Read Don't Even Think About It Online
Authors: George Marshall
Cyndi Wright, the editor of the
Bastrop Advertiser
, was more doubtful, suspecting that the extreme weather was part of a natural cycle. She thought it was entirely inappropriate for discussion in her newspaper. “This is a community newspaper,” she told me. “Sure, if climate change had a direct impact on us, we would definitely bring it in, but we are more centered around Bastrop County.”
If climate change had a direct impact on us?
This is surprising, that a journalist could not see any possible connection between the wildfire that had burned down her own house and an issue that scientists had, for twenty years, been warning would lead to increasing droughts and wildfires. Even Texas state climatologist John Nielsen-Gammon, who chose his words carefully, suggested the link and regarded the combination of extreme drought and record-breaking temperatures that fueled the fires as being “off the charts.”
Of course no scientist will ever be able to say with total certainty that any single weather event is caused by climate change. But why does this prevent all discussion? What other topic is shut down because of a lack of total scientific certainty? Newspapers usually encourage debate, often ill-informed. Conversations are fueled by hunch and rumor. As I explore later, the lack of certainty is invariably an excuse for silence rather than the cause of it.
Nor were the people of Bastrop short of other things to say about the fire, including some highly conjectural opinions about who started it. Above all though, what they really wanted to share with me was their pride in their community and their capacity to overcome challenges. They spoke of the many acts of kindness, altruism, and generosity from strangers. Wendy Escobar told me how a customer at her cousin's hair salon in Longview sent her a thousand-dollar check in the mail. “The coolest thing to come out of the fire,” she said, “was finding out how much people really cared, and how it's made people pull together so much.”
One year later, Hurricane Sandy, the largest Atlantic hurricane on record, damaged or destroyed nearly 350,000 homes as it hit the New Jersey seashore. When I visited five months later, the destruction could still be seen everywhere in the small towns that line the shore.
In Seaside Heights the tangled remains of a roller coaster still lay out to sea, where it had fallen after the pier beneath it collapsed. Block after block of pastel-painted wooden houses were dark and abandoned, many homes twisted off their foundations or lying at crazy angles. Thirty miles north, in the small town of Highlands, the residents of the absurdly named Paradise Trailer Park had faced the full fury of the hurricaneâone of them told me that he had survived the storm surge by sitting on top of his refrigerator. Now they had wrecked homes, no insurance payouts, and nowhere to go while the park's owner tried to evict them and redevelop the site.
In Sea Bright, just south along the coast, every shop on the main street was gutted, and the seawall was demolished. Two-thirds of the permanent residents were still homeless when I visited, and only eight of the hundred registered local businesses were back up and running.
Certainly, people were more inclined to accept that climate change exists in the Democrat territory of New Jersey than they were in Republican Texas. Dina Long, the charismatic mayor of Sea Bright, agreed that the frequency and power of the storms is changing and that the sea level is rising. Nonetheless, she could not recall anyone in her community discussing climate change in regards to the storm.
When I suggested to Long that she might band together with the leaders of other affected communities and demand federal action on climate change, she rolled her eyes. “Have you
seen
what Sandy did?” she demanded. “Climate change,
duh
, of
course
it is happening. But it is bigger than anything we could make a difference on. We just want to go home, and we will deal with all that lofty stuff some other day.”
As in Bastrop, Texas, the dominant narrative all along the Jersey Shore was one of community cohesion and resilience. As Dina Long warmed to this theme, she flourished a small piece of plastic salvaged from Donovan's Reef, a landmark beachside bar. It is all that remains of the sign that used to hang over the doorâa small fragment with two letters on it: “DO.” Long brings out this talisman in every talk she makes to the townsfolk, media, and investors. It became the slogan of the Sea Bright Rising campaign and duly appears on T-shirts and posters around the town.
The strong sense of local pride I found in Bastrop and Sea Bright is entirely consistent with that found in other areas after disasters. Contrary to expectations, people rarely respond to natural disasters with panic, and there is often a marked fall in crime and other forms of antisocial behavior. People consistently tend to pull together, displaying unusual generosity and a sense of purpose.
These are times when people are most inclined to seek common ground and actively suppress the divisive and partisan issue of climate change. To talk about it seems inappropriate and exploitative, just as many peopleâPresident Obama's spokesman among themârefused to talk about gun control after the Sandy Hook school shooting.
The pain and loss of the event generates an intensified desire that there be a “normal” state to which one can return, making it even harder for people to accept that there are larger changes under way. The decision to stay, rebuild, and reinvest in that normality is accordingly validated by the community.
After losing all of his stock during Hurricane Sandy, Brian George, the owner of Northshore Menswear in Sea Bright, hung a sign outside his shop saying, “We love Sea Brightâwe'll be back.” After he reopened, business was great, he said, with many people buying something simply to thank him for staying. He accepted that climate change could bring more disasters but said he is resigned to it. “This is my home,” he said, “and I guess we're just hoping another one doesn't come along any time soon.”
Across the road, Frank Bain of Bain's Hardware also lost all of his stockâand found that his insurance did not cover floods. “I would have been better off if I'd burned the building down,” he said bitterly. Bain, a much-loved pillar of his community, is a Republican and “no fan of Al Gore or his spotted owl,” so he had always been unconvinced about climate change. After Hurricane Sandy, though, he had even stronger reasons for wanting to believe that it was just a rare extreme of nature: Not only had he rebuilt his store out of his savings, but he was “self-insuring”âputting money aside in the bank each year and hoping that the next storm was a long way off. He accepted that this was a gamble, but then again, being in business is a gamble, he said. “This is just how free enterprise works.”
The extreme events themselves had already seemed like a gamble. In Bastrop and New Jersey alike, everyone was perplexed about how the wildfire or storm surge could destroy some houses and leave others untouched. “It was like Russian roulette,” said Sharon Jones, sharing a birthday drink with her husband at the one bar still operating in Seaside Heights. Her house was entirely destroyed; the house across the road was left almost untouched. “Go figure,” she said, raising her glass to the vagaries of fate.
After a disaster like Sandy or the Bastrop wildfires, people are presented with a stark choice about whether to admit defeat and leave or whether to stay and rebuild. When they decide to stay, as most people do, they are taking a gamble, and like any gamble, it predisposes them to undue optimism about the future and their own chances.
Psychological research finds that people who survive climate disasters, like people who escape car accidents unscathed, are prone to have a false sense of their own future invulnerability. A large field study in an Iowa town that had been hit by a Force 2 hurricane found that most people had become convinced that they were less likely to be affected by a future hurricane than people in other towns. The people in the areas that had suffered the most damage were often the most optimistic. So it is hardly surprising, following the extreme floods in 2012 in Queensland, Australia, that few people made any attempt to reduce their vulnerability to flooding, and many residents chose instead to spend their disaster relief and insurance premiums on general home improvements such as installing new kitchens.
Revealingly, then, extreme weather events provide an initial insight into why and how people can come to ignore climate change. At every stage their perceptions are shaped by their individual psychological coping mechanisms and the collective narratives that they shape with the people around them.
People yearn for normality and safety, and no one wants to be reminded of a growing global threat. As they rebuild their lives, they invest their hopes along with their savings in the belief that the catastrophe was a rare natural aberration.
At a community level they collectively choose to tell the positive stories of shared purpose and reconstruction and to suppress the divisive issue of climate change which would require them to question their values and way of life.
On reflection, it is hard to imagine any social environment in which a narrative of responsibility, austerity and future hardship would be less welcome than a community recovering from a climate disaster.
3
Why We Think That Extreme Weather Shows We Were Right All Along
“Unprecedented, unthinkable. The devastation is
staggering. I struggle to find words.” Choking back his tears, Yeb Saño, head of the Philippine government delegation, told the opening session of the November 2013 Warsaw Climate Change Conference of the devastation caused when Typhoon Haiyan hit his country three days earlier. He announced that he would fast in solidarity with the orphaned, the dead, and his own brother, who, he said, had still not eaten and had been gathering the bodies of the dead with his own hands. “To anyone who continues to deny the reality that is climate change, I dare you to get off your ivory tower and away from the comfort of your armchair and pay a visit to the Philippines right now.”
Climate change can seem distant, uncertain, and incomprehensible. Saño made it seem real, immediate, and deeply moving. These personal stories and strong images, compounded by the constant repetition they received though the news media, spoke far more strongly to our sense of empathy and direct threat than the abstract data of graphs and scientific reports.
This is why climate change communicators are convinced that extreme weather events can, in the words of Elke Weber, an environmental risk specialist at Columbia University, “be counted on to be an extremely effective teacher and motivator.” Tony Leiserowitz, director of the Yale Project on Climate Change Communication, calls them “teachable moments.” Michael Brune, the executive director of the Sierra Club, tells me that he sees severe weather as a kind of direct action. “Obviously,” he stresses, “not in an organized or manipulative way—these are tragic events—but with the same capacity to change consciousness and political direction.”
Extreme weather events have already played a major role in the political momentum on climate change. In 1988, a severe drought and heat wave across the Midwestern states provided the backdrop for Dr. James Hansen of NASA to declare in a congressional hearing that there was a 99 percent certainty that global warming had already started. The rise of consciousness about climate change in Europe that led to the signing of the Framework Convention on Climate Change in 1992 was helped enormously by severe storms in the spring of 1991, which were freely interpreted by the media as a warning of the climate change to come.
Those campaigning for action on climate change do everything they can to keep these connections alive in the public’s minds. As mayor of New York City, Michael Bloomberg personally approved the cover of the November 1, 2012,
Bloomberg Businessweek
, with a picture of Hurricane Sandy and bold block text reading, “IT’S GLOBAL WARMING, STUPID.” Referring to Hurricane Sandy, Al Gore said, “These storms—it’s like a nature hike through the Book of Revelation on the news every day now. People are now connecting the dots.”
Environment America global warming program director Nathan Willcox is also convinced that “the more Americans see extreme weather events in their backyards, the more they will reach out to their politicians for action.” However, his own research suggests that the relationship between experience and conviction is far from straightforward. In the seven years up until 2012, the Great Plains was consistently, and by a wide margin, the region worst affected by climate-related disasters. Nonetheless in the 2010 Senate elections, all the winning Republican candidates for the Plains states publically refuted climate science or opposed action to reduce greenhouse gas emissions.
Across the entire United States, the state most consistently affected by extreme weather has been Oklahoma. In 2008, voters there were offered a clear choice in their Senate election between Andrew Rice, a Democrat candidate with a moderate but balanced acceptance of climate change, and incumbent James Inhofe, the most active and aggressive climate denier
†
in the Senate. In a year when national concern about climate change was at an all-time high, Inhofe still won by a large margin, cleaning up in the five Oklahoma counties that were experiencing, on average, more than one federally declared weather emergency every year. As I write this, the so-called polar vortex is sweeping across the Midwest, and temperatures in Nowata, Oklahoma, have just fallen to 31 degrees below zero, three degrees lower than the previous state record. They keep getting hit and they keep voting for Inhofe.