Tuesday, May 26, 2026

OMNI CLIMATE EMERGENCY ANTHOLOGY #3 MAY 26, 2026

 

 

OMNI

CLIMATE EMERGENCY ANTHOLOGY #3

MAY 26,  2026

Compiled by Dick Bennett for a Culture of Peace, Justice,  Ecology, and Democracy

https://omnicenter.org/donate

 

What’s at Stake:   OMNI’S CLIMATE BOOK FORUMS ON CLIMATE CHANGE began in 2006 late in the story. (Prof. James Hansen had warned Congress in 1988 of the dangers that could arise from rising temperatures.   The UN created the IPCC in 1999.)  From its beginning we enjoyed the advice of three climatologists:   Dr. Robert McAfee (Ph.D in Climatology from U. of Melbourne), Prof. Malcolm Cleveland (Geology Dept, UAF), and Prof. Art Hobson (Physics Dept., UAF); and the participation of more than a dozen concerned citizens (including Lolly Tindol, Gladys Tiffany, Shelley Bunaiuto, Dick Bennett).   The forums consisted mainly of reviews of recent books.  OMNI’s Climate Emergency Anthologies began in 2019, edited by Dick Bennett.  A main issue regarded naming: warming, disaster, catastrophe, calamity, chaos?  Already climatologists had chosen catastrophe (or its synonym calamity), with the fossil fuels industry and its political tools in the Bush administration preferring no suggestion of change or if pressed, warming, though this label, once explained offers no comfort to exploiters.   The fossil fuels industry delayed an accurate label for the urgency at least a decade, part of their criminal denial, which was also a subject of published books discussed at the forums.   And the leading scientific body studying climate--the UN Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (estab. 1999)--was cautious in its earliest “assessments” in announcing its most dire conclusions believing understatement best served the search for truth.  Its Sixth Assessment, however, presented their full conclusions.    OMNI’s 2024 Emergency Anthology (#2) presented articles published from 2019 to 2024 in which the urgency is not in doubt.  This 2026 #3 anthology opens with a discussion of why it took the UN’s  Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) so long to employ the strong, accurate  

word: catastrophe (or among many climatologists: emergency or chaos).

 

CONTENTS
Language Again.  Calamity?  Apocalypse?
Mark Hertsgaard.  “Americans Are Not Nearly Alarmed Enough about Climate Change.”
Drew and the crew at 198. “3 years and counting.”
Special Feature
     David Spratt and Ian Dunlop.  “What Lies Beneath: The Understatement of Existential
    Climate Risk” and discussion by members of OMNI’s Climate Forum members.
Andrea Mazzarino. “The All-American Ravages of Extreme Weather.”

Huiting Hsu.   [Global Scorching?]   “The last generation.”
Dick Bennett.  “Speechless?  More on language of climate scorching.”

Climate change and the Pacific Islands: ‘When the land disappears, we will all disappear’.”
Dick Bennett.  Awareness of Our World Ending.  From Wordsworth to Marx via to Naomi Klein and John Bellamy Foster. 

Foster.  The Ecological Revolution.

 

TEXTS

[Some of the links might not be entirely up to date, but those that I have tested lead to further understanding and useful actions.   I have changed added some signposts and changed some important words and phrases to bold, but I have also deleted most of the visuals.  –D] 

 
CORRECT LABEL?

I asked a geologist friend which label was best—change, catastrophe, emergency, or?   Is the following at least roughly true? Too early to say? I haven't seen a study yet of the usage. Here is his reply.  D 1-1-20

Malcolm Kent Cleaveland    Dec 31, 2019 (7 years ago).         to me, Art

Dick,

 Hard to say.  "Catastrophe" and "emergency" certainly are accurate.  Most people have no idea how close we are to catastrophe.  The Australian government, world's largest exporter of coal and led by a climate denier, is facing a catastrophe on top of/partially created by, an epic drought.  Serves them right, they elected him.  Read an item about sea surface temperatures around Tasmania exceeding 2 deg C above average, wreaking havoc with marine ecosystems and threatening some species with extinction.  But we all know that "climate change is a Chinese hoax". 

In Antarctica, Thwaites Glacier is being undermined by warm water and could accelerate/disintegrate catastrophically with an ultimate effect of raising sea level up to a foot, especially if the subsidiary glaciers that Thwaites holds back destabilize.  Combined with super energized storms, that could destroy quadrillions of $$$ of infrastructure.  Paleoclimate shows that there have been abrupt big changes in the past and we are not prepared, mentally or physically, if it happens now.

 

Malcolm K. Cleaveland, Ph.D.    LTC USAR (Ret.)
Professor Emeritus of Geosciences
University of Arkansas – Fayetteville

 

https://ssl.gstatic.com/ui/v1/icons/mail/images/cleardot.gif Mark Hertsgaard.  “Americans Are Not Nearly Alarmed Enough about Climate Change.”   The Nation (July 18, 2025). 

Americans still don’t comprehend how imminent, dangerous, and far-reaching the threat is—and journalists are partly to blame.

Last Thursday, CNN ran a story that inadvertently underscored the fact that most journalism is still not getting across the full truth about climate change. Harry Enten, CNN’s polling analyst, displayed Gallup data showing that 40 percent of Americans are “greatly worried” about climate change. But this 40 percent is “the exact same percentage as [were worried] back in 2000,” he pointed out, “despite everything we see [today] on our television screens, our computer screens…the hurricanes, the tornados, the flooding.”

“Americans aren’t afraid of climate change,” Enten concluded. “Climate activists have not successfully made the case to the American people.”

Perhaps not, but neither have most journalists. The extreme weather events Enten cited have gotten extensive news coverage, but most of that coverage did not make the climate connection. As we noted last month, “In the summer of 2024, for example, when record high temperatures brutalized outdoor workers, withered crops, and worsened hurricanes, only 12 percent of US national TV news segments mentioned climate change, though its role in driving such extreme heat has long been scientifically indisputable.”   

Anthony Leiserowitz, the executive director of the Yale Program on Climate Change Communication, said Yale’s latest survey found that only 29 percent of Americans are “very worried” about climate change—a remarkably low number, considering that climate change is already killing people and devastating communities around the world and threatens much worse if left unchecked.    “I constantly make the point that only 29 percent are very worried, when it should be 100 percent,” Leiserowitz told Covering Climate Now. “This reflects [climate change’s] lack of salience for most Americans. There are many who are not deniers, but do not adequately understand the risks, that the impacts are here and now, and the urgency of action.”

These numbers also shed light on The 89 Percent Project that CCNow and dozens of news outlets have been reporting this year. The project is grounded in a cluster of scientific studies finding that 80 to 89 percent of the world’s people want governments to “do more” about climate change. . . .

 

[Mark Hertsgaard is an American journalist, the co-founder and executive director of Covering Climate Now. He is the environment correspondent for The Nation, and the author of seven non-fiction books, including Earth Odyssey and Hot: Living Through the Next Fifty Years on EarthWikipedia.    Hertsgaard has been an essential source of knowledge to me about climate.   The Nation has been my indispensable companion for navigating the USA for several decades.   –D]

 

“3 years and counting.”   Drew and the crew at 198 Methods <drew@198methods.org> Jul 22, 2025. me is running out 

 

Today, July 22, 2025, the Climate Clock ticked below 4 years. That means we are running our of time to limit global warming to 1.5°C. And to be perfectly honest, we are simply not going to slash fossil fuels and climate changing emissions enough in the next 3 years and 364 days left to protect our future from the deadliest, most expensive, and cruelest impacts of climate change.

 Click here to share the news with your networks, or scroll down for actions you can take now, this week, to #ActInTime.

A screen grab of the climate clock as it ticked below 4 years earlier today

 

 

Many of us are taking action. Across the world, communities are building the solutions we need to protect people and planet, and fighting for climate justice. We're participating in the global day of action Sun Day on September 21 [2025] to highlight those solutions. If you're interested in learning more about Sun Day and plugging into the organizing, join a call tomorrow evening at 6pm ET / 3pm PT with bill Mckibben and Third Act.

But not everyone is working toward a safe future. Fossil fueled fascists and corporations are running out the clock. They use money, power and disinformation to delay action and block progress. They must be named, shamed, and held accountable. That's why we'll also be participating in a global day of action to hold billionaires accountable on September 20
sign on your organization if you're interested in participating – and join a mass action this week in San Francisco and next week in New York City challenging the financiers of climate chaos (more info below).

Wells Fargo funds fossil fuels, genocide and the war on immigrants. Along with our friends from the Standing Rock Sioux tribe, we’re taking mass direct action to shut down the bank’s global HQ. We'll paint a mural on their plaza and take nonviolent direct action together. 
Join us at Wells Fargo Global HQ, 333 Market Street, San Francisco, Wednesday, July 23rd at 830AM PT and RSVP here for details.

Then, from July 28-Aug 1, Gulf South climate leaders are teaming up with migrant leaders from the Global South to confront the Big Oil billionaires whose way of life is a threat to our communities, and our world. We will be taking action to stop the Big Oil billionaires who are financing environmental racism from the Gulf South to the Global South, and are cashing in on the destruction of our families and our democracy. Join us in New York for an Art Build July 28, a march and rally July 30, and an action at Citibank Headquarters on August 1.

This Climate Emergency Day, we encourage you to ask: Who is running out the climate clock? And take action both to support the solutions and those who Act On Climate in time, AND name and shame those who Running Out the Clock. You can share these posts on social media to spread the word – or make your own. Use the hashtags: #ActinTime #ClimateEmergencyDay &/or #TimeToEndFossilFuels and tag us and @climateclock.world for shares and reposts.   Share on Facebook    Share on Instagram    Share on Bluesky    Or make your own using this toolkit.

Thanks,
Drew & the 198 methods to #ActInTime crew

 

Sources:  

1.     https://www.198methods.org/2025/06/24/trumps-big-ugly-bill-is-no-day-in-the-sun/

2.     https://sunday.earth/

3.     https://climateclock.world

4.     https://www.stopbillionaires.org/Yre receiving this email because you're awesome, a www.198methods.org


To OMNI's Climate Book Forum (2006-), 1-29-20

[The following will interest everyone who participated in OMNI’s Climate Book Forum.  But its relevance will be appreciated by all who are studying the history of climate change and the struggle to control it.    Art sent us a major essay on the politics of warming that I urge all to read.  My computer messed up and eliminated the division markers (same with you?), so I have restored the beginning of the Foreword and Introduction and put a few lines in bold.   The argument in the Intro. was not new even in 2017; many of our books have warned the same (that the IPCC reports have understated the danger).  This essay makes the case emphatically, and it possesses particular relevance to OMNI's CBF, for in our knowledge we are responsible for telling the truth to the public.   We deserve to feel glad for having adhered to our scientific sources and to UAF’s motto:  To Advance with Truth as Our Leader.  Another interest in this conversation is its illustration of one aspect of OMNI’s climate leadership.  Back to Art.  –Dick]

Yesterday I sent you a link to a free 40-page book “The understatement of climate risk.”  Some folks tell me the link doesn’t work for them.  Here is an alternative link that does work:   

https://climateextremes.org.au/wp-content/uploads/2018/08/What-Lies-Beneath-V3-LR-Blank5b15d.pdf   Art 

WHAT LIES BENEATH:  THE UNDERSTATEMENT OF EXISTENTIAL CLIMATE RISK BY DAVID SPRATT & IAN DUNLOP.  2017.   

| FOREWORD BY HANS JOACHIM SCHELLNHUBER .    2018 RELEASE Published by Breakthrough, National Centre for Climate Restoration, Melbourne, Australia. First published September 2017. Revised and updated August 2018. BREAKTHROUGHONLINE.ORG.AU FOREWORD INTRODUCTION RISK UNDERSTATEMENT EXCESSIVE CAUTION THINKING THE UNTHINKABLE THE UNDERESTIMATION OF RISK EXISTENTIAL RISK TO HUMAN CIVILISATION PUBLIC SECTOR DUTY OF CARE ON CLIMATE RISK SCIENTIFIC UNDERSTATEMENT CLIMATE MODELS TIPPING POINTS CLIMATE SENSITIVITY CARBON BUDGETS PERMAFROST AND THE CARBON CYCLE ARCTIC SEA ICE POLAR ICE-MASS LOSS SEA-LEVEL RISE POLITICAL UNDERSTATEMENT POLITICISATION GOALS ABANDONED A FAILURE OF IMAGINATION ADDRESSING EXISTENTIAL CLIMATE RISK SUMMARY CONTENTS 02 04 08 09 10 13 15 18 21 22 24 25 27 28 30 34 36 38 39 40 What Lies Beneath 2 DRAFT ONLY

 

FOREWORD  BY HANS JOACHIM SCHELLNHUBER.     Hans Joachim Schellnhuber is a professor of theoretical physics specialising in complex systems and nonlinearity, founding director of the Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research (1992-2018) and former chair of the German Advisory Council on Global Change. He is a senior climate advisor to the European Union, the German Chancellor and Pope Francis. What Lies Beneath is an important report. It does not deliver new facts and figures, but instead provides a new perspective on the existential risks associated with anthropogenic global warming. It is the critical overview of well-informed intellectuals who sit outside the climate-science community which has developed over the last fifty years. All such expert communities are prone to what the French call deformation professionelle and the German betriebsblindheit. Expressed in plain English, experts tend to establish a peer world-view which becomes ever more rigid and focussed. Yet the crucial insights regarding the issue in question may lurk at the fringes, as this report suggests. This is particularly true when the issue is the very survival of our civilisation, where conventional means of analysis may become useless. This dilemma notwithstanding, the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) bravely  perseveres with its attempts to assess the multiple cause-and-effect relationships which comprise the climate problem. After delivering five fully-fledged assessment reports, it is hardly surprising that a trend towards “erring on the side of least drama” has emerged. There are many reasons, both subtle and mundane. Let me highlight just one of each. Firstly, the IPCC is stricken with the Probability Obsession. Ever since statistics was established in the16th century, scientists have tried to capture the complex, stochastic behaviour of a given nontrivial object (such as a roulette wheel) by repeating the same experiment on that object many, many times. If there was a set of well-defined outcomes (such as the ball ending on the red or black of the wheel), then the probability of a specific outcome was simply the number of experiments delivering that outcome divided by the total number of experiments. This sounds reasonable, but can we even imagine applying that approach to global warming? Strictly speaking, we would have to redo the Industrial Revolution and the greenhouse-gas emissions it triggered a thousand times or so, always starting with the Earth system in its 1750 pre-industrial state. What Lies Beneath 2 What Lies Beneath 3 DRAFT ONLY Then calculate the averaged observed outcome of that planetary experiment in terms of mean surface-temperature rise, global biological productivity, total number of climate refugees, and many other variables. This is a nonsensical notion. Of course, climate scientists are not trying to treat the Earth like a roulette wheel, yet the statistical approach keeps on creeping into the assessments. How many times did the thermohaline circulation collapse under comparable conditions in the planetary past? How often did the Pacific enter a permanent El Niño state in the Holocene? And so on. These are valuable questions that can generate precious scientific insights. But we must never forget that we are in a unique situation with no precise historic analogue. The level of greenhouse gases in the atmosphere is now greater, and the Earth warmer, than human beings have ever experienced. And there are almost eight billion of us now living on this planet. So calculating probabilities makes little sense in the most critical instances, such as the methane release dynamics in thawing permafrost areas or the potential failing of entire states in the climate crisis. Rather, we should identify possibilities, that is, potential developments in the planetary make-up that are consistent with the initial and boundary conditions, the processes and the drivers we know. This is akin to scenario planning, now being proposed for assessing climate risks in the corporate sector, where the consequences of a number of future possibilities, including those which may seem highly unlikely, but have major consequences, are evaluated. This way one can overcome the probability obsession that not only fantasizes about the replicability of the singular, but also favours the familiar over the unknown and unexpected. As an extreme example, the fact that our world has never been destroyed previously would conventionally assign probability zero to such an event. But this only holds true under steadystate assumptions, which are practically never warranted. Secondly, there is the Devil’s Advocate Reward. In the magnificent tradition of the Enlightenment, which shattered so many myths of the ancient regimes, scientists are trained to be sceptical about every proposition which cannot be directly verified by empirical evidence or derived from first principles (such as the invariability of the speed of light). So, if a researcher comes up with an entirely new thought, experts tend to reflexively dismiss it as “speculative”, which is effectively a death warrant in the academic world. Whereas those who criticize the idea will be applauded, rewarded and promoted! This phenomenon is evident in every seminar, colloquium or learned-society assembly. In turn, this means that scientific progress is often driven from the periphery, or occasionally, by eminent personalities whose seniority is beyond doubt. This does not at all imply that hypotheses need not be vindicated in due course, but out-ofthe-box thinking is vital given the unprecedented climate risks which now confront human civilisation. In conclusion, one should not be overly critical of the IPCC, since the scientists involved are doing what scientists are expected to do, to the very best of their ability in difficult circumstances. But climate change is now reaching the end-game, where very soon humanity must choose between taking unprecedented action, or accepting that it has been left too late and bear the consequences. Therefore, it is all the more important to listen to non-mainstream voices who do understand the issues and are less hesitant to cry wolf. Unfortunately for us, the wolf may already be in the house. What Lies Beneath 3

 

What Lies Beneath 4

INTRODUCTION

Three decades ago, when serious debate on human-induced climate change began at the global level, a great deal of statesmanship was on display. There was a preparedness to recognise that this was an issue transcending nation states, ideologies and political parties which had to be addressed proactively in the long-term interests of humanity as a whole. This was the case even though the existential nature of the risk it posed was far less clear cut than it is today. As global institutions, such as the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC) which was established at the Rio Earth Summit in 1992, were developed to take up this challenge, and the extent of change this would demand of the fossil-fuel-dominated world order became clearer, the forces of resistance began to mobilise. Today, as a consequence, and despite the diplomatic triumph of the 2015 Paris Agreement, the debate around climate change policy has never been more dysfunctional, indeed Orwellian. In his book 1984, George Orwell describes a double-think totalitarian state where most of the population accepts “the most flagrant violations of reality, because they never fully grasped the enormity of what was demanded of them, and were not sufficiently interested in public events to notice what was happening. By lack of understanding they remained sane.”1 Orwell could have been writing about climate change and policymaking. International agreements talk of limiting global warming to 1.5–2 degrees Celsius (°C), but in reality they set the world on a path of 3–5°C of warming. Goals are reaffirmed, only to be abandoned. Coal is “clean”. Just 1°C of warming is already dangerous, but this cannot be admitted. The planetary future is hostage to myopic national self-interest. Action is delayed on the assumption that as yet unproven technologies will save the day, decades hence. The risks are existential, but it is “alarmist” to say so. 1 Orwell, G 1949, Nineteen Eighty-Four. A Novel, Secker and Warburg, London. 2 CommunicateResearch 2017, ‘Global Challenges Foundation global risks survey’, ComRes, 24 May 2017, . 3 Randle, MJ & Eckersley, R 2015, ‘Public perceptions of future threats to humanity and different societal responses: a cross-national study’, Futures, vol. 72, pp. 4-16. A. . . . . . . . . https://climateextremes.org.au/wp-content/uploads/2018/08/What-Lies-Beneath-V3-LR-Blank5b15d.pdf

 

REPLIES FROM Shelley, Lolly, Art

shelley buonaiuto           Jan 29, 2020, to me, Alberto, Art, Aubrey, Gladys, Jeanne, Joyce, Lolly, malcolm, Marvin, Peg, Terry, Georgehttps://mail.google.com/mail/u/0/images/cleardot.gif

Just read it.  It’s a quick read since there is a lot of repetition, basically

That the IPCC reports ignored feedback loops in projections and so seriously underestimate risks. It gives examples. I’m glad I read it to get this sobering perspective but it is .....well...sobering. 

lolly tindol   [Lolly died last year, too suddenly for adequate celebration of her many talents.   She devoured books and led our committee in forum after forum.  She was a tour guide across the country, known for her wide historical and anthropological knowledge.  She was a successful Ozarks hill farmer who canned her own vegetables and fruits.   She was a lifetime wife and companion, and good friend to countless.   She is missed.  –D]

 

 

 

to Marvin, me, Alberto, Art, Aubrey, Gladys, Jeanne, Joyce, malcolm, Peg, Shelley, Terry, George

I find that I react viscerally to documents like this. To think that the US Congress is wasting its time on a show impeachment trial and a despicable man who they allowed to be elected president and all that entails, instead of doing what it should to protect The People and the Earth, is beyond outrageous.  

I've forwarded it to several people, some who may join CCl and then also to the NEPA Coordinator for the Ozark Ntl. Forest, Mike Mulford. He's the guy Kent Bonar, Naturalist for Newton County Wildlife, and I complain to when they do another corporate type thing to our forests.   

Looking forward to seeing you Sunday. Shelley and I are taking Kent, our Naturalist and presenter, to lunch at 11am at Arsaga's at the Depot if anyone wants to join us (if there's room) before our CCBF at the

 

Art Hobson                                                                                                                                          

Thanks Dick.  Your note is perfect.   I hadn’t actually planned on reading the entire essay, but your letter persuades me that I should.   Peace - Art

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WHAT FOLLOWS IS BROADER CULTURAL CRITIQUE

shelley buonaiuto

 

 

 

to lollyAlbertoAubreyGladysJeanneJoycemalcolmMarvinPegTerryGeorgehttps://mail.google.com/mail/u/0/images/cleardot.gif

They have made their point perfectly clear in the impeachment trial, Lolly…Trump’s not guilty because he considers his personal interest in the public’s interest. There’s a blindness and lack of conscience that is hard to understand or know how to reach or counter, and is incomprehensibly embraced by 30% of the population. Naked brutal self interest, glorified by Ayn Rand (the power elites’ darling), the symptom of an epidemic of narcissistic personality disorders among those in power, appears now to be used as defense of corruption.  They are circling the wagons…if it’s good for them, then it’s good for the public. Capitalistic and political corruption is good for them…as for the rest of us, we’re not in the circle….but it’s somehow still good for us, especially if we are white supremacists and racists, misogynists, sexists and xenophobes. The hordes of refugees their policies or lack of policies create will be met with increasingly brutal and sophisticated military technologies. 

 

Just to concur…yes, this causes a visceral reaction. 

 

I just keep working on the issues and hope Bernie or any Democrat running except Biden gets elected and that it makes a difference….and that McConnell and the Senate get a real comeuppance. If we can count on any shred of our system to actually work to address the urgency of climate change, while the minds of most people are so dreadfully asleep. 

 

Art Hobson

 

 

 

to CoralieAbel, shelley, lolly, me, Alberto, Aubrey, Gladys, Jeanne, Joyce, Malcolm, Marvin, Peg, Terry, Georgehttps://mail.google.com/mail/u/0/images/cleardot.gif

 Hi friends - 

I totally agree Shelley.  My thoughts:  

This country has always (since about 1650) had a virulent 30-40% minority who favored slavery, guns, business, weak government, the rich and powerful, military force, white people, fundamentalist religion, and US dominance.  

Read Jill Lepore’s excellent new one-volume history of America, These Truths.  One of her themes is America’s compromise with the southern states on slavery, during the constitutional convention.  She summarizes this compromise with the observation that, following the Declaration of Independence, the nation faced two challenges.  It only won one of the them:  The war for independence.  It lost the other:  the war to free blacks from slavery.   We are still paying for this compromise.   The founding fathers made a huge mistake on slavery.   

 

Or read about the “Borderers,” also called the “Scots-Irish,” who formed the dominant American culture during the century leading up to 1776, and is still the basis for our dominant backward conservative attitudes.  For an entertaining brief essay read Joe Bageant's https://bageant.typepad.com/joe/2005/01/drink_pray_figh.html, .  Or read former Senator Jim Webb’s book “Born Fighting:  How the Scots-Irish shaped America.”   Other good books:  J. D. Vance “Hillbilly Elegy,” Arlie Hochschild "Strangers in Their Own Land."

 

A narrow, bitter, racist, conservative, fundamentalist, minority culture reigns in America.  These attitudes are far more prevalent here than in Europe.  This group elected Trump and protect him today in the Senate.  We must defeat this group in November—but this won’t be easy.  However, the problem is much more than political, it is a deep, centuries-old American cultural failure.  There are signs of change.  To my mind (I know many will disagree), the most hopeful of these is the rejection of religion by increasing percentages of Americans, especially the young.   Another is the rise of environmentalism, especially recent popular concern about global warming.   Two other hopeful developments are the peace movement and the increasing political power of women--developments that need to strengthen further in the future.  One goal: all governments should be about 50% female.  Another:  Male/female equality of eduction.  This kind of culture-oriented politics can save the nation, and the world.   

 

I’m copying two new people who should be on this Climate Book Forum list.   

 

Cheers - Art

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lolly tindol       to shelley, Art, me, Alberto, Aubrey, Gladys, Jeanne, Joyce, Malcolm, Marvin, Peg, Terry, George, Coralie, Abel Thanks, Shelley and Art, for this thoughtful conversation, am so in agreement with you both.    And Art, a personal thank you to you---you helped me make a leap of understanding that was already internalized just not put into words: I asked you the following question when we had first met, finding that you were an atheist, my question was "Could you say the word 'sacred?'  " Your answer was "no." Admiring your intellect and my own desire to attempt to embrace all beliefs in an accepting circle of compassion, I realized if I had asked you can you say the word "respect" or "honor" you would have said yes. Anthropology was the minor in my graduate work, and having traveled a lot as a child and now as an adult (tour director with an upscale company, speaking other languages), I recognize so many notions of spirit in the world. What Native Americans see is a spirit in everything, be it a tree, the wind, dirt, a worm. I love the thought of that aliveness, a shared value with  indigenous in New Mexico that I've worked with for years. So I can say "spirit" and I can also say equally comfortably "we're all carbon particles from the Big Bang." (That last one is from you, Art.) I remember as a young grad student studying Henri Bergson in a French class, a grand French philosopher from the early 20th c. He called it "elan vital." That vital thread that connects everything. So, one of my favorite sayings is "we're all in it together" (whether we like it or not!)    Too much that we call "religion" is dualistic, legalistic, retributive justice oriented rather than restorative justice, lacking in compassion and acceptance. And when I see evangelicals embracing Trump's lack of ethics because his actions might bring on the Apocalpyse/Armageddon, I have another visceral reaction. The sad thing is that he represents a class of society that for their lack of action, may in fact be the last straw r/t an inhabitable Earth.   Thanks for the article that started this conversation.

 

CATASTROPHE OR EMERGENCY?  Language to Action.

While all OMNI Forum members were engaged in learning about climate and becoming informed citizens our country so keenly needed, some were reviewing the books, and some were making connections in and surrounding of climate.  Jeanne introduced us to writings by renowned feminists.  Philosopher Coralie was writing another encompassing book.   Environmentalist Aubrey related our Forum to NW AR streams and forests.   Communications professional Marvin was making an illustrated lecture.   Laboratory scientist Alberto was introducing books we might never have heard of.   All were recommending books.   

Bibliographer and reviewer Dick Bennett was also contacting organizations by which OMNI might share in resisting the planet-threatening climate dangers increasingly more imminent.   For example, I wrote several women’s organizations about OMNI’s Book Forum, believing that they possessed an undiscerned and undeveloped power to stand against population growth.  One, Population Connection, stood out for already publishing articles in their magazine by that name in relation to family planning and rising global temperature, and increasing population.   To meet the urgent need, PC has expanded its capacity to help nations understand the importance of family planning in reducing population and heat. 

Please check out our release on the topic here: https://www.populationconnection.org/population-connection-launches-project-highlighting-effects-of-population-growth-on-climate-change/

            Population Connection Launches Project Highlighting the Effects of Population Growth on Climate Change - PopConnect.”

Sign Up to Help Stop Climate Change.     As the United States’ leading grassroots organization seeking to stabilize global population through education about population challenges and advocacy supporting U.S. investment in voluntary domestic and international family planning programs, Population Connection will launch a project aimed at illuminating the link between empowering women and girls and addressing population growth and climate change.    www.populationconnection.org       2120 L St. NW, Suite 500, Washington DC 20037

Read the latest magazine!


Andrea Mazzarino,  “The All-American Ravages of Extreme Weather.”    A blue and white logo

Description automatically generated TOMDISPATCH (October 27, 2024).

If you want a headline to set you back a little when it comes to our planet and our future, try this one from the British Guardian: "Global water crisis leaves half of world food production at risk in next 25 years." Yes, new studies show that crucial heavily populated areas of the world, including Europe, are increasingly at risk. As New York Times climate reporter Somini Sengupta wrote recently, "Ten countries, including the United States and China, produce nearly three-fourths of the world’s most irrigated crops, including sugar, wheat, and cotton. Two-thirds of these crops face what the World Resources Institute called 'high to extremely high levels of water stress.'” And with the weather growing ever more extreme globally, thanks to climate change, all of this is only expected to worsen significantly in the decades to come. In fact, by the middle of this century, it's predicted that up to half of all food production could be at risk.

Of course, it's been known for years that, on a planet growing ever hotter, countries that are home to one quarter of the global population will be at increasing risk of running out of needed water supplies. And mind you, that growing reality goes with a world of increasingly extreme water events, including both fierce droughts and sudden, massive downpours that can lead, as in Europe recently, or in the wake of Hurricanes Helene and Milton here in the United States, to extreme flooding events made twice as likely by the overheating of this planet.

In that context, let TomDispatch regular Andrea Mazzarino consider the rural world she now inhabits, an America whose farms have fallen from 6.8 million in 1935 to just over two million today, even as, until recently, farm output had tripled. However, under ever greater pressure from extreme weather events like Helene and Milton, farm yields are finally beginning to fall and store prices of foods, as every politician in America knows, have risen. In fact, thanks to extreme weather, from oranges in the U.S. to olives in Europe to rice in China, crops have begun to fail and, if the latest studies are accurate, all of this (and store food prices, too) will, in the years to come only worsen as the planet grows warmer yet. Now, let Mazzarino take you to an increasingly imperiled rural America on a planet growing hotter by the year. Tom

 

How Long Before This Storm Turns Political?

What's at Stake in 2024 -- from (My) Rural America”

By Andrea Mazzarino.    Images of homes that collapsed under mudslides or falling trees, waterlogged farms, and debris-filled roads drove home (yes, home!) to me recently the impact of Hurricane Helene on rural areas in the southeastern United States. That hurricane and the no-less-devastating Hurricane Milton that followed it only exacerbated already existing underlying problems for rural America. Those would include federal insurance programs that prioritize rising sea levels over flooding from heavy rainfall, deepening poverty, and unequal access to private home insurance -- issues, in other words, faced by poor inland farming communities. And for millions of rural Americans impacted by Helene, don't forget limited access to healthcare services, widespread electricity outages, and of course, difficulty getting to the ballot box. Case in point: some 80% of North Carolinians under major disaster declarations live in rural areas.

Given that Helene’s human impact was plain for all to see, what struck me was that significant numbers of headlines about that storm's devastation centered not on those people hardest hit, but on the bizarre conspiracy theories of extremist observers: that the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) is 
funneling tens of millions in funds and supplies meant for hurricane survivors to migrants, that the Biden administration has been in cahoots with meteorologists to control the weather, or that Biden and crew actually planned the storm! One of my personal favorites came from a neighbor I encountered at the post office in our rural Maryland town: we don’t have enough money for FEMA rescue operations, she told me, because we're funding Israeli healthcare and housing -- a reference, undoubtedly, to the tens of billions of dollars of bombs and other aid this country has sent Israel’s military in its war in Gaza and beyond.

Click here to read more of this dispatch.

 

Following are AVAAZ’s plans for 2 important conferences in Oct. 2021.  HOW DID THEY WORK OUT??    [AVAAZ an example of excessive sky is falling language?  But if we are on track for a global temp rise of 3 degrees C.?--D]

Huiting Hsu.  “The last generation.”   Avaaz.    Jul 20, 2021.

 

Dear friends,

This isn't global warming anymore. It's global scorching.  
Our world is hotter now than any time in recorded history, unleashing a firestorm of heatwaves, megadroughts, and acidifying seas. We are shattering the temple of life, with a million species on the edge of extinction.   
Within 50 years, 1.5 billion people could be forced to flee temperatures as hot as the Sahara desert -- already 20 million are forced to run every year.    We're living through one of the greatest upheavals of life on earth, and it's caused by a global rise of just 1°C. We're on track for 3°C. Just imagine the hostile and desolate planet our children will inherit.

But here's the most important bit: We CAN still turn this around -- we may be the last generation who can. The next five months are critical.
World leaders will hold two major UN summits, where momentous decisions on the climate and extinction crisis must be made. It could change everything -- or nothing. It means we only have 150 days to shake our leaders into action, radically grow our team to overpower the fossil fuel army, supercharge massive marches, and get the world behind our courageous plan to save nature.

Earth can't wait anymore. This is one of the most important times to be alive on this fragile planet, because it all hangs in the balance. We have to give it everything we've got, and just a small weekly donation from each of us will make an almighty difference. If you've ever thought of donating, do it now and let's fight for the future of our world

 

 

I'LL DONATE $1 WEEKLY

 

I'LL DONATE $2 WEEKLY

 

I'LL DONATE $3 WEEKLY

 

OTHER AMOUNT

 


The UN Biodiversity Summit will happen in October, and aims to end the extinction crisis with bold new protections for nature. And then just a few weeks later, the global Climate Summit is our best chance to secure new commitments to avoid a climate catastrophe.

It will not be easy, but there is reason to hope.

Almost all the world's biggest economies have now pledged to end carbon pollution by 2050 -- and the pandemic has shown that bold, systemic changes can happen far quicker than anyone dreamed. Humanity is learning that everything on our beautiful planet is intimately connected.

But this is an emergency and pledges aren't enough. We need real, decisive action -- and that will take absolutely everything we've got over the next 5 months. Here's the plan:

· We'll massively scale up our team of media and policy experts, researchers, and organisers to pressure governments to sign a bold new deal to save nature;

· We'll bring brave indigenous leaders to the summits, ensuring their urgent call to protect life-giving ecosystems is heard loud and clear;

· We'll publish bombshell reports and shine a glaring media spotlight on the shady lobbying tactics of the fossil fuel giants; and

· We'll help organise historic marches, ensuring our leaders know the world is watching.

The threats we face are no longer just serious; they are a matter of survival. We can't miss this moment: Earth needs a powerful voice as leaders decide the future. A tiny regular donation will make an incredible difference to what we can do together -- chip in now so we can be deafening:

I'LL DONATE $1 WEEKLY

 

I'LL DONATE $2 WEEKLY

 

I'LL DONATE $3 WEEKLY

 

OTHER AMOUNT

 


In the battle to save our world, there is no certainty; only opportunity. And together, our years of marching, protesting, and advocacy have helped create the golden opportunities ahead. Together, we are changing the world -- and I am now more hopeful than I've been in a very long time. And hope is power. The power to rise and fight and charge like never before. Because it's clear that when we come together, all 66 million of us, our movement is capable of the most extraordinary things. This moment demands nothing less.

With fierce hope and determination, always,
Huiting, Mike, Chris, Marigona, Adela, Fra, Camille, Alis, Mouhamad, Bert and the whole team at Avaaz
More information:
Canada is a warning: more and more of the world will soon be too hot for humans (the Guardian)     Leaked UN draft report warns of accelerating climate devastation (Aljazeera)      3 billion people could live in places as hot as the Sahara by 2070  (World Economic Forum)

 

Dick Bennett.  Speechless?  More on language of climate scorching.

    One of the functions of words is to enable us to be less ambiguous, more exact, less vague, more explicit in describing and understanding our experiences.  It’s part of our efforts to be more truthful in conveying the diverse particularities of life.    

        The label disaster has been widely recognized as inadequate to describe global warming, and catastrophe and calamity would be more accurate.  The Inuit have some 50 words for snow; the Scots, apparently, 421, depending upon how you define “word” and “lexeme.”   So surely we need an at least equally precise vocabulary for making distinctions among the kinds and degrees of ruin.  We are a long way from achieving that.  An erupting volcano is a disaster for the nearest town overrun by lava, in contrast to the covid 19 virus that swept the world in 2020-21.  What shall we label a new pandemic?   A crisis?   A catastrophe?   The Spanish flu of 1919 killed an estimated 50 million people: what word for that?  A calamity?   What name (or names) is proportionately accurate for coronaclimate?   But it was eventually managed by vaccine, when the warning word must be replaced?.  

     If you combine climate, when happening simultaneously, what word in the English language will be adequate?  What name (or names) is proportionately accurate for coronaclimatenuclear war?   Emergency?  Didn’t Biden use that word for the pandemic?  Is it adequate?   Better would be chaos?   Apocalyse?
    But what shall we call chronic, ceaseless coronaclimatewars, as described by Andreas Malm in Corona, Climate, Chronic Emergency?  And then add population growth.

     The development of the precise vocabulary for snow itself took thousands of years, and continues (although snow is disappearing), so I expect with great hope our lexicographers are now busy collecting a dictionary for pandemics and climate change and wars. . .and rapid population rise.   We do need it.  For how can we think without words to particularize our extraordinary variety of experiences?

      What other words have you heard or seen?  What words would you add?  

Dick

I sent the above to a Mullin’s Reference Librarian and here are her suggestions.
https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/epdf/10.1111/phn.12866

· https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007%2Fs10980-021-01212-y

· Gilder, Andrew, and Olivia Rumble. Implications of the COVID-19 Pandemic for Global Climate Change Responses. South African Institute of International Affairs, 2020, www.jstor.org/stable/resrep28366. Accessed 13 Apr. 2021.

· "Japan Hosts Int'l Talks on Post-COVID Recovery, Global Warming." Jiji Press English News Service, Sep 03, 2020. ProQuesthttps://search.proquest.com/wire-feeds/japan-hosts-intl-talks-on-post-covid-recovery/docview/2439667808/se-2?accountid=8361."Japan Hosts Int'l Talks on Post-COVID Recovery, Global Warming." Jiji Press English News Service, Sep 03, 2020. ProQuesthttps://search.proquest.com/wire-feeds/japan-hosts-intl-talks-on-post-covid-recovery/docview/2439667808/se-2?accountid=8361.

· Selby, David, and Fumiyo Kagawa. “Climate Change and Coronavirus: A Confluence of Crises as Learning Moment.” COVID-19 in the Global South: Impacts and Responses, edited by Pádraig Carmody et al., by Ciarán Cannon, 1st ed., Bristol University Press, Bristol, 2020, pp. 17–28. JSTORwww.jstor.org/stable/j.ctv18gfz7c.9. Accessed 13 Apr. 2021.

States News Service. "PANDEMIC LEXICON". States News Service, August 3, 2020 Monday. advance.lexis.com/api/document?collection=news&id=urn:contentItem:60HT-NTC1-DYTH-G0RX-00000-00&context=1516831. Accessed April 13, 2021.

 

Climate change and the Pacific Islands: ‘When the land disappears, we will all disappear’.”   Editor.  Mronline.org (7-21-21).

Climate change is already leading to rising sea levels, threatening island and coastal communities and devastating food security and access to fresh water. Long-term drought and changes in weather patterns are causing hunger and destroying farming land.     Originally published: Green Left  on July 13, 2021 by Susan Price (more by Green Left)  |  (Posted Jul 20, 2021).     Agriculture, Climate Change, Environment, HealthAustralasia, Australia, New ZealandNewswirePacific Islands

. . .Another method rich countries are using to downplay the severity of climate change is to ignore its consequences, or try and pass them off as “natural” events.

Climate change is already leading to rising sea levels, threatening island and coastal communities and devastating food security and access to fresh water. Long-term drought and changes in weather patterns are causing hunger and destroying farming land.    By the middle of the century, it is estimated that as many as 200 million people worldwide may be displaced as a result.

Yet, rich countries have responded to this humanitarian disaster with lock-down and lock-up measures to try and stop vulnerable people trying to flee.     The poorest nations with the least resources–which have had the least to do with the climate emergency–are being left to deal with humanitarian problems.

Climate-related displacement is still not considered to be an important global issue. The United Nations (UN) Charter still does not recognise climate refugees–those who cross international borders to find safety–let alone internally displaced persons due to changes in the climate. . . .  MORE     July 20, 2021 | Newswire  

 

Dick.  Awareness of Our World Ending.  From Wordsworth to Naomi Klein, to Marx.   [Some of you know I was a professor of 19th century British literature.]

       It’s not a new experience, but rather timeless and universal.  The elegy has a venerable history.   We need a literature of loss today, perhaps more than ever before. The suffering of change is a main theme of the early poetry of William Wordsworth’s Lyrical Ballads and The Prelude (1787-1800).  He wrote about pathetic and tragic people, about anguish and loss, about murderers, crazed widows, desperate beggars, betrayed women.   Simultaneously he struggled with the contradictions between his republican hopes in the US and French revolutions and periods of despondency caused by the events of reactionary, unjust, unequal realities in England and France.

        We live in a more imperiled world, as the rising temperature deranges our atmosphere, our weather, our lives, and converges with ceaseless wars, spreading fascism, increasing population, increasing inequality, and old and new pandemics. The difference with Wordsworth’s world seems to be that unless we respond totally and quickly today we won’t merely continue the ancient inequities and suffering; we will be extinguished.  Are there elegies for that today?

      And beyond the elegiac, What does Wordsworth’s life suggest to us in such possible extremity of loss?   Among the various ways he explored, to discover the future he yearned for, was the creativity he had experienced in childhood and in poetry, until gradually he found his own way, his individuality, and his poetry of political radicalism, a way for all.  Is there a literature for that today? 

(Publisher’s description) The Ecological Revolution: Making Peace with the Planet is a 2009 book [17 years ago] by Foster that argues the ecological crisis stems from capitalism's expansion, proposing an "ecological revolution" as the only solution, drawing on thinkers like Marx, Malthus, and Carson to address issues like climate change, resource depletion, and environmental justice. The book synthesizes a Marxist critique with ecological concerns, advocating for a radical shift in humanity's relationship with the planet, with examples of this revolution seen in global movements, particularly in the Global South. 

Key themes and arguments

  • Capitalism as the root cause: Foster links the ecological crisis to the inherent drive of capitalism for endless expansion, leading to irrational exploitation of the planet. 
  • The need for revolution: He argues that a fundamental, revolutionary change in human-nature relations is necessary, not just reform. 
  • Metabolic Rift: A central concept is the "metabolic rift," which describes the disruption of natural cycles caused by capitalist production, a theory rooted in Marx's work. 
  • Scope of the crisis: The book covers major issues including global warming, peak oil, species extinction, water shortages, and hunger. 
  • Hope in action: Foster finds hope in emerging ecological movements and experiments, especially in the "periphery of the world system". 
  • Synthesis of thought: He integrates a wide range of thinkers, from classical political economists to contemporary environmental activists, to build his argument. 

Following is from Foster’s preface to the Persian-language edition of The Ecological Revolution, translated by Mohsen Saffari from Cheshmeh Publication in Iran.

The Ecological Revolution: Making Peace with the Planet was first published a little more than ten years ago in April 2009, at a time when climate change had already been recognized as a pressing global issue for over two decades, but when there was still hardly any realistic discussion of its connection to capitalism or of the immense ecological and social revolution that would be required to overcome the Earth System crisis.

In order to understand the historical gulf separating that time from our own, it is useful to refer to the account provided in Naomi Klein’s 2014 book, This Changes Everything: Capitalism vs. the Climate. Klein, one of the leading figures in today’s global climate movement, recounts that April 2009 was the “precise moment when I stopped averting my eyes to the reality of climate change.” She attributes her awakening to an encounter that month with Angélica Navarro Llanos, Bolivia’s socialist ambassador to the World Trade Organization. Navarro Llanos convinced her that global warming was by far the most pressing and momentous issue of the twenty-first century, and that any attempt to address it would also require vast, radical changes in human society.1 Still, few people in spring 2009 saw the true seriousness of anthropogenic climate change for the world economy, or the existential crisis it entailed. Although the planetary emergency arising from fossil fuel combustion had been spelled out for decades by the world scientific consensus, what was still generally lacking was a deep understanding of how this was related to capitalism as a system of accumulation.

Indeed, in 2009 there was still a widespread belief even on the left that the United Nations climate negotiations in Copenhagen that year would take the necessary steps to begin to resolve the climate crisis. However, such illusions regarding the system were to be stripped away in December 2009 with the total collapse of the climate talks. As Klein recalled: “I have come to think of that night [when the complete failure of the Copenhagen negotiations became apparent] as the climate movement’s coming of age: it was the moment when the realization truly sank in that no one was coming to save us.… It really is the case that we are on our own and any credible source of hope in this crisis will have to come from below.”2 The problem of course was that all the talk about limiting climate emissions had proven to be so much hot air as long as fossil capital reigned unchallenged within the world economy. Either the peoples of the earth would organize to fight for solutions going against the logic of capital accumulation, or the future would be one of unending catastrophe—even a kind of exterminism—on the planetary level.

 

 

OMNI CLIMATE URGENCY, EMERGENCY ANTHOLOGY #1.   DECEMBER 17, 2019.  https://jamesrichardbennett.blogspot.com/2019/12/omni-climate-emergency-newsletter.html

What’s at Stake:  Naming/Labeling and the Year 2019 [8 years ago].   A few years ago the usual reference to a warming world was “global warming” or “climate change.”   Last year “climate catastrophe” or “climate calamity” were gaining prominence.  And now 2019 “climate emergency” claims precedence.   Brenda Looper in her column in the NADG (“Weighty Words,” 12-11-19, 7B) wrote about this rapid evolution of the language used to describe the increase of atmospheric temperature and its dire consequences:        “The Oxford Dictionaries blog notes: ‘The Oxford Word of the Year is a word or expression shown through usage evidence to reflect the ethos, mood or preoccupations of the passing year, and have lasting potential as a term of cultural significance.’ The expression that did that for 2019, it said, was ‘climate emergency.’”  Most of the articles in #1 were published in 2019, but several cite some of the numerous earlier articles.  

OMNI CLIMATE URGENCY, EMERGENCY ANTHOLOGY  #2, October 30, 2024.   https://jamesrichardbennett.blogspot.com/2024/10/omni-climate-urgency-emergency.html

END OMNI CLIMATE URGENCY, EMERGENCY ANTHOLOGY  #3.