Posts Tagged by Copenhagen
Dealing with Global Climate Change
| May 23, 2012 | Posted by Craig Shields under Sustainability |

Not that you needed another, but here’s an article painting a frightening picture of what life on planet Earth will look like by 2050. One of things I found interesting about it is that it offers this theory for the reason for our inaction at this critical point in time, as the oceans are rising and the species are disappearing. “One answer may be found in our DNA. Growing evidence suggesting our brains aren’t wired to handle future threats. We may be hardwired to deal with the present proximate, not the future probable.”
I’m reminded of what my friend Tom Konrad told me in an interview: Read More
Obama in Copenhagen
| November 27, 2009 | Posted by Craig Shields under Renewables - Politics |
With the Copenhagen summit occupying so much attention on the international stage, I may as well weigh in with my own viewpoint. In brief:
Obama’s commitment to a 17 percent emissions cut from 2005 levels by 2020 is virtually meaningless – even if it actually occurs. It’s a small fraction of what climate scientists have called for in their peer-reviewed studies on global warming. This carefully contrived, last-minute decision to send Obama was made with the proviso that it needed to appear to be a success. The commitment to this meager cut in emissions may be construed as a victory for the White House, but it most certainly is not for the rest of the people who live on this planet.
Having said that, as I’ve written many times before, Obama’s hands are tied. Here’s a man who won a landslide election a year ago, who has no more power than I do to move forward a progressive agenda and make real change. The lobbyists who work for the big energy corporations have an utter stranglehold over him and the entire the legislative process.
If you think I’m exaggerating, look at the healthcare logjam. The vast majority of Americans – and 57% of the physicians who treat them – favor single-payor – and we can’t even get that on the table. Here, the lobbies for the big money in healthcare are so powerful that our representatives are forbidden to even discuss an idea that represents a potential threat.
I honestly wish I could find I way to be optimistic and less cynical about the way in which we govern ourselves — but I can’t.
