, which is one of the few places anyone takes him seriously.

There Kerry was confronted by a reporter who challenged him on his hypocrisy of flying carbon-heavy private jets while demanding everyone else lower carbon emissions. “That’s a stupid question,” America’s Climate Envoy responded. Way to think on your feet, Mr. Kerry, especially since this very familiar issue has long plagued you and should come as no surprise.

Having been so accustomed to a fawning, congenial media, America’s climate czar was in no mood for reporter practicing actual journalism by holding him to account for his actions.

This Climate Envoy position was created for Mr. Kerry after President Biden’s election and is often referred to as climate “ambassador.” But ambassadors are subject to approval by the U.S. Senate, and this post received no such action, which made Kerry unanswerable and unaccountable to Congress (though he once appeared before it voluntarily).

Instead, John Kerry has been a senior White House staff member who roamed the planet for three years in private, family-owned aircraft trying to convince nations to reduce carbon emissions to purportedly save the planet. Few listened and fewer cared, outside the United Nations and other global bureaucracies that reside in a bubble, impervious to civilian day-to-day realities and sound science that challenges their climate dogma.

Sure, many nations pay public lip service to some amorphous commitment to “fight” climate change, reduce emissions, shift to alternative energies, blah blah blah. But it is mostly unserious, particularly from larger energy consuming nations like China, India and Russia.

China, the largest emitter of carbon dioxide into the atmosphere, signed the Paris Climate Accords in 2015, but committed to nothing before 2030, and will continue to increase its production and use of coal, the biggest climate change bugaboo. Don’t bet the ranch the Chinese Communist Politburo will get climate religion in the next decade and jump on the “net-zero” parade. All the while, John Kerry has played along as though China was a partner and progress was afoot, even as he and the president ignored China’s military aggression and human rights abuses.

At Davos, Mr. Kerry’s tin-ear elitism again was on display as he reiterated the Biden administration’s full-on effort to turn the U.S. into a playland of electric vehicles. Kerry’s embrace of these toys was a pure misinformation since they are increasingly showing themselves unreliable in cold weather, potentially explosive during flooding, harmful to the planet (if you look askance at increasing strip mining), and exploitive of child labor in the developing world.

Other climate policies are further on the defensive in the U.S. and globally, ranging from corporate America’s pull-back on environmental, social governance (ESG) policies, to opposition by farmers in the Netherlands, Germany and elsewhere protesting government efforts to curtail use of fertilizer and meat products. And, financial commitments by “wealthy” nations to climate mitigation has been pennies to the state dollar of need.

Lastly, there is the price of gasoline, which has been declining in the U.S. to in the last 20 months to a national average of $3.05 per gallon at this writing. That’s a good thing for American consumers, and President Biden is trying to get re-elected, after all. But lower gasoline prices are bad for climate fanatics and the sought-after “transition” to EVs, wind turbines and solar panels, since such “green” energy becomes even less competitive and more impractical against more affordable fossil fuels.

John Kerry’s 40-year career in politics now appears to be sun setting. He reached many plateaus as a U.S. senator, Secretary of State and presidential nominee of the Democratic party. But climate envoy was a bridge too far and is ending in abject failure.

Greta Thunberg’s climate crusade is heading for defeat | Michael Shellenberger interview

“Greta Thunberg is an end stage product of the climate religion. As renewables come into crisis everywhere in the world because of local community opposition to the land use impacts, as well as the high associated costs, the bloom is coming off the rose for climate activists.”

Michael Shellenberger is an environmentalist, author, and advocate for pragmatic solutions to climate change. He joins Steven Edginton to talk about the ‘religion’ of climate change for this week’s Off Script podcast. Watch the full interview above, or listen on your podcast app by searching “Off Script”.

Grand Enviro-Scandal: Wind Industry Delivers (Dead) Whale Watching Tourism Bonanza

From STOP THESE THINGS

Thanks to the offshore wind industry, it’s never been easier to get up close and personal with rare and endangered whales. Never before has the general public been able to walk along the shoreline and find their favourite beach routinely littered with a steady stream of cetacean carcasses. Call it ‘eco-tourism’, with a twist.

Some might cringe at the carnage, but the wind industry hasn’t a care in the world – long before they began spearing these things into the ocean, they sought and were granted government-backed licenses to (quite lawfully) kill an unlimited number of whales, porpoises and dolphins – aka the ‘Incidental Harassment Authorization’.

Under the witless Chris Bowen, Australia’s wind and solar obsessed Federal government is hell-bent on plugging thousands of these monstrosities off Australia’s coasts, notwithstanding the wholesale whale slaughter playing out along America’s Atlantic coast.

With that in mind, it’s timely to tap into the work of Michael Shellenberger, who has recently produced a half-hour documentary, Thrown To The Wind – that exposes the corrupt relationship between government and the wind industry – desperately designed to cover up the true cause of one the greatest environmental scandals, of all time.

We’ll start first with Shellenberger’s interview on Sky News, and leave you with the video of Thrown To The Wind.

Government offshore renewable projects at risk of killing marine life
Sky News
Outsiders
24 September 2023

Environmental policy expert Michael Shellenberger says offshore renewable projects are “very environmentally degrading technology” that is affecting marine life.

“Windmills are very old, these are hundreds of years old technologies; the wind itself has low energy density meaning you have to spread wind turbines over huge areas, that; ‘s why they keep building them so big,” Mr Shellenberger told Sky News host Rowan Dean.

“The preparation, the mapping of the ocean floor with sonar is so loud it’s actually in violation of the regulations by the US government the separations the mothers from their calf’s, it sent the whales into boat traffic.

“These impacts can be seen around the world; the east coast is very sensitive because it’s actually a very shallow waters on the offshore.

“I think you can expect to see very significant impacts in Australia and everywhere in the world, I think people don’t realise that the oceans are full of life and I think we sometimes miss the fact that it’s a really biodiverse important part of our planetary ecosystem.”

Transcript

Rohan Dean: The Albanese government’s green dream is in strife. Things are not going to plan. Residents near the proposed five gigawatt Hunter offshore wind farm zone are furious. Not only is it outrageously expensive, but it will kill our whales. Our next guest has delved deeply into this sad phenomenon in his documentary, Thrown to the Wind. Take a look.

Thrown to the wind:
“I saw another whale had washed up and it’s becoming a pattern.”
“It sounds like someone pile driving!”
“What the United States is looking at is thousands of wind turbines in an area that our whales, our dolphins, our marine life…”
“So those red dots are whale deaths?”
“Precisely.”
“What a scandal.”

Rohan Dean: Joining us now is the producer of that video, a great friend of Outsiders, Michael Shellenberger, author, journalist, and founder of the group, Environmental Progress. Michael, it’s always great to see you. Thanks for coming on Outsiders. The documentary about killing whales, it has landed at the right point in time here in Australia. We are embarking on a massive offshore wind program across some of our most beautiful Australian ocean sides. What do you make of it?

Michael Shellenberger: Well, it’s good to be with you, Rohan. And yeah, I mean, it’s a very environmentally degrading technology because you have to remember, windmills are very old. These are hundreds of years old technologies. The wind itself has low energy density, meaning you have to spread wind turbines over huge areas. That’s why they keep building them so big, as tall as the Eiffel Tower. What we have documented is just simply the preparation, the mapping of the ocean floor with sonar is so loud. It’s actually in violation of the regulations by the US government that separates the mothers from their calves. It sends the whales into boat traffic and also the wind industry is expanding boat traffic into areas where there wasn’t traffic. That’s what’s behind the deaths of these whales off the East Coast of the United States. Also, dolphins, all cetaceans. And these impacts can be seen around the world.

The East Coast is very sensitive because it’s actually very shallow waters on the offshore and there’s only 340 of these magnificent whales left. It’s the North Atlantic right whales. But I think you can expect to see very significant impacts in Australia and everywhere in the world. I think people don’t realise that the oceans are full of life, and I think we sometimes miss the fact that it’s a really biodiverse important part of our planetary ecosystem, and I think there’s also just a lot of mythology. I think people think that because it’s wind, it’s somehow more natural or better for the environment, but what the science shows is something very different. Massive ecological impacts from industrial wind turbines. And as I pointed out last week, we’re now seeing the impacts of wind turbines on pumas in Brazil, critically endangered, but also on eagles, other raptor species, including raptors in Australia, and bat species. These are huge, loud degrading devices, and so I would just say you really have to make sure because we’ve discovered that the government hasn’t done the research that it claimed it was doing in order to monitor and protect the whales.

Rohan Dean: James.

James Morrow: And Michael, you go further than that, and this is a great concern in Australia because we also have right whales that migrate up and down the East Coast every year. You can watch them from the cliffs at Bondi. You can see them go up the coast. You say that the government knew about these effects and has covered this up. Tell us about that and what does that tell us that we should be watching out for when the government here in Australia says, “This is clean, this is green, this has no impact. This is what we need. If we’re going to march on to net zero, whales be damned.”

Michael Shellenberger: Well, I think the first thing you have to remember is that environmental conservation organisations have been pointing out the impacts of sonar on whales for many decades. This is a very well-studied phenomenon. Two years ago, the big conservation organisations wrote an open letter warning of this particular project on this whale species. Last year, a top government scientists wrote a very unusual letter warning of extinction on the species. We have now sent multiple letters to the government pointing out that the applications for the permits to engage in this industrial activity themselves show that they’re in violation of the law. So it’s big money, huge taxpayer subsidies. Somewhere on the order of one third to two thirds of the cost of wind energy is subsidised by rate payers. The industry then funnels that money to the politicians who then put pressure on the regulators to not enforce these environmental laws.

They have this cover, this story that says that this is good for the environment. It’s bad for the environment. This is greenwashing like I’ve never seen before. I’ve said it before, I’ll say it again. This is the biggest environmental scandal I’ve ever seen or been involved with, and I’ve been involved in environmental causes for over 30 years. This is a critically endangered species that could go extinct because of this project, but I think that people in Australia also need to look closely at the documents. People can be in touch with me, by the way. We’ve now gotten pretty good at the science and also at helping to work with the independent scientists, so many of whom have been sold out and the conservation groups have sold out.

We also documented industry funding for news organisations, aquarium, Woods Hole. I mean, it’s shocking how much money is being spent basically to repress the best available science showing the imminent threat to these magnificent animals, spiritual animals, I should say. There’s a reason we care about whales, the songs, the love of the mothers for their calves, the ways in which they’re a communal species. All of the reasons that we’ve loved and protected whales for decades stand today. It’s more desperate than ever, particularly for the right whales.

Rohan Dean: And Michael, I’ll just point out to viewers, you were of course Time Magazine’s, Young Environmentalist of the Year several years ago, so you know exactly what you’re talking about when you talk about caring for the environment. Liz.

Liz Storer: Well, I was going to ask Michael, how you account for the fact that the government is blindly forging ahead despite all the research done by yourselves and others in this space, and how do you account for that? You’ve kind of already answered that by saying follow the money. Do you ascribe to the idea that that’s really all there is behind the veil of this green dream zero emissions. And what do you make, would you agree with Dr. Jordan Peterson’s assessment that this is an extremely anti-human species agenda that we’re seeing rollout?

Michael Shellenberger: Yeah, absolutely. I think the thing you have to remember is that the reason that wind energy is so expensive is the same reason it’s so bad for the environment, which is that it’s just really inefficient. Wind is very energy dilute. You have to spread the collection of energy over huge amounts of areas. You have to build these machines to be very tall, to have huge environmental impacts. At bottom, it is a kind of mania like a religion, climatism, which says that climate change is the only environmental problem. It is an environmental problem. It’s not the biggest environmental problem and what is more tragic than actually killing an entire species of whale out of, because people are in the grip of this religion. We have shut down more nuclear energy on the East Coast of the United States, closed more nuclear plants that produced more energy than all of the wind turbines will produce if they got them up and running.

So the big hope here is that the finances of these projects are absolutely awful. Even with one to two third subsidy, the wind industry is asking for more money for rate payers. So we’re at just high corruption at this point. I mean, it’s just a money grab by greedy politicians, by frankly greedy journalists, scientists, conservation groups. Many of them have really sold out. It’s been a small group of us that are independent scientists, researchers, advocates, and others that have been fighting this. But I think that Australians also have a really important role to play here. The projects that proposing Australia would be absolutely devastating. We’re here to be in solidarity. If folks in Australia want to reach out, michaelshellenberger@gmail.com, happy to give our assistance because this industry is an absolute nightmare for marine life, marine mammals, and for whales in particular. There’s a reason we care so much about these particular animals.

Rohan Dean: Michael Shellenberger, well said, you will be inundated. I’ll repeat that, michaelshellenberger@gmail.com. We know what a great job Michael has done on so many fronts. We’ll talk to you again soon in a couple of months because the nuclear debate is heating up here. Michael, you were out here in Australia talking to Australians about the need for nuclear to get to net zero. The liberal party is finally… looks like adopting that as their major policy going to the next election. So we’ll be chatting a lot more about that, but that’s yet another example, Michael, of the great work you have done for us here in Australia. Get ready for those emails on the whales. Thanks, Michael.
Sky News

Here’s Michael’s documentary on the offshore wind industry’s utterly pointless and unnecessary marine mammal slaughter.

Thrown to the Wind
YouTube
Public News Video
14 September 2023

YouTube

Inside the Carbon Cult

From Kevin D. Williamson

Foreword

Kevin D. Williamson has a pretty good claim to being the best columnist in the United States right now. I don’t say that lightly. We Brits, as you may have noticed, are sparing in our use of superlatives. But I can’t think of anyone else in whom all the qualities that make for a great opinion writer are so sweetly blended.

Which qualities?

First of all, intense curiosity.

There are plenty of columnists who make a good living by serving up predictable arguments in well-spiced language. Their readers, who know in advance exactly what they are buying, nod along vigorously, enjoying the sensation of having their prejudices confirmed. But shall I let you into a professional secret, as an old newspaper hack myself?

These are the easiest columns to write. They require no specialist knowledge and precious little research. All you have to do is read the news, maybe follow one or two links to original sources, and possibly phone an expert on whom you can try out your thesis.

Williamson is not a grandee who bloviates on TV shows. He is a newsman to his inky fingertips, always ready to engage in his own investigations. Here is a man who used to write for the local paper in Lubbock, Texas, and who worked for a time as a theater critic. You see the thoroughness of a seasoned reporter in the following collection. Anyone can toss off colorful opinions about the eco-loons. But Williamson covered the Glasgow summit in detail, asking penetrating questions. He bothered to get into the detail of the nuclear debate. The ensuing essays show it.

Next, Williamson is blessed with a fine turn of phrase. “Outrage is intoxicating, and like other intoxicants, it makes people stupid.” “When things go sideways in this unhappy world, nobody cries out in the dead of night: ‘For the love of God, somebody call the Dutch!’” His clever phrases are not, as they can be in the hands of a lesser journalist, a cover for ambiguity. Rather, they emphasize and solidify his arguments.

Then there is his versatility. There are few subjects to which he cannot turn his hand: popular music, technology, art, religion, sports, drugs, history, economics. Give him a topic and he will find intelligent and original things to say about it, thoroughly researched and beautifully expressed.

Finally, there is his independence. Yes, Williamson has a point of view. He is, broadly speaking, a Right-of- Center free-marketeer. But he is anything but predictable. During the Trump era, almost all conservative writers took sides. Either the president was a threat to the republic, or he was the people’s champion, finally taking the fight to the libs. Williamson was unimpressed. He saw Trump as representing the kind of two-bit Caesarism that the Founders had warned against, and found his buffoonish antics embarrassing. But he never gave into hatred, acknowledging the things that went well under the 45th president without ever losing his skepticism.

All those qualities are on display in the pages that follow. Williamson is by no means the first writer to draw attention to the quasi-religious nature of some eco-campaigners, for example. But when have you ever seen that point made so vividly, so humorously and based on so much primary evidence?

Throughout, Williamson’s dramatic prose is tempered by his cool-headed detachment. He does not deny that the world is heating, nor that human activity is playing its part. He simply points to some of the absurdities that have f lowed from our determination to approach climate change in millenarian rather than transactional terms. Instead of assessing the problem and finding the most cost-effective way to treat it, we have entered into a ghoulish spiral of competitive pessimism.

Edmund Burke spoke of society as a partnership of the dead, the living, and the unborn. Nowhere is this clearer or more important than when it comes to the environment. This is altogether too important a field to be left to the Left— which is why we are lucky to have a thinker of Williamson’s caliber engaged. He has the great gift of being able to take complex themes and make them comprehensible. How fortunate that he uses his powers for good.

Daniel Hannan
President
Initiative for Free Trade
January 2023

Introduction

This is not a religious book in the sense of its being meant to convey a religious message or for people of a particular religion—it is a book containing three journalistic reports about a religion, or a sort of religion, that emerged from and then subsumed the environmental movement. Today, that movement is a kind of cult and not a political movement at all, if it ever was one. Those who profess one of the Abrahamic faiths have a religious interest in idolatry because it perverts religion and leads religion to inhuman ends—Norman Podhoretz, in his very interesting book The Prophets, describes the ancient Israelite “war on idolatry” as a matter that is not exclusively otherworldly but very much rooted in a campaign against the ghastly social practices associated with idolatry: cannibalism, child sacrifice, etc. And if idolatry makes a hash of religion, it is, if anything, even more of a menace to the practice of politics, which is my subject.

I suspect that some of you may object to the term idolatry here, or to the description of the environmental movement as a kind of cult—that some readers may regard these as rhetorical excesses. All that I have to say in my defense is that this is a factual and literal account of what I have seen and heard in reporting about the environmental movement, in the actual explicit religious ceremonies that were conducted in and around the United Nations climate conference in Glasgow in 2021, in my conversations with such figures as the “voluntary human extinction” activist who calls himself Les U. Knight, in my conversations with those who object to clean and economical nuclear power on grounds that are, even when not accompanied by pseudo- religious Gaia rhetoric, fundamentally metaphysical. What is at work is a kind of sophomoric, cartoon puritanism that regards modernity—and, in particular, the extent and pattern of consumption in the modern developed world— as sinful. One need not squint too much to recognize very old Christian (or even Stoic) aversion to “luxury” in these denunciations.

Indeed, we need only take the true believers at their word. As scientists have been searching for economic, abundant, and environmentally responsible sources of energy to support human f lourishing, the environmentalists have resisted and abominated these efforts: Amory Lovins of Friends of the Earth declared that “it would be little short of disastrous for us to discover a source of clean, cheap, abundant energy”—and please note there the inclusion of clean—while Population Bomb author Paul Ehrlich famously opined that “giving society cheap, abundant energy at this point would be the equivalent of giving an idiot child a machine gun.” Professor Ehrlich gives up the game with “at this point”—meaning, of course, in our fallen, postlapsarian state.

It was, of course, inevitable that Professor Ehrlich— who has been spectacularly wrong about practically every prediction he has made in his lucrative career as a secular, Malthusian prophet—should be back in the news at the same time scientists were announcing a breakthrough in nuclear fusion research. Professor Ehrlich, recently seen on 60 Minutes (which still exists!) and elsewhere, downplays the recent advance in fusion on the grounds that current patterns of human living are “unsustainable.”

Professor Ehrlich has been giving the same interview for decade and decades—advances in energy production will not matter because “the world will have long since succumbed to overpopulation, famine,” and other ills, as he insisted in an interview published by the Los Angeles Times—in 1989— not long after insisting that the United Kingdom would be ravished by famine no later than the year 2000.

He made that prediction in the 1970s after predicting in the late 1960s: “In the 1970s hundreds of millions of people will starve to death in spite of any crash programs embarked upon now.” William F. Buckley Jr., borrowing from the political theorist Eric Voegelin, advised the idealists of the 1960s: “Don’t immanentize the eschaton,” i.e., don’t try to bring about a utopian state of affairs through political means. The eschaton to which Buckley referred was a Christian eschaton of the end of days: “Thy kingdom come, Thy will be done, on Earth as it is in Heaven.” But there are many other possible eschatons, many of them a good deal less cheerful. End-of- days stories have long been a staple of religions and cults of many different kinds and characters, of course, and the environmental movement is fundamentally eschatological in its orientation, by turns utopian and apocalyptic. It is at the moment more apocalyptic than utopian, but that is a reflection of a broader trend in our politics and our society.

The Western world, in particular, the English-speaking Western world, has been fervently praying for its own demise for a generation.

Future historians will note the prevalence of zombie-apocalypse stories in our time—The Walking Dead has recently concluded its main series but will be supplemented by numerous spinoffs, while one of the most intensely anticipated television series of 2023 is The Last of Us, an adaptation of a video game that is based on yet another variation of the zombie-apocalypse theme—but beyond zombie-apocalypse stories we have alien-invasion- apocalypse stories (Falling Skies, Independence Day, Battle: Los Angeles, 10 Cloverfield Lane, Captive State), epidemic- apocalypse stories (Train To BusanOutbreak12 MonkeysContagion), zombie-epidemic-hybrid-apocalypse stories (28 Days Later), alien-invasion-epidemic-hybrid-apocalypse stories (all those many versions of Invasion of the Body- Snatchers), zombie-eco-hybrid stories (the aforementioned The Last of Us) nuclear apocalypse stories (The Road, Mad MaxBook of Eli), EMP-apocalypse stories and related nonspecific techno-failure-apocalypse stories (James Wesley Rawles’s survivalist novels), meteor-apocalypse stories (the fraternal twins Deep Impact and Armageddon, and, of course, Meteor Apocalypse), and, precisely to our point here, eco-apocalypse stories by the dozen (The Day After Tomorrow, Snowpiercer, Waterworld, Interstellar, Wall-E).

What these stories have in common is not the particular source of anxiety, though environmental concerns are interlaced into many stories: The Last of Us is a zombie story, but the zombies are produced by global warming, which allows a particular fungus to colonize and control human brains. (One shared article of faith that is present not only in zombie movies but also from campy, anencephalic or macrocephalic aliens of Mars Attacks! and Independence Day—the enemy is the brain.)

What they have in common, rather, is a two-sided fascination with social collapse, both the negative aspects—the inevitable suffering—and the positive—the possibility of a return to innocence and a shared born-against experience that retroactively sanctifies that suffering. The eco-terrorist character Brad Pitt plays in 12 Monkeys might as well be the character he plays in Fight Club, the masculinist eco-prophet who promises his followers: “In the world I see, you are stalking elk through the damp canyon forests around the ruins of Rockefeller Center. You’ll wear leather clothes that will last you the rest of your life. You’ll climb the wrist-thick kudzu vines that wrap the Sears Tower. And when you look down, you’ll see tiny figures pounding corn, laying strips of venison on the empty carpool lane of some abandoned superhighway.”

Which is to say, what we have here is the old mythological cycle of suffering, death, and rebirth told at the social level rather than at the level of individual hero or martyr.

None of this is to say that there are not real environmental challenges in front of us. These are real, and they deserve serious attention. But here in the third decade of the benighted 21st century, the environmental movement is not about that. It is an apocalyptic-fantasy cult. Of course there are people who think of themselves as adherents of that movement who are doing real work in science and policy, in much the same way that the alchemists and magicians of the medieval period laid the foundations for much of modern science, including a great deal of chemistry and astronomy. The two phenomena are by no means mutually exclusive.

But if you want to understand why there has been so frustratingly little meaningful progress in environmental policy in the United States, the United Kingdom, and the European Union in the past 30 years or so, then understanding the cultic character of the environmental movement is essential.

The real environmental-policy debate should be, not to put too fine a point on it, boring, though by no means simple—a largely technical matter of understanding tradeoffs and drawing up policies that attempt to balance competing goods (environmental, recreational, economic, social, etc.) and putting those policies to the test of democratic accountability.

None of this is easy in a connected and global world—prohibit the use of coal in the United States and you might end up increasing worldwide coal-related greenhouse-gas emissions as relatively dirty power plants in China and India take up the slack in consumption—but none of it ought to present a Manichean conflict, either.

Demagoguery is an old and obvious factor in all political discourse, but there is at work here something deeper than mere political opportunism, and that is the invariable human need, sometimes subtly realized, to rewrite complex stories as simple stories, replacing real-world complexity with the anaesthetizing simplicity of heroes and villains. We have been here before, of course. Consider Robert Wiebe’s anthropology of bureaucracy in the Progressive Era in The Search for Order:

The sanguine followers of the bureaucratic way constructed their world on a comfortable set of assumptions. While they shaded many of the old moral absolutes, they still thought in terms of normal and abnormal. Rationality and peace, decent living conditions and equal opportunity, they considered “natural”; passion and violence, slums and deprivation, were “unnatural.” Knowledge, they were convinced, was power, specifically the power to guide men into the future.

Consequently, these hopeful people also exposed themselves to the shock of bloody catastrophe. In contrast to the predetermined stages of the idealists, however, bureaucratic thought had made indeterminate process central to its approach. Presupposing the unexpected, its adherents were most resilient just where the idealists were most brittle.

Of course, the assumptions described by Wiebe are precisely backward: It is deprivation and violence that are natural, peace and plenty that are unnatural. As Thomas Sowell famously observed, poverty has no causes— prosperity has causes, while poverty is the natural state of human affairs, present and effective ex nihilo. But the conflation of the natural and the desirable is always with us: Like most Americans, I treasure our national parks and have spent many enjoyable days in them, but it is difficult to think of any environment anywhere on Earth that is less natural than Yellowstone, the highly artificial environment that is the product of planning and policy, for instance in the programmatic introduction of grey wolves and other species.

To subscribe to a genuinely natural view of the world and man’s place in it, as opposed to a quasi-religious environmental dualism, is to understand man as integral part of nature, in which case you might think of Midtown Manhattan as a less artificial and more organic environment than Yellowstone, its features and patterns considerably more spontaneous than what one finds in a diligently managed nature preserve. If, on the other hand, you understand the natural world and the wild places in it principally as a paradisiac spiritual counterpoint to the fallen state of man as represented in our urban and technological civilization, then you cannot make any kind of reasonable tradeoff calculation when it comes to, say, drilling for gas in the Arctic, which must be regarded not as a poor policy choice but as a profanation, a “violation” of that which is “pristine” and “sacred”—words that one commonly hears applied to the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge and to many less exalted swamps and swathes of tundra.

For myself, what I want is a boring environmental policy, one that is, in Wiebe’s terms, less brittle and more resilient, one that in “presupposing the unexpected” is able to account for developments that complicate our environmental policies by enmeshing them in other policies that they also complicate. For example, try putting yourself in the position of a responsible policy analyst in 1968, when Ehrlich’s Population Bomb hit the shelves.

In 1968, it would have been very difficult to imagine the subsequent transformation of China into a modern economic power—and even more difficult to imagine that this development would be not entirely and unqualifiedly good for the world, given the resources it has put at the disposal of what today must be regarded as history’s most encompassing and sophisticated police state. (So far.) But instead of a political discourse that can take such developments on their own terms and put them into a context of competing goods and tradeoffs, we end up instead with a parade of Great Satans: For the environmental cultists, the Great Satan is Exxon; for certain self-described nationalists in the United States, the Great Satan is the Chinese Communist Party; the strangely durable Marxists and the neo-nationalists on the Right have, with utter predictability, converged on their choice of Great Satans, these being transnational “elites.”

And so the religious appetite is satisfied through politics, including, in a particularly intense way, through environmental politics. To take one example that seems very obvious to me, the United States and much of the rest of the world, including the developing world, would be much better off on practically every applicable metric if there were wider and more sophisticated deployment of nuclear power, which is not a panacea by any means, but is a reliable, economical, and effectively zero-emissions way to produce electricity at utility scale.

The case against nuclear power might be described, in generous terms, as “moral” or “pseudo-religious” but might be described more accurately as “superstitious.” But maybe that kind of metaphysical primitivism is to be expected from a political movement whose economic agenda includes a great deal of physical primitivism as well: In the neo-Neolithic future of their dreams, there won’t be much to do in the evenings except bark at the moon, so one may as well try to imbue it with some transcendent meaning.

The environment matters. So do property rights, trade, development, agriculture, medicine, energy, the rule of law, democracy, and the uncountable other constituent elements of human f lourishing. A reasonable environmental policy can work with that, but a spiritualized and cultic environmental policy cannot. I hope these reports will help to make it clear just how real the choice between these two kinds of environmentalism is.