73. Climate Memo Mondays, #73, May 2, 2022
Convergence of War and Warming, Sites of Remembrance. --Dick
The French nation pays attention to their “lieux de memoir,”
or sites of remembrance. Tthe German
occupation of France during WWII—known as the “années noires,” or dark years—is
marked throughout France, not only by places but people also and even ideas. A resolve never to forget past sociopaths and
altruists.
Perhaps we could
better decrease our present wars of aggression and our failure to resist climate
catastrophe by changing attention from past to future --resisting our
calamitous wars and climate chaos by marking significant moments, events, and
individuals of rising temperature and its consequences as they happen. By not waiting, particularly when nuclear
holocaust and unchecked emissions heat might prevent a future—dooming us to “années
noires” forever--, but by meeting and noting
the future head-on now, we might at least help decrease its destruction.
So how to
conceptualize the project? By creating
our ongoing “lieux de memoir.”
I. Public
Enemies. Massive exposure of those who
prepare for war instead of peace and those who fail to prepare for warming. For example, Taylor and Watts, “Revealed: The
20 Firms behind a Third of All Carbon Emissions,” (Oct.9, 2019).
II. Public
Friends. Those who prepare for peace and
cooling.
The French of
course also understood the difficulties of their great undertaking, because
they understand the instability of memory after passage of time. The long quest for the identity of the man
who betrayed Jean Moulin to the Gestapo offers a precise example. More remarkable in the US is the little known
though dramatically public former CEO of ExxonMobil, Lee Raymond. It’s
not merely forgetfulness, but is called by Jean-Marie Borzeix; “refoulement
collectif,” a repression of atrocious events (One Day in France). Every
effort to reconstruct the past must be undertaken with respect for the
facts. Our recording of the present is
only a little less demanding. And
whether sleuthing past or present, our larger goal should be not only
identifying criminals and heroes, but retrieving both from future forgetting.
There
are no accidents could be our motto. Dick
Ukraine war: UN chief arrives for talks in Moscow as 'messenger of
peace'
Full Story: UN News (4/26)
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