This essay is an expansion of the one I published today
in my science blog.
I live and work in Oklahoma, the hotbed of creationism
and climate change denialism. I feel like I am a missionary in a hostile tribe
just because I accept scientific evidence. I am, for the most part, personally reclusive
about my knowledge of evolution and climate change. I, of course, am quite
clear about them when I teach and write, but I seldom engage in discussion
about them with people who disagree. The only neighbors who know my views are
those who have first declared their similar views to me.
I tell everybody I can about botany, the science of
plants. But the reason I seldom speak in person about the sciences of evolution
and global warming is that I will almost certainly experience personal attack
if I do. Today, I joined in with other activists at an information table
outside a farmer’s market to tell people about global warming. This is
something I have not done before and probably will not do again. Most of the
people who went by were supportive, to varying degrees. This is something you
might expect from the visitors to a farmer’s market. But there was one climate
change denialist who decided to subject me to a barrage of lies and tried to
make me feel like I was a force of darkness and repression.
Okay, I started it. A man and his wife and baby were
leaving the farmer’s market. Our information table was not within the market
itself, but in the lawn of a nearby church that had specifically invited us to
be there. I spoke first. I said, “Thank you for coming to the Farmer’s Market.
By doing so, you have helped to reduce your carbon emissions, because you have
bought local produce that has not been trucked across the country for thousands
of miles.” I thought this was a positive thing to say.
But this was when the man decided to launch his attack.
He said that there has been no global warming for the last ten years. I told
him that my own research has clearly demonstrated global warming over the last
twelve years. (I will present some of my data in another essay.) He simply said
that I was lying and had made all of my data up.
But he did not stop there. He said that the government
must have paid me thousands of dollars to do my research, and that I was being
paid to say that global warming was occurring. I told him that I had done my
research entirely for free. I would have told him that I gathered my data about
budburst dates in deciduous trees by simply writing them down almost every day
for two months each of twelve years, something that required no money. But I
didn’t have a chance to do this. He just called me a liar again.
Next he said that Barack Obama was an evil man, a liar,
and a hypocrite because of all the fuel that he burned in Air Force One to go
to Paris to sign the climate agreement. Of course, when Trump uses a lot of jet
fuel to fly to his personal vacation resorts at taxpayer expense, it is just
fine. According to an AP report by Chad Day, published last month,
“Flying Trump to Mar-a-Lago on Air Force One twice cost at least $1.2 million.”
The report continues, "...documents made public Thursday by Judicial Watch are some of the first to put even part of a price tag on Trump's frequent visits to his Palm Beach, Florida, club. The numbers reflect only the costs associated with the president's plane, Air Force One. Not included are expenses for Secret Service protection or support vehicles provided by the Department of Defense, which must be airlifted into place." This is just fine, according to Oklahoma Republicans, but Obama flying to Paris to sign the climate agreement was evil.
Why did the man criticize Obama flying in Air Force one? The key was that the man called Obama a hypocrite. You see, the reasoning seems to go like this. Democrats say that burning unnecessary jet fuel is bad for the climate. Republicans, however, say that they can burn all the jet fuel they want for any reason whatsoever. Therefore, if a Democrat ever burns any jet fuel at all, it is hypocrisy. For Republicans, however, it is not, since they say it is not a problem. This is like a thief saying that it is okay for him to steal money, but not okay for a person who disapproves of theft to do so.
So the only time a denialist will so much as listen to someone who disagrees with him or her is if that person lives in a hovel and is not responsible for any carbon emissions. Well, I don't quite live in a hovel, but I am very frugal in my energy use. I didn't get a chance to tell him this, but if I had, I imagine he would have called me a liar, just as he did regarding my research.
The man's final attack was to say that environmentalists wanted to keep Africans poor and diseased and miserable because we want them to not have any electricity, any at all. This is, of course, not true, but I didn't have a chance to say this. Another person who was with me started to say it, but the man refused to listen to it. We tried to tell him that locally-generated solar and wind energy makes electricity more accessible to rural African villages than would building billion-dollar power-plants, precisely because it would save the expense of thousands of miles of transmission lines from point of production to point of use.
Why did the man criticize Obama flying in Air Force one? The key was that the man called Obama a hypocrite. You see, the reasoning seems to go like this. Democrats say that burning unnecessary jet fuel is bad for the climate. Republicans, however, say that they can burn all the jet fuel they want for any reason whatsoever. Therefore, if a Democrat ever burns any jet fuel at all, it is hypocrisy. For Republicans, however, it is not, since they say it is not a problem. This is like a thief saying that it is okay for him to steal money, but not okay for a person who disapproves of theft to do so.
So the only time a denialist will so much as listen to someone who disagrees with him or her is if that person lives in a hovel and is not responsible for any carbon emissions. Well, I don't quite live in a hovel, but I am very frugal in my energy use. I didn't get a chance to tell him this, but if I had, I imagine he would have called me a liar, just as he did regarding my research.
The man's final attack was to say that environmentalists wanted to keep Africans poor and diseased and miserable because we want them to not have any electricity, any at all. This is, of course, not true, but I didn't have a chance to say this. Another person who was with me started to say it, but the man refused to listen to it. We tried to tell him that locally-generated solar and wind energy makes electricity more accessible to rural African villages than would building billion-dollar power-plants, precisely because it would save the expense of thousands of miles of transmission lines from point of production to point of use.
I did get a last few words in to the wife with the kid.
She told me she came to the market for safe food. I said that, even though we
disagree, she was part of the solution to the climate problem. What she was
doing was good for more reasons than she had known. I think she might have been
inclined to agree with me on that one point—I sensed a distinct lessening of
tension—but I think she did not want her husband to see her agreeing with me
about anything.
There are some evolution and climate change denialists who
are reasonable people, not necessarily in their approach to the information but
at least in their approach to me. There are denialists who will not call me an
evil liar. But they are rare enough that I think I will just stay away from any
personal discussions on these subjects.
I think it is about time for this old missionary to
retire. At some point, it is time to move to some place in which one is not
constantly in fear of personal attack. France looks like a pretty good place,
especially since the new prime minister has specifically invited climate
scientists such as myself to move there. As explained above, if you accept
science in Oklahoma you are subjected to the same kind of verbal attacks as
black people were throughout the South in the pre-civil-rights era. If I had
been black in the 1950’s and France had invited me to come, I would have taken
the invitation very seriously.
The reason I include this essay in a religion blog is
that the denialists, like the creationists, are inspired by religious fervor.
They worship Trump and the Republican Party. Their response to anyone who
disagrees with them about anything (not just these issues but all others) is
the same as a medieval Inquisitor reacting to someone he declared to be a
heretic. To them, creationism and global-warming-denialism are the only essential
parts of Christianity. I really do feel
like a missionary who is about to be beheaded. I feel like a black man about to be lynched in the early twentieth
century. I need to live in a secular society, and soon.
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