Why It's So Difficult to Face the Frightening Climate Change Reality
http://www.alternet.org/media/why-its-so-difficult-face-frightening-climate-change-reality
Late last week, in the lobby of a particularly unglamorous downtown San Francisco building, a group of passionate but polite activists met with a bureaucrat who stepped forward to hear what they had to say about the fate of the Earth. The activists wanted to save the world. The particular part of it that might be under their control involved getting the San Francisco Retirement board to divest its half a billion dollars in fossil fuel holdings, one piece of the international divestment movement that arose a year ago.
Sometimes the fate of the Earth boils down to getting one person with modest powers to budge.
The bureaucrat had a hundred reasons why changing course was, well, too much of a change. This public official wanted to operate under ordinary-times rules and the idea that climate change has thrust us into extraordinary times (and that divesting didnt necessarily entail financial loss or even financial risk) was apparently too much to accept.
The mass media arent exactly helping. Last Saturday, for instance, the New York Times gave its story on the International Panel on Climate Changes six-years-in-the-making report on the catastrophic future thats already here below-the-fold front-page placement, more or less equal to that given a story on the last episode of Breaking Bad. The end of the second paragraph did include this quote: In short, it threatens our planet, our only home. But the headline (U.N. Climate Panel Endorses Ceiling on Global Emissions) and the opening paragraph assured you this was dull stuff. Imagine a front page that reported your house was on fire right now, but that some television show was more exciting.