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    Greed and Cowardice: two old friends who will accompany us as we drive off the global warming cliff

    Who or what eventually killed the (weak to begin with, and further weakened through the legislative "process") climate change bill in the US congress? Asks Paul Krugman, and identifies the same age-old enemies who keep us from practicing responsible planetary citizenship:

    The answer is, the usual suspects: greed and cowardice.

    If you want to understand opposition to climate action, follow the money. The economy as a whole wouldn’t be significantly hurt if we put a price on carbon, but certain industries — above all, the coal and oil industries — would. And those industries have mounted a huge disinformation campaign to protect their bottom lines.

    Look at the scientists who question the consensus on climate change; look at the organizations pushing fake scandals; look at the think tanks claiming that any effort to limit emissions would cripple the economy. Again and again, you’ll find that they’re on the receiving end of a pipeline of funding that starts with big energy companies, like Exxon Mobil, which has spent tens of millions of dollars promoting climate-change denial, or Koch Industries, which has been sponsoring anti-environmental organizations for two decades.

    Or look at the politicians who have been most vociferously opposed to climate action. Where do they get much of their campaign money? You already know the answer.

    By itself, however, greed wouldn’t have triumphed. It needed the aid of cowardice — above all, the cowardice of politicians who know how big a threat global warming poses, who supported action in the past, but who deserted their posts at the crucial moment.

    Read the rest of his column. And, as usual, try not to get depressed... but here's another article from the same paper of record to nudge you further in that direction:

    IF President Obama and Congress had announced that no financial reform legislation would pass unless Goldman Sachs agreed to the bill, we would conclude our leaders had been standing in the Washington sun too long. Yet when it came to addressing climate change, that is precisely the course the president and Congress took. Lacking support from those most responsible for the problem, they have given up on passing a major climate bill this year.

    Lee Wasserman, of the Rockefeller Family Foundation, goes on to identify four threads that were woven together to produce this tapestry of legislative inaction. Do you know which thread your are clinging to? Might I suggest thread #4 (presuming readers of my tiny blog are not very likely to overlap with the first three)? What are we going to do about it?

    Tags » US global warming politics
    • 27 July 2010
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    I'm a reconciliation ecologist studying the responses of wildlife to human influences through an evolutionary lens. I seek ways to apply evolutionary ecology towards reconciling biodiversity conservation with human development. Also a father of two girls; photographer; birdwatcher; bookworm; cinephile; and explorer of the internets.

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    I'm a reconciliation ecologist studying the responses of wildlife to human influences through an evolutionary lens. I seek ways to apply evolutionary ecology towards reconciling biodiversity conservation with human development. Also a father of two girls; photographer; birdwatcher; bookworm; cinephile; and explorer of the internets.

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