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Reality Check From Bali
This Washington Post article conveys in short and sweet style how serious the U.S.’s refusal in Bali to accept emissions caps is.
Europe: frustrated, vowing to boycott Bush’s distracter tactic, the “major economies” meetings he’s hosting on global warming. Brazil—home to the world’s largest intact forest—threatening not to comply with rules that only apply to developing countries.
Most disturbing of all, Americans support carbon emissions caps because they’re the only way of fending off catastrophic climate change.
As Connie Hedegaard, Denmark's minister for climate and energy, put it, the targets don't come from "figures taken at random," she said. Rather, the 25 percent by 2020 "reports very specifically back to what the IPCC tells us."
Compare the sanity of that remark—we're doing what the best scientists tell us we have to—to the childish churlishness of this one, made by James L. Connaughton, chair of the White House Council on Environmental Quality, explaining why the U.S. refuses to do the right thing and accept the caps: "We will lead. The U.S. will lead. But leadership also requires others to fall in line and follow."
Despite Americans' political will, our government is standing in the way of the best documented solution for the greatest problem the world has ever faced.
Comments
I read that George Bush is indifferent to global warming; he just doesn't care. And apparently Bush is focused more on Cheney's interests in the energy industry. Probably both Bush and Cheney will ignore global warming... they don't want to sign the Kyoto Protocol. Environmentalists will be angry at them, but then again much of the American public doesn't care about climate change.
Myself, I can't decide... depends whether global warming disasters will happen soon, or in 20 years or 100 years... who knows...
Everything GWB says or does reminds me of the Steppenwolf song "The Ostrich":
But there's nothing you or I can do
You and I are only two
What's right and wrong is hard to say
Forget about it for today
We'll stick our heads into the sand
And pretend that all is grand
And hope that everything turns out okay.
Posted by: Bill G on 12/14/07 at 6:06 AM Respond
Tnored
The real shame of that conference is that they ignored the really big elephant in the room which is global corporate industrial agriculture.For details on this problem and the solution,see my blog-earthcycle.wordpress.com
Posted by: Huw Williams on 12/28/07 at 12:02 PM Respond
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Posted by: Does George Bush care about global warming? on 12/14/07 at 12:58 AM Respond