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When Ignorance Isn't Bliss
Newsweek recently detailed how ExxonMobil, the oil lobby, and other earth-plundering apologists spend millions of dollars to keep us ignorant on global warming. Time reported that in the rebuilding of New Orleans, "environmental ignorance is setting up the city for another catastrophe."
America's catastrophic ignorance continues.
Time said the US Army Corps of Engineers understands that protecting New Orleans from hurricanes like Katrina or worse will require not just bigger and stronger levees. It also means preserving and restoring marshes, swamps, and barrier islands that offer natural protection against winds and high water.
"But for all the talk about restoring wetlands," Time wrote, "almost every dime of the $7 billion the Corps has received since Katrina is going to traditional engineering: huge structures designed to control rather than preserve nature."
On global warming, which is predicted to pound our coasts with a higher percentage of Katrina-like storms, ExxonMobil pumped $19 million into conservative causes dedicated to pooh-poohing the science. Those causes paid tens of thousands of dollars to those who doubt climate change. In 2003, Republican Party consultant Frank Luntz wrote a memo saying, "You need to continue to make the lack of scientific certainty a primary issue."
This worked, even though, as Newsweek wrote, "few of the experts did empirical research of their own."
The two-decade onslaught on science and sanity resulted in the Clinton White House being neutralized and enabled the outright denial of the Bush administration, which edited and deleted key portions of government reports linking human greenhouse gas emissions to climate change.
Even with Democrats now in control, Congress still plays games with fuel economy. The Senate's new energy bill would raise fuel economy to 35 miles per gallon by 2020. The House bill has no new standards because of the auto lobby and key Democratic auto hacks such as Representative John Dingell of Michigan. Optimists hope to still get new standards when the two bills go to conference committee.
The most important measure of the onslaught is American ambivalence. Even though 600 scientists from 40 countries concluded this year that global warming is "unequivocal," Newsweek pollsters found that still less than half of Americans -- 46 percent -- say climate change is being felt today. Less than half of Americans support requiring much more fuel and energy efficient vehicles and appliances. In the best dreams of the pooh-pooh lobby, 42 percent of Americans say "there is a lot of disagreement that human activities are a major cause of global warming."
In New Orleans, a bipartisan nightmare is being recreated. Bush was castigated around the globe for his response to Katrina. But US Senators Mary Landrieu, a Democrat, and David Vitter, a Republican, proposed pork-barrel reconstruction projects backed in part by the oil lobby. Some projects were already judged to be a waste of money. Vitter (who has other problems in the escort scandal in Washington) wanted timber companies to be allowed to keep slashing cypress swamps.
Levees are being so poorly thought out that they risk the further destruction of marshes or rendering them useless against storms. Louisiana State University hurricane researcher Ivor van Heerden said some of the levees are "absolutely screwy, the exact opposite of what we need."
The head of the state's science review team, LSU ecologist Robert Twilley, told Time, "My great fear is that we're going to cut off the coast with barriers, just like we did to the river. I'd hate for that to be my legacy."
The planned ignorance of the oil lobby and the ignorant planning in New Orleans make it clear that too few people care whether the nation cares about its legacy. In the Newsweek poll, 42 percent of Americans say the press "exaggerates the threat of climate change." In New Orleans, the devastation and displacement in that precarious aqualand has not made many people rethink our exaggerated entitlement to crowd the coasts with development.
Despite Katrina, Time reminds us that the United States still "has no water-resources policy." The Army Corps of Engineers remains funded by individual congressional earmarks, regardless of whether any specific project is worthwhile. Gerry Galloway, president of the American Water Resources Association, told the magazine, "It's a sinister system. Water is a national security issue, but we treat it like the Wild West."
The oil lobby tells us to ignore the swamping of our planet. In New Orleans, we are building to be swamped again. America apparently needs a more direct hit than even Katrina to wake up to the catastrophe of ignorance.
© Copyright 2007 The Boston Globe

16 Comments so far
Show AllMost Americans don't want to understand that global warming is happening now. Watching Hurricane Dean percolating off the coast of Texas these last few days has been giving me chills, and I live in California. But I'm sure half the nation is blissfully unaware of Dean - or, if they've seen a story about it on the news, is simply choosing to look the other way . . . until Dean crashes into Texas: then they pay attention. Anyways, thanks for an interesting read, Mr. Jackson.
The commentary about "planned ignorance" is key - deeply interested parties are dominating public discourse on every topic of importance.
It is POSSIBLE for a concerned individual who has some space in his/her life to sift it out and learn to see through the persistent distortions, but that does not solve the monstrous public problem of the contamination of discourse by interested parties.
Even the concept of an "interested party" has pretty much vanished from public conversation, making it difficult for most persons to train their radar to detect when a speaker may have other motives than the truth.
Somehow, in a story for example about mining disasters, it seems "normal" in our corporate media that spokespersons for mining companies dominate the space given to analysis of the causes of and responses to the disasters. And the media do not point out that these spokespersons are "interested parties", they just broadcast their statements as if they were simply important news for people to hear. This takes place on every important topic that ever gets media coverage.
Aside from individually learning how to sift through the distortions, how do we break the huge fundamental cultural distortion that pervades our public treatment of every issue? How do we intervene to denounce and refute the interested parties who poison the public discussion of every issue? For those of us who spend time at Common Dreams this is not an issue, but for millions of people every day, the lies are simply part of "reality" that does not get deeply questioned.
How can we break through?
Denial is an American trait but it's hard to deny a hurricane, or a flood or a drought and when produce becomes a luxury commodity, now amount of spin will be adequate. You can't outspin Mother Nature . . .
"America apparently needs a more direct hit than even Katrina to wake up to the catastrophe of ignorance."
Short of near-total annihilation, I don't see people EVER waking up to full consciousness!. If the disaster doesn't affect ME, then it ain't no more than yet another REALITY T.V. SHOW--and life goes on.........
Somehow, I do not think ignorance is ever bliss. I do not know how this phrase got started, but I think that it is dead wrong. Information makes us aware. There may be times when we wish we did not know, because we do not know what to do. But I for one, would much rather know all that I can anytime and every time, than be kept in the dark.
GLOBAL WARMING DIVERSION.
After six years of stonewalling & deception to impede global warming mitigation, Bush now throws a bone to appease the world community with comparable meaningless rhetoric. The dangerous manipulation of essential scientific data used by his team to conceal and derail corrective measures for this threat and other vital environmental reforms has always been apparent--and all indicators still show that their motives have not changed.
Contrary to their assertions, measures to reduce greenhouse gases could only improve our economy by lessening our trade deficits, and improving our security by reducing our dependance on foreign oil. We could also regain some of our lost world respect that has resulted from our opposition Kyoto while arrogantly contributing disproportionally to carbon pollution.
Evidence linking carbon pollution to warming has been as close to certain as science can be for many years. Its causes, consequences, and mitigation requirements have been documented by many dedicated environmental organizations including The Union of Concerned Scientists.
Often overlooked is the fact that the same measures needed to mitigate global warming would be necessary even if it were not an issue. Conservation, alternative energy development, anti- pollution refinements, etc are essential for other vital environmental reforms such as air and water quality, reductions in toxic waste generation, land preservation, etc.
The environmental and social damage from our indifference to carbon pollution and related environmental measures can only worsen if we allow this reckless and unlearned president to continue this war on the environment.
Maybe the site of New Orleans is not the proper location for a city. It appears as though the natural defenses against flooding have been destroyed by dredging, destruction of mangrove swamps, disruption of the depositing of silt, which builds up land, and other modifications.
Perhaps the incompetence and ill will of this administration is doing the right thing by not rebuilding the city. Continual construction and repair of levees is fighting the natural tendencies of nature in the area. Not that Bush wants to do the right thing.
Leonardo Di Caprio's new film "The 11th Hour" shoud do a pretty good job of whacking people over the head. I saw it in a sneak preview last week. He lines up about 50 top experts to tell the story from about the beginning of time to where we are now (pretty scary stuff, I might add)-- inlcuding the politics and the corporate lobbyists behind it, as well as the cultural hurdles we will have to overcome to solve these problems. He also shows a lot of the existing technology we have to live more sustainably. A very odd film for someone with Hollywood credentials - about as talking head as you can get (but in a way that is very powerful). Check out the trailer and his action website:
www.11thhouraction.com Sorry forgot the link - This is to DiCaprio's new movie just being released this month.
If we are all extremely lucky, the entire USA will sink under the weight of its own evil, into the sea, never to resurface, thus saving the planet from more wars, famine and ignorance.
In Canada there is little or no debate about man's impact on global warming. This is not to say our government is really doing very much but I am amazed when I read the statistics in this article along with the statistics regarding belief in genesis. Don't you guys go to school, and if you do, with this being what you are learning, why bother?
"If we are all extremely lucky, the entire USA will sink under the weight of its own evil, into the sea, never to resurface, thus saving the planet from more wars, famine and ignorance."
If we did ole Chuck, you'd be one of the first to miss us. Funny how we get blamed for all the worlds ills when anyone with a bit of education and knowledge of history will be hard pressed to find a more compassionate country.
Ask yourself this Chuckie.....if we decided the world would be better if we just took it over, what would you do? Don't be delusional now as so many of you American haters are.
Many have wished us ill over the years, Galtung types are a dime a dozen. Perhaps you should offer shelter to some of the folks that hate America so much.
They usually give themselves away as this writer does by referring to America rather than we or us. Doesn't make his points invalid, just that he more than likely hates his country.
Leftist lockstep is just as unattractive and false as rightwing marchers.
Thomas said
"Funny how we get blamed for all the worlds ills when anyone with a bit of education and knowledge of history will be hard pressed to find a more compassionate country."
Yeah, it was really compassionate of us to invade a sovereign nation, kill a million civilians, displace a few million more and for no other reason than lies and greed...Is it compassion that allows us to let 15,000 people die every year in this country because they have no insurance? That's five times as many that died in 9/11 every year but nobody seems to care about "those" Americans...Must be that compassion thing at work again...
Thomas said
"Funny how we get blamed for all the worlds ills when anyone with a bit of education and knowledge of history will be hard pressed to find a more compassionate country."
yeah... the native americans most surely agree with that.
you people are pretty ridiculous sometimes.
it's high time americans actually tried to achieve the greatness they obligingly claim.
just because you say something, doesn't make it so.
for instance: george bush is a compassionate, pro-life, conservative.
now, analyze his acts.
compassionate: to his buddies and their swollen paychecks. not the people.
pro-life: only so far as he can remove or restrain YOUR right to choose. certainly WAR is not a pro-life endeavor.
conservative?: he took the $5trillion surplus left by clinton and turned it into a $4trillion deficit.
think before you vote.
and about that voting thing: if the nspd51 doesn't entirely end our 2008 elections, the democrats are supposed to vote november 7, and the republicans on november 8.
pass it on.
Thomas More: any objective analysis of the state of the world would decidedly come to the same conclusion canuckchuck. The basic numbers and statistics show that we do way more harm than good in the world. Whether it is through world arms sales, over consumption and unsustainable lifestyles, trade agreements that give corporations license to usurp the sovereignty of nations, endless war, strangling third world economies through forced debt (yes, forced -- the US acts like mafia thugs when it comes to foreign policy), the US leaves a huge wake of destruction and misery wherever it goes. It is amazing that the rest of the world has put up with us as long as it has.
Thomas said
"Funny how we get blamed for all the worlds ills when anyone with a bit of education and knowledge of history will be hard pressed to find a more compassionate country."
you're kidding right? If not it's about time you took off the blinkers, America has led the world to the brink of disaster and is about to push it over.
The US is the biggest bully in the world and the rest of us have to be grateful for it? Should the Vietnamese pay war reparations for dying under your bombs? How about those ungrateful Iraqis filling the graves?
Hypocrisy and Ignorance the trademarks of America. Thomas it seems like you have just a "bit" of education, may I suggest you get some more.