There is a kind of madness to walking
through a blizzard, while wearing a thick coat and picking the moment to
discuss Global Warming
The
Temperature at Which Global Warming Freezes
By
Daniel Greenfield Sunday,
February 14, 2010
Wednesday
afternoon, the sky over New York City was a falling sheet of white.
Temperatures had dropped sharply and the blizzard was underway.
But nowhere
in the city was the blizzard more pronounced than in Central Park, which
had been designed in the 19th century to create a miniature forest in the
heart of one of the biggest cities in the world. The trees were layered
with coats of snow and visibility had vanished into a cloud of whiteness.
And walking along a path in the Ramble, I heard a woman lecturing her
children on the dangers of what else, but Global Warming.
There is a
kind of madness to walking through a blizzard, while wearing a thick coat
and picking the moment to discuss Global Warming. A theory according to
which we should be sliding toward the tropics, awash in fleeing polar
bears and Florida style temperatures, instead of frantically shoveling our
driveways. Such an attitude has very little to do with science, and a
great deal to do with faith. Because while the scientist sees what is and
evaluates it based on the available evidence, the believer has faith in
what he cannot see. And to see Global Warming while walking through a
blizzard, is itself an act of faith.
Prior to
this season’s unfortunate weather, Global Warming advocates had staked
their bets on a mild winter in order to show people the pernicious effects
of people driving to work and using extra shopping bags. Which was a
decent enough angle, considering that we had been experiencing milder
winters over the last few years. But the problem with betting that the
weather will help prove your point, is that the weather may have other
plans. And now digging out of a snowstorm and their own lies, Global
Warming advocates are arguing that colder winters and snowstorms are
actually another effect of global warming. Which may now need to be
renamed, Global Temperatures We Don’t Like.
Had
environmentalists hedged their bets by calling Global Warming something
vaguely neutral like Global Temperature Imbalance, they would have had a
much easier time covering their asses. Because temperature imbalances are
a more subjective thing and the graphs are easier to fake. But Global
Temperature Imbalance is much less entertainingly alarmist than Global
Warming, and the environmentalists knew that they needed a name with some
heft to frighten the public. Armageddon. Apocalypse. We think of
destruction as a fiery event. And Global Warming was an environmentalist
apocalypse, supposedly backed by science. No wonder it got as much
traction as it did.
But it
isn’t just the weather that’s turning on Global Warming, from Anglia
to the IPCC, the scientific case for Global Warming is being undermined by
revelations of fraud and malfeasance. And the political case for Cap and
Trade is being undermined by the refusal of politicians and nations to cut
their own throats so that Al Gore and George Soros can make a few billion
selling “Right to Emit Carbon” certificates to every factory on the
planet.
Walking
through Central Park, it’s easy to see how perverse the modern day
Environmentalist has become in his view of the relationship between man
and nature. Central Park was inspired by one of the co-founders of the
Republican party, newspaper editor, William Cullen Bryant, and co-created
by Republican architect and landscape designer Frederick Olmsted, to
harmonize the natural world and the urban one through human industry.
The New York
Republicans of the 19th century viewed public parks as part of their
civilizing mission. Central Park was created as part of an ongoing battle
with the corrupt Democratic Tammany Hall machine, which wanted segregated
slums and downtrodden workers who would rush to them as saviors and vote
how they were told. By contrast Bryant and Olmsted saw parks as a way to
improve human health, inspire public citizenship and build a strong
republic.
While
today’s environmentalists are fixated on holding back human development
in order to maintain wetlands, banning DDT to save the mosquito and
campaigning against agriculture to reduce population growth—the
visionaries behind Central Park did not restrict human development for the
sake of nature, instead they used human industry and the state of the art
technology of the time to turn a decrepit site used for slaughterhouse
refuse, swamps and shantytowns into a magnificent park that seems
effortlessly natural.
The
difference is in the emphasis. Environmentalists demonize most human
industry and accomplishment, except the ineffective and efficient kind, as
evil, because they are wedded to a black and white view of humanity and
the environment as opposites. In their worldview, for the environment to
prosper, humanity must go into decline. And when humanity prospers, they
insist that the environment is in decline.
By contrast,
Conservationists, who included the likes of President Theodore Roosevelt,
valued the natural world for what human beings can learn about themselves
from engaging with it. That was the philosophy behind Central Park, which
to this day remains an elegant demonstration of human accomplishment as
applied to the natural world.
Global
Warming is an ideological weapon by the environmentalists against human
industry and civilization. It is part of a broader anti-civilization
agenda by the left, which values the natural world only because it sees it
as a “primitive” antidote to the complexities of civilization. That
romanticism goes back many centuries. It is the borrowed hostility of the
nomad to the farmer (and it is very telling to look at Europe and see its
intellectuals championing the virtues of the grandsons of Bedouin nomads
over the grandsons of French and English farmers) taken up by bored
intellectuals, arguing against the complexity of civilization and for the
noble barbarism of the savage.
Where the
Conservationist values the natural world because of its beneficial impact
on the human spirit through cultivation and achievement, the
Environmentalist only thinks he values the natural world, in reality he
does not love nature, he only hates civilization. Where the
Conservationist sought out the natural world for its civilizing effects,
the Environmentalist seeks it out for its decivilizing effects. He does
not want to be a better human being, but less of one.
Accordingly
to the Conservationist, we needed to integrate the natural world into our
lives in order to build a better civilization. The Environmentalist is not
interested in building a better human civilization. His objective can only
truly succeed if every human being, every building, factory, car and
artifact vanished off the face of the earth tomorrow. Because his
environmentalism is really a mask for his hostility to human civilization.
Central Park
does not duplicate Manhattan before the arrival of the settlers, a trendy
bit of landscaping that environmentalists are rather fond of. But then who
besides environmentalists would fancy the idea of reverting Manhattan to a
swamp bordered island with poor water sources and high rates of disease.
Instead it creates something better, improving on the natural world,
cultivating land into a transcendent statement that is more about man than
nature.
Where Global
Warming insists that everything humans do just makes the world worse,
Central Park is a shining statement that says we make it better. The
ideology of Global Warming’s only real message is, “Stop Doing Things
We Don’t Approve Of”. Every ad is another parable about the evil of
humans who clear cut forests, pour oil into the oceans and refuse to put
things into clearly marked recycling containers. By contrast Central Park
was meant to open up the natural world to human activities. The ideas of
Olmsted about good citizenship and the natural world did not involve
teaching people to leave the natural world alone, but to make it a part of
our cities.
Environmentalists
today sneer at this attitude, they view parks as patronizing to the
environment and artificial human entities. They clamor against hunting and
fishing. They agitate to restrict human access to national parks. They
push Zero Population Growth and mandatory birth control. Their
“Green”, like that of the Islamic Green, burns with hate for the Red,
White and Blue. For human civilization.
But as with
so many left wing ideologies, the public may go along with the propaganda,
until they begin realizing the real world implications. Much of the public
thinks Environmentalism is a good idea, because they think it’s
ultimately meant to benefit them. And slowly they’re realizing that this
is not the case. That Environmentalism is an ideology that champions the
Supremacy of Nature, better known as the ecosystem covering the surface of
the Earth, over man. Where Conservationism believed in the Supremacy of
Man, and the utilization of the natural environment for mankind’s
benefit, the environmentalist doesn’t give a damn about mankind’s
benefit. Less so than he does about an endangered mollusk.
Walking
through the blizzard, the trees wreathed in bridal veils of snow, I heard
their voices in the distance, a distance that in the whiteness may have
been only a dozen feet away. “The scientists say Global Warming is
coming”, the mother said. “It’s too cold out for that,” answered
the little girl.
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