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The words "peace" together with a peace sign can be read on the poster of a demonstrator at a demonstration against Russia's attack on Ukraine on 03 March 2022 in Lower Saxony, Hanover: (Photo: Moritz Frankenberg/picture alliance via Getty Images)
It's a tragic truth that some people are willing to inflict unfathomable suffering and death for the sake of power and wealth. From Russia's aggression in Ukraine to the push for continued climate-altering fossil fuel expansion, selfish gain means more to some than the health and well-being of our children and grandchildren and those yet to be born.
Those with power often exploit the uneducated and uninformed to further their own ends--and in many cases work to degrade education systems to prevent people from acquiring critical thinking and logic skills.
Take the decades-spanning efforts to downplay and deny the evidence of human-caused climate disruption--efforts that have accelerated in recent days, as the fossil fuel industry and its political and media allies cynically use the Russia-Ukraine crisis to advocate for increased development and expansion of the products and infrastructure they tout.
Alberta's premier tweeted, "Now if Canada really wants to help defang Putin, then let's get some pipelines built." He fails to acknowledge that the pipes are largely being made by a company 60 percent owned by Russian oligarchs--one with close ties to Putin--and that the Alberta Investment Management Corporation owns half a million shares of a Russian investment fund whose largest holdings are in Russian fossil fuel companies Gazprom, Sberbank, and Lukoil.
He did halt Russian alcohol sales, though (which is mostly just Russian Standard vodka, not really popular in Alberta).
UN secretary-general Antonio Guterres had a more rational take, tweeting: "As current events make all too clear, our reliance on fossil fuels makes the global economy & our energy security vulnerable to geopolitical crises. Instead of slowing down decarbonization, now is the time to accelerate the transition to a renewable energy future."
The recent Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change report, Impacts, Adaptation, and Vulnerability, explains the dangers of deception: "Rhetoric and misinformation on climate change and the deliberate undermining of science have contributed to misperceptions of the scientific consensus, uncertainty, disregarded risk and urgency, and dissent."
It adds that "strong party affiliation and partisan opinion polarization contribute to delayed mitigation and adaptation action, most notably in the US but with similar patterns in Canada" and that "Vested economic and political interests have organized and financed misinformation and 'contrarian' climate change communication."
It's not that everyone who denies or downplays climate science is uncaring or, worse, sociopathic. Those with power often exploit the uneducated and uninformed to further their own ends--and in many cases work to degrade education systems to prevent people from acquiring critical thinking and logic skills.
The excuse that the world will need fossil fuels for years to come so it's better to support our own industries wasn't a great argument even 34 years ago when the IPCC was established--and fossil fuel development and use have accelerated since then. Failure to heed the evidence has propelled humanity into a climate emergency.
Those who know better have no excuse. The fossil fuel industry's own scientists accurately warned about the climate consequences of profligate fossil fuel burning 45 years ago. Most opinion writers who sow doubt, confusion and misinformation about climate disruption aren't ignorant enough to outright reject mountains of accumulating evidence--including what people everywhere are plainly experiencing!
So, why do they so strenuously oppose what is clearly necessary, especially knowing that many measures to shift to cleaner energy, reduce consumption and protect carbon sinks like forests, wetlands, kelp forests and more will also lead to less pollution, improved public health, and better, more equitable economic outcomes?
Part of it may be fear--fear of change, of losing illusory power and wealth, of having to think differently. Much of it's rooted in selfishness, of taking what they can while they can, under the assumption that negative consequences won't affect them, either because their wealth and power will insulate them, or because impacts won't kick in until after they're gone. Some of it is ego. It's been surmised that Putin is only wreaking such horrible destruction because he wants to cement his imaginary legacy as a great leader who helped restore a failing empire to its former glory.
It's profoundly sad that we're being led by so many short-sighted, narrow-minded people. It's sad that children have to march in the streets and protest for something as basic as survivable conditions. It's sad that young people are being sacrificed--sent to kill and be killed to protect billionaires' interests.
It's time for a radical shift.
Dear Common Dreams reader, It’s been nearly 30 years since I co-founded Common Dreams with my late wife, Lina Newhouser. We had the radical notion that journalism should serve the public good, not corporate profits. It was clear to us from the outset what it would take to build such a project. No paid advertisements. No corporate sponsors. No millionaire publisher telling us what to think or do. Many people said we wouldn't last a year, but we proved those doubters wrong. Together with a tremendous team of journalists and dedicated staff, we built an independent media outlet free from the constraints of profits and corporate control. Our mission has always been simple: To inform. To inspire. To ignite change for the common good. Building Common Dreams was not easy. Our survival was never guaranteed. When you take on the most powerful forces—Wall Street greed, fossil fuel industry destruction, Big Tech lobbyists, and uber-rich oligarchs who have spent billions upon billions rigging the economy and democracy in their favor—the only bulwark you have is supporters who believe in your work. But here’s the urgent message from me today. It's never been this bad out there. And it's never been this hard to keep us going. At the very moment Common Dreams is most needed, the threats we face are intensifying. We need your support now more than ever. We don't accept corporate advertising and never will. We don't have a paywall because we don't think people should be blocked from critical news based on their ability to pay. Everything we do is funded by the donations of readers like you. When everyone does the little they can afford, we are strong. But if that support retreats or dries up, so do we. Will you donate now to make sure Common Dreams not only survives but thrives? —Craig Brown, Co-founder |
It's a tragic truth that some people are willing to inflict unfathomable suffering and death for the sake of power and wealth. From Russia's aggression in Ukraine to the push for continued climate-altering fossil fuel expansion, selfish gain means more to some than the health and well-being of our children and grandchildren and those yet to be born.
Those with power often exploit the uneducated and uninformed to further their own ends--and in many cases work to degrade education systems to prevent people from acquiring critical thinking and logic skills.
Take the decades-spanning efforts to downplay and deny the evidence of human-caused climate disruption--efforts that have accelerated in recent days, as the fossil fuel industry and its political and media allies cynically use the Russia-Ukraine crisis to advocate for increased development and expansion of the products and infrastructure they tout.
Alberta's premier tweeted, "Now if Canada really wants to help defang Putin, then let's get some pipelines built." He fails to acknowledge that the pipes are largely being made by a company 60 percent owned by Russian oligarchs--one with close ties to Putin--and that the Alberta Investment Management Corporation owns half a million shares of a Russian investment fund whose largest holdings are in Russian fossil fuel companies Gazprom, Sberbank, and Lukoil.
He did halt Russian alcohol sales, though (which is mostly just Russian Standard vodka, not really popular in Alberta).
UN secretary-general Antonio Guterres had a more rational take, tweeting: "As current events make all too clear, our reliance on fossil fuels makes the global economy & our energy security vulnerable to geopolitical crises. Instead of slowing down decarbonization, now is the time to accelerate the transition to a renewable energy future."
The recent Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change report, Impacts, Adaptation, and Vulnerability, explains the dangers of deception: "Rhetoric and misinformation on climate change and the deliberate undermining of science have contributed to misperceptions of the scientific consensus, uncertainty, disregarded risk and urgency, and dissent."
It adds that "strong party affiliation and partisan opinion polarization contribute to delayed mitigation and adaptation action, most notably in the US but with similar patterns in Canada" and that "Vested economic and political interests have organized and financed misinformation and 'contrarian' climate change communication."
It's not that everyone who denies or downplays climate science is uncaring or, worse, sociopathic. Those with power often exploit the uneducated and uninformed to further their own ends--and in many cases work to degrade education systems to prevent people from acquiring critical thinking and logic skills.
The excuse that the world will need fossil fuels for years to come so it's better to support our own industries wasn't a great argument even 34 years ago when the IPCC was established--and fossil fuel development and use have accelerated since then. Failure to heed the evidence has propelled humanity into a climate emergency.
Those who know better have no excuse. The fossil fuel industry's own scientists accurately warned about the climate consequences of profligate fossil fuel burning 45 years ago. Most opinion writers who sow doubt, confusion and misinformation about climate disruption aren't ignorant enough to outright reject mountains of accumulating evidence--including what people everywhere are plainly experiencing!
So, why do they so strenuously oppose what is clearly necessary, especially knowing that many measures to shift to cleaner energy, reduce consumption and protect carbon sinks like forests, wetlands, kelp forests and more will also lead to less pollution, improved public health, and better, more equitable economic outcomes?
Part of it may be fear--fear of change, of losing illusory power and wealth, of having to think differently. Much of it's rooted in selfishness, of taking what they can while they can, under the assumption that negative consequences won't affect them, either because their wealth and power will insulate them, or because impacts won't kick in until after they're gone. Some of it is ego. It's been surmised that Putin is only wreaking such horrible destruction because he wants to cement his imaginary legacy as a great leader who helped restore a failing empire to its former glory.
It's profoundly sad that we're being led by so many short-sighted, narrow-minded people. It's sad that children have to march in the streets and protest for something as basic as survivable conditions. It's sad that young people are being sacrificed--sent to kill and be killed to protect billionaires' interests.
It's time for a radical shift.
It's a tragic truth that some people are willing to inflict unfathomable suffering and death for the sake of power and wealth. From Russia's aggression in Ukraine to the push for continued climate-altering fossil fuel expansion, selfish gain means more to some than the health and well-being of our children and grandchildren and those yet to be born.
Those with power often exploit the uneducated and uninformed to further their own ends--and in many cases work to degrade education systems to prevent people from acquiring critical thinking and logic skills.
Take the decades-spanning efforts to downplay and deny the evidence of human-caused climate disruption--efforts that have accelerated in recent days, as the fossil fuel industry and its political and media allies cynically use the Russia-Ukraine crisis to advocate for increased development and expansion of the products and infrastructure they tout.
Alberta's premier tweeted, "Now if Canada really wants to help defang Putin, then let's get some pipelines built." He fails to acknowledge that the pipes are largely being made by a company 60 percent owned by Russian oligarchs--one with close ties to Putin--and that the Alberta Investment Management Corporation owns half a million shares of a Russian investment fund whose largest holdings are in Russian fossil fuel companies Gazprom, Sberbank, and Lukoil.
He did halt Russian alcohol sales, though (which is mostly just Russian Standard vodka, not really popular in Alberta).
UN secretary-general Antonio Guterres had a more rational take, tweeting: "As current events make all too clear, our reliance on fossil fuels makes the global economy & our energy security vulnerable to geopolitical crises. Instead of slowing down decarbonization, now is the time to accelerate the transition to a renewable energy future."
The recent Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change report, Impacts, Adaptation, and Vulnerability, explains the dangers of deception: "Rhetoric and misinformation on climate change and the deliberate undermining of science have contributed to misperceptions of the scientific consensus, uncertainty, disregarded risk and urgency, and dissent."
It adds that "strong party affiliation and partisan opinion polarization contribute to delayed mitigation and adaptation action, most notably in the US but with similar patterns in Canada" and that "Vested economic and political interests have organized and financed misinformation and 'contrarian' climate change communication."
It's not that everyone who denies or downplays climate science is uncaring or, worse, sociopathic. Those with power often exploit the uneducated and uninformed to further their own ends--and in many cases work to degrade education systems to prevent people from acquiring critical thinking and logic skills.
The excuse that the world will need fossil fuels for years to come so it's better to support our own industries wasn't a great argument even 34 years ago when the IPCC was established--and fossil fuel development and use have accelerated since then. Failure to heed the evidence has propelled humanity into a climate emergency.
Those who know better have no excuse. The fossil fuel industry's own scientists accurately warned about the climate consequences of profligate fossil fuel burning 45 years ago. Most opinion writers who sow doubt, confusion and misinformation about climate disruption aren't ignorant enough to outright reject mountains of accumulating evidence--including what people everywhere are plainly experiencing!
So, why do they so strenuously oppose what is clearly necessary, especially knowing that many measures to shift to cleaner energy, reduce consumption and protect carbon sinks like forests, wetlands, kelp forests and more will also lead to less pollution, improved public health, and better, more equitable economic outcomes?
Part of it may be fear--fear of change, of losing illusory power and wealth, of having to think differently. Much of it's rooted in selfishness, of taking what they can while they can, under the assumption that negative consequences won't affect them, either because their wealth and power will insulate them, or because impacts won't kick in until after they're gone. Some of it is ego. It's been surmised that Putin is only wreaking such horrible destruction because he wants to cement his imaginary legacy as a great leader who helped restore a failing empire to its former glory.
It's profoundly sad that we're being led by so many short-sighted, narrow-minded people. It's sad that children have to march in the streets and protest for something as basic as survivable conditions. It's sad that young people are being sacrificed--sent to kill and be killed to protect billionaires' interests.
It's time for a radical shift.