The Laudato Si encyclical on climate, sustainability and the environment prepared by and for Pope Francis is often eloquent, always passionate but often encumbered by platitudes, many of them erroneous.
“Man has slapped nature in the face,” and “nature never forgives,” the
pontiff declares. “Never have we so hurt and mistreated our common home as in
the last 200 years.” It isn’t possible to sustain the present level of
consumption in developed countries and wealthier sectors of society. “Each year
thousands of species are being lost,” and “if we destroy creation, it will
destroy us.”
The pope believes climate change is largely manmade and driven by a
capitalist economic system that exploits the poor. Therefore, he says, we must
radically reform the global economy, promote sustainable development and wealth
redistribution, and ensure “intergenerational solidarity” with the poor, who
must be given their “sacred rights” to labor, lodging and land (the Three L’s).
All of this suggests that, for the most part, Pope Francis probably
welcomes statements by his new friends in the United Nations and its climate
and sustainability alliance.
One top Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change official bluntly says
climate policy is no longer about environmental protection; instead, the next
climate summit will negotiate “the distribution of the world’s resources.” UN
Climate Chief Christiana Figueres goes even further. UN bureaucrats, she says,
are undertaking “probably the most difficult task we have ever given ourselves,
which is to intentionally transform the global economic development
model.” [emphasis added]
However, statements by other prominent prophets of planetary demise
hopefully give the pope pause.
Obama science advisor John Holdren and Population Bomb author
Paul Ehrlich, in their Human Ecology book: “We need to de-develop the
UnitedStates” and other developed countries, “to bring our economic system into
line with the realities of ecology and the global resource situation.” We will
then address the “ecologically feasible development of the
underdeveloped countries.” [emphasis added]
Ehrlich again: “Giving society cheap energy is like giving an idiot
child a machine gun.” And most outrageous: The “instant death control” provided
by DDT was “responsible for the drastic lowering of death rates” in poor
countries; so they need to have a “death rate solution” imposed on them.
Radical environmentalism’s death campaigns do not
stop with opposing DDT even as a powerful insect repellant to prevent malaria.
They view humans (other than themselves) as consumers, polluters and “a plague
upon the Earth” – never as creators, innovators or protectors. They oppose
modern fertilizers and biotech foods that feed more people from less land,
using less water. And of course they are viscerally against all forms and uses
of hydrocarbon energy, which yields far more energy per acre than alternatives.
Reflect on all of this a moment. Unelected, unaccountable UN bureaucrats
have given themselves the authority to upend the world economic order
and redistribute its wealth and resources – with no evidence that any
alternative they might have in mind will bring anything but worse poverty,
inequality and death.
Moreover, beyond the dishonest, arrogant and callous attitudes reflected
in these outrageous statements, there are countless basic realities that the
encyclical and alarmist allies sweep under the rug.
We are trying today to feed, clothe, and provide electricity, jobs,
homes, and better health and living standards to six billion more people than
lived on our planet 200 years ago. Back then, reliance on human and animal
muscle, wood and dung fires, windmills and water wheels, and primitive,
backbreaking, dawn-to-dusk farming methods made life nasty, brutish and short
for the vast majority of humans.
As a fascinating short video
by Swedish physician and statistician Hans Rosling illustrates, human life
expectancy and societal wealth has surged dramatically over these past 200
years. None of this would have been possible without the scientific method and
hydrocarbon energy that radical, shortsighted activists in the UN, EPA, Big
Green, Inc. and Vatican now want to put in history’s dustbin.
Over the past three decades, fossil fuels – mostly coal – helped 1.3
billion people get electricity and escape debilitating, often lethal energy and
economic poverty. However, 1.3 billion still do not have electricity. In India
alone, more people than live in the USA still lack electricity; in Sub-Saharan
Africa, 730 million (equal to Europe) still cook and heat with wood, charcoal and
animal dung.
Hundreds of millions get horribly sick and 4-6 million die every year from lung and
intestinal diseases, due to breathing smoke from open fires and not having clean
water, refrigeration and unspoiled food.
Providing energy, food, homes and the Three L’s to middle class and
impoverished families cannot happen without nuclear and hydrocarbon energy and
numerous raw materials. Thankfully, we still have these resources in abundance,
because “our ultimate resource” (our creative intellect) has enabled us to use
“fracking” and other technologies to put Earth’s resources to productive use
serving humanity.
Little solar panels on huts, subsistence and organic farming, and bird-and-bat-butchering
wind turbines have serious cost, reliability and sustainability problems
of their own. If Pope Francis truly wants to help the poor, he cannot rely on
these “alternatives” or on UN and Big Green ruling elite wannabes. Who are they
to decide what is “ecologically feasible,” what living standards people will be
“permitted” to enjoy, or how the world should “more fairly” share greater
scarcity, poverty and energy deprivation?
We are all obligated to help protect our planet and its people – from real
problems, not imaginary ones. Outside the computer modelers’ windows, in The
Real World, we are not running out of energy and raw materials. (We’re just not
allowed to develop and use them.) The only species going extinct have been
birds on islands where humans introduced new predators – and raptors that have
been wiped out by giant wind turbines across habitats in California and other
locations. Nor are we encountering climate chaos.
No category 3-5 hurricane has struck the USA in a record 9-3/4 years. (Is
that blessing due to CO2 and capitalism?) There has been no warming in
19 years, because the sun has gone quiet again. We have not been battered by
droughts more frequent or extreme than what humanity experienced many times
over the millennia, including those that afflicted biblical Egypt, the Mayas
and Anasazi, and Dust Bowl America.
The scientific method brought centuries of planetary and human progress.
It requires that we propose and test hypotheses that explain how nature works.
If experimental evidence supports a hypothesis, we have a new rule that can
guide further health and scientific advances. If the evidence contradicts the
hypothesis, we must devise a new premise – or give up on further progress.
But with climate change, a politicized method has gained supremacy.
Based on ideology, it ignores real world evidence and fiercely defends its
assumptions and proclamations. Laudato Si places the Catholic Church at
risk of surrendering its role as a champion of science and human progress, and
returning to the ignominious persecution of Galileo.
Nor does resorting to sustainable development provide guidance.
Sustainability is largely interchangeable with “dangerous manmade climate
change” as a rallying cry for anti-hydrocarbon, wealth redistribution and
economic transformation policies. It means whatever
particular interests want it to mean and has become yet one more intolerant ideology in
college and government circles.
Climate change and sustainability are critical moral issues.
Denying people access to abundant, reliable, affordable hydrocarbon energy is
not just wrong. It is immoral – and lethal.
It is an unconscionable crime against humanity to implement policies
that pretend to protect the world’s energy-deprived masses from hypothetical
manmade climate and other dangers decades from now – by perpetuating poverty,
malnutrition and disease that kill millions of them tomorrow.
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