Cult of Global Warming Is Losing
Influence
By Michael Barone
Religious faith is a source of
strength in many people's lives. But religious faith when taken too far can
prove ludicrous -- or disastrous.
On Oct. 22, 1844, thousand of
Millerites, having sold all their possessions, climbed to the top of hills in
Upstate New York to await the return of Jesus and the end of the world. They
suffered "the great disappointment" when it didn't happen.
In 1212, or so the legends go,
thousands of Children's Crusaders set off from France and Germany expecting the
sea to part so they could march peaceably and convert Muslims in the Holy Land.
It didn't, and many were shipwrecked or sold into slavery.
In 1898, the cavalrymen of the
Madhi, ruler of Sudan for 13 years, went into the Battle of Omdurman armed with
swords, believing that they were impervious to bullets. They weren't, and they
were mowed down by British Maxim guns.
A similar but more peaceable fate is
befalling believers in what I think can be called the religion of the global
warming alarmists.
They have an unshakeable faith that
manmade carbon emissions will produce a hotter climate, causing multiple
natural disasters. Their insistence that we can be absolutely certain this will
come to pass is based not on science -- which is never fully settled, witness
the recent experiments that may undermine Albert Einstein's theory of
relativity -- but on something very much like religious faith.
All the trappings of religion are
there. Original sin: Mankind is responsible for these prophesied disasters,
especially those slobs who live on suburban cul-de-sacs and drive their SUVs to
strip malls and tacky chain restaurants.
The need for atonement and
repentance: We must impose a carbon tax or cap-and-trade system, which will
increase the cost of everything and stunt economic growth.
Ritual, from the annual Earth Day to
weekly recycling.
Indulgences, like those Martin
Luther railed against: private jet-fliers like Al Gore and sitcom heiress
Laurie David can buy carbon offsets to compensate for their carbon-emitting
sins.
Corporate elitists, like General
Electric's Jeff Immelt, profess to share this faith, just as cynical Venetian
merchants and prim Victorian bankers gave lip service to the religious
enthusiasms of their days. Bad for business not to. And if you're clever, you
can figure out how to make money off it.
Believers in this religion have
flocked to conferences in Rio de Janeiro, Kyoto and Copenhagen, just as
Catholic bishops flocked to councils in Constance, Ferrara and Trent, to codify
dogma and set new rules.
But like the Millerites, the global
warming clergy has preached apocalyptic doom -- and is now facing an
increasingly skeptical public. The idea that we can be so completely certain of
climate change 70 to 90 years hence that we must inflict serious economic
damage on ourselves in the meantime seems increasingly absurd.
If carbon emissions were the only
thing affecting climate, the global-warming alarmists would be right. But it's
obvious that climate is affected by many things, many not yet fully understood,
and implausible that SUVs will affect it more than variations in the enormous
energy produced by the sun.
Skepticism has been increased by the
actions of believers. Passage of the House cap-and-trade bill in June 2009
focused politicians and voters on the costs of global-warming religion. And
disclosure of the Climategate emails in November 2009 showed how the clerisy
was willing to distort evidence and suppress dissenting views in the interest
of propagation of the faith.
We have seen how the United Nations
agency whose authority we are supposed to respect took an item from an
environmental activist group predicting that the Himalayan glaciers would melt
in 2350 and predicted that the melting would take place in 2035. No sensible
society would stake its economic future on the word of folks capable of such an
error.
In recent years, we have seen how
negative to 2 percent growth hurts many, many people, as compared to what
happens with 3 to 7 percent growth. So we're much less willing to adopt
policies that will slow down growth not just for a few years but for the
indefinite future.
Media, university and corporate
elites still profess belief in global warming alarmism, but moves toward
policies limiting carbon emissions have fizzled out, here and abroad. It looks
like we'll dodge the fate of the Millerites, the children's crusaders and the
Mahdi's cavalrymen.
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