Kevin Drum offers a challenge: “Today’s op-ed in the Washington Post by Emily Yoffe is literally so inane I’m speechless. The last sentence, in particular, deserves an award of some kind. Can someone please give it the mockery it so richly deserves?”
Well, mockery isn’t exactly my specialty, but I’m more than happy to point out how very dumb the op-ed is.
Given Kevin’s description, I kind of expected Yoffe to launch into some kind of Inhofe-inspired tirade, relying on ExxonMobil talking points and Crichton-like analysis. As it turns out, for most of the piece, Yoffe doesn’t disagree with warnings about global warming, she just doesn’t want to hear them.
[A]n essential part of the global warming awareness movement is the belief that scaring us to death is the best way to spur massive change. Gore explicitly compares warming to the Nazis of the last century and terrorists of this one.
And a recent New York Times profile of Gore tells that we are to be flooded with “An Inconvenient Truth.” It is going to be shown in schools; book versions for children and young adults and a children’s television show are planned. The global Live Earth concerts scheduled for July 7 are expected to raise millions, going to a three-year public relations effort, headed by Gore, to deluge us with bad news.
All this talk about catastrophic consequences is apparently quite a bummer. It’s got people worried and anxious to help avoid disaster. Yoffe seems to believe this is problematic because, well, the talk is scaring people. And that’s bad because feeling scared is unpleasant. Yoffe seems to prefer a public-education campaign about a pressing environmental crisis that’s more upbeat.
(Quick fact-check: Yoffe is wrong about Gore “explicitly” comparing climate change to the Nazis. Gore compared a number of global challenges that required a massive, coordinated response. WWII was one of these challenges, as is global warming.)
What about that last paragraph that annoyed Kevin? He’s right; it’s a doozy.
In his new book, “The Assault on Reason,” Gore denounces what he sees as today’s politics of fear. Yet his own campaign of mass persuasion — any such campaign — is not amenable to contradiction and uncertainty. It’s about fright and absolutes. But just because something can be plotted on an X and Y axis does not make it the whole truth.
Ouch, that is dumb.
I’m not annoyed by Yoffe’s column so much as I’m curious about what on earth she’s talking about. On the one hand she believes it’s “necessary” to curb “our profligate environmental ways,” but on the other she sees an upside to global warming (she mentions enjoying meals on a patio when it’s usually too cold). She believes scientists, but questions their conclusions (apparently, in part because weather forecasts are routinely mistaken). She wants more proof, but not the kind that’s “plotted on an X and Y axis.”
Someone help me out here. What’s the point of Yoffe’s argument?