|
Faith in a Climate of Fear
global warnings: part 1
BY MELINDA SELMYS
November 25 - December 1, 2007 Issue |
Posted 11/19/07 at 3:11 PM
End-of-the-world alarmism has been a perpetual feature of
human existence for as long as we have recorded history.
Generally, it occurs within a religious framework: Whether
it is Apocalypse mania, or a fear that any moment now Ragnarök is going to
erupt in earnest, lavish claims of total world destruction have always
furnished the necessary motivation for extremist agendas.
The new craze about global warming ought not to surprise us.
Christ warned us, in Matthew 24 and Mark 13, that we would hear rumors of war,
that there will be famines and earthquakes, that false prophets would arise and
lead people astray, and so forth. And what does he say that we are to do?
First, “see that you are not alarmed; for this must take
place, but the end is not yet.” Scripture’s repeated admonition to “be not
afraid” — the very admonition with which Pope John Paul II ushered in his
papacy — is reiterated.
Christ belabors this point several times over the course of
the Gospels, encouraging us not to worry, reminding us that there are
innumerable things in heaven and earth that we do not have it in our power to
affect, and reassuring us that God has it all in hand.
This does not mean that we should never take action to
prevent evil, or should sit back and wait for God to do something. It does mean
that we should not panic, or become needlessly anxious, or jump to rash
conclusions, which may cause more harm than good.
At the moment, scientific consensus suggests that the
climate of the world is changing, and that human activities are having an
impact on the amount and kind of change that we are seeing. This means that, as
Benedict XVI said in a letter to the patriarch of Constantinople, “Preservation
of the environment, promotion of sustainable development and particular
attention to climate change are matters of grave concern for the entire human
family.”
It is immoral to overlook these issues because they happen
to be inconvenient.
On the other hand, it is foolish and imprudent to dedicate
ourselves to quixotic schemes that do more to salve our consciences than to
change the impact of our lifestyle on the world, and it is gravely immoral to
overlook the needs and rights of human beings in favor of “saving the planet.”
Consider, for example, the environmental alarmism in the
1960s that said that DDT was poisoning bird populations — a supposition about
which the scientific community had yet to come to a genuine consensus.
Exaggerated propaganda about a “Silent Spring” devoid of birds led to an
ill-considered ban on DDT as a means of controlling malarial mosquito
populations in tropical countries.
Over the ensuing years, cases of malaria in Africa and the
Indian subcontinent rose substantially, causing millions of preventable deaths
before finally, almost 40 years later, the scientific community decided that
DDT wasn’t as pernicious as originally feared.
Fear and uncertainty are a recipe for bad decisions. Good
solutions require accurate, relatively complete data, and they require
thoughtful, long-term, holistic planning. Alarmists claim that we don’t have
time — that we have to do something drastic, and we have to do it now or the
planet is going to die. The result is that both time and money get wasted on projects
that have little impact or even that have a negative impact overall.
The practice of pushing ethanol-based fuels is a good
example: These fuels must be moved by trucks because they corrode pipelines.
The cars that burn the fuel may have a moderately reduced “carbon footprint,”
but the cost, in carbon dioxide exhaled by transport trucks, more than offsets
the gain.
Problems like this are foolish, but they are not cause for
moral concern. If ill-conceived environmentalism was the only risk, we could
let the alarmists go on tilting at windmills and wait for the responsible
scientists and statesmen to come up with better solutions. After all, ad hoc
environmentalism is unlikely to do any serious damage to the planet or to
society.
Unfortunately, the climate change alarmists are,
predictably, allied with the population control advocates.
The sloppy thinking on this matter is absolutely typical: If
human beings are radically increasing their carbon emissions with every passing
year, and the human population is growing to levels never before seen in
history, then the easiest way to reduce carbon output is to eliminate large
numbers of human beings.
“Population limitation should,” according to the
British-based Optimum Population Trust, “be seen as the most cost-effective
carbon offsetting strategy available to individuals and nations.”
In other words, once we have realized that a human being is
not an exciting new creation, a person who will share in the trials and joys of
earthly life, and enjoy the chance to join the heavenly hosts in the life of
the world to come; that, on the contrary, a human being is nothing more than a
pesky producer of unwanted carbon dioxide, we can get down to the real business
of cleaning up this planet.
Most environmentalists (though, distressingly, not all)
don’t think that this should actually lead to the direct extermination of human
populations, but they do think that it should lead to an increase in pressures
on Third World governments to impose contraception, sterilization and abortion
on their citizens.
A familiar story. In many ways, it is the story of the 20th
century. The excuses have varied: neo-Malthusian prophecies of massive global
food shortages, claims that population growth is bad for developing economies,
predictions of rampant disease spread in concentrated populations, or even
utter absurdities like “population growth leads to the spread of communism” or
“Muslim terrorism is caused by overpopulation.”
Serious global and local problems have been consistently met
with the asinine reasoning that since people cause problems, more people will
cause more problems, and the best broad-band solution to the ills of humanity
is to stop having humans.
One hardly needs to belabor the consequences. Population
controllers have arranged forced sterilizations in Third World countries, the
strings tied to U.N. aid packages often have IUDs at the other end, influential
population control advocates have been consistent in their support for China’s
one-child policy, and in the first world, children are routinely taught that it
is morally responsible to kill their unborn children in order to avoid
burdening an “already overburdened” planet.
The result is not responsible environmentalism, nor is it
the salvation of earth’s ecology. Rather, the modern population control
alarmists, like the prophets of Moloch or the Aztec priests of Tlaloc, demand
that human children be sacrificed in order to prevent storms, floods and
disease.
In this series, we’ll take a closer look at the facts, and
attempt the difficult process of trying to unravel truth from propaganda, and
science from speculation.
Melinda Selmys is a staff writer
at VulgataMagazine.org.
Filed under
Advertisement
Advertisement
Make a Donation now!
Insightful. Informative. Uncompromisingly faithful. The National Catholic Register is more than a newspaper. It’s a cause. Your support for the Register funds important journalism that helps to build a Culture of Life in our nation, and throughout the world. Help us promote the Church’s New Evangelization by donating to the National Catholic Register right now.
Click here to donate
|