In this obscene opinion piece, Dick Polman outrageously equates questioning global warming with believing that the Earth is flat.
In this obscene opinion piece, Dick Polman outrageously equates questioning global warming with believing that the Earth is flat.

Trump regime wants to believe the Earth is flat

The Trump regime has trafficked in self parody since its inception, so perhaps we’re already numb to the news that it intends to challenge the scientific consensus that climate change is a dire international emergency.

You heard that right. Even though the federal government’s National Climate Assessment officially warned in November that the planet is truly imperiled, and even though a U.N. report in October compared the climate change crisis to “a deafening, piercing smoke alarm going off in the kitchen,” and even though Director of National Intelligence Daniel Coats warned in January that climate change poses a significant national security risk, Donald Trump is nevertheless hiring some flat Earth believers who will likely ratify his belief that climate change is a “hoax” that poses no threat to our national security.

This ad hoc coterie of deniers reportedly will be spearheaded by a National Security Council adviser named William Happer, a guy with no formal training as a climate scientist. Happer, who has taken money from the fossil fuel industry, says the carbon emissions that precipitate climate change are “not a pollutant at all” and that they’re “actually a benefit to the Earth.” Happer has stated in the past that “the demonization” of carbon emissions “is just like the demonization of the poor Jews under Hitler,” which is apparently his way of comparing climate scientists to Nazis.

How did we wind up with quacks who are so blind to reality?

One credentialed climate expert — retired Navy Rear Adm. David Titley, former chief operating officer at the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration — expressed his disgust: “I never thought I would live to see the day in the United States where our own White House is attacking the very science agencies that can help the president understand and manage the climate risks to security of today and tomorrow. Such attacks are un-American.”

Unfortunately, this day was guaranteed when 46 percent of the electorate chose as its president a flat-Earth crank who tweeted in 2014 that “GLOBAL WARMING bulls- has got to stop!” and has never masked his hostility to science. A pivotal 77,000 swing voters in three Rust Belt states decided that it didn’t matter.

Trump aides told the press that he’s looking for a “mixture of opinions” on whether climate change is a threat to the United States because he “wants people to be able to decide for themselves.” In truth, the American people, echoing the scientific consensus, have already decided for themselves. According to the latest NBC News-Wall Street Journal survey, 66 percent say climate change is a “serious problem” that requires action while only 30 percent say otherwise.

At a time when “we are adding planet-warming carbon dioxide to the atmosphere at a rate faster than at any point in human history since the beginning of industrialization” (in the words of David Wallace-Wells, author of the forthcoming book “The Uninhabitable Earth”), we can ill afford a “leader” who mimics the attitude of the 17th-century church when it was confronted with Galileo’s conclusion that the Earth circles the sun. We’re saddled with someone who disses the expertise of the Pentagon, which warned way back in 2003 during the Bush administration that climate change “should be elevated beyond a scientific debate to a U.S. national security concern.”

When Trump was asked last November whether climate change poses a major threat to America, he replied, “I don’t see it.” Hence his desire for a “mixture of opinions” that would ratify what he doesn’t want to see, even though the Pentagon has repeatedly seen it. In 2008, the Pentagon weighed in on a report that outlined “the National Security Implications of Global Climate Change.” In 2010, it again detailed its concerns in a “defense review.” In 2014, it did so again, writing that “the pressures caused by climate change will influence resource competition while placing additional burdens on economies, societies, and governance institutions around the world.”

That Pentagon report was five years ago. Since then, the severity of the crisis has only worsened. If Trump were to stop playing tin soldier on our Mexican border, perhaps he’d be capable of confronting our true national emergency. But that’s a futile hope.

Only a regime change in 2020 would reorient us toward science, if it’s not too late.

The viewpoints expressed above are those of the author and do not necessarily reflect those of The Independent.

How to submit an article, guest opinion piece, or letter to the editor to The Independent

Do you have something to say? Want your voice to be heard by thousands of readers? Send The Independent your letter to the editor or guest opinion piece. All submissions will be considered for publication by our editorial staff. If your letter or editorial is accepted, it will run on suindependent.com, and we’ll promote it through all of our social media channels. We may even decide to include it in our monthly print edition. Just follow our simple submission guidelines and make your voice heard:

—Submissions should be between 300 and 1,500 words.

—Submissions must be sent to editor@infowest.com as a .doc, .docx, .txt, or .rtf file.

—The subject line of the email containing your submission should read “Letter to the editor.”

—Attach your name to both the email and the document file (we don’t run anonymous letters).

—If you have a photo or image you’d like us to use and it’s in .jpg format, at least 1200 X 754 pixels large, and your intellectual property (you own the copyright), feel free to attach it as well, though we reserve the right to choose a different image.

—If you are on Twitter and would like a shout-out when your piece or letter is published, include that in your correspondence and we’ll give you a mention at the time of publication.

Articles related to “Trump regime wants to believe the Earth is flat”

The Wages of Sin: If you still believe the Earth is flat

For this one sentence, Trump earns praise

Jussie Smollett’s bad acting

Click This Ad

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here