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19 votes
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Hidden water reserve twice the size of Loch Ness discovered in drought-stricken Sicily
10 votes -
Impacts Project
8 votes -
‘Morally, nobody’s against it’: Brazil’s radical plan to tax global super-rich to tackle climate crisis
61 votes -
Citing climate change, a federal court in Brazil halts rainforest highway paving
20 votes -
Climate hero or villain? As it rapidly adopts clean technologies while drilling furiously for oil and gas, Norway is a paradox.
11 votes -
Monday breaks the record for the hottest day ever on Earth
52 votes -
What it's like to live in a Californian tourist attraction being swallowed by the sea
17 votes -
With CO2 levels rising, world’s drylands are turning green
9 votes -
Hurricane Beryl setting alarming records
25 votes -
New NOAA heat severity classification system for heat-related impacts on people (similar to hurricanes)
24 votes -
The US Department of Agriculture’s gardening zones shifted. This map shows you what’s changed in vivid detail.
32 votes -
Denmark will introduce a levy on farm emissions in what is set to be one of the world's first carbon taxes on agriculture
26 votes -
Russia’s war with Ukraine accelerating global climate emergency, report shows
13 votes -
Nearly half of journalists covering climate crisis globally received threats for their work
52 votes -
Research on Earth’s raging fever of 2023-24 is picking up
9 votes -
Giant viruses discovered on Greenland ice sheet could reduce ice melt by feeding on the snow algae which diminish ability of ice to reflect the sun
10 votes -
Deaths mount and water rationed as India faces record heat
43 votes -
Panama prepares to evacuate first island in face of rising sea levels
37 votes -
Carbon pricing works, meta-review finds
17 votes -
Alaskan rivers are turning orange
14 votes -
Fast-rising seas could swamp septic systems in parts of the American South
7 votes -
EU's Green Deal improved its climate performance: a 1.5°C pathway is close
17 votes -
New GPS-based method can measure daily ice loss in Greenland
6 votes -
Landmark study definitively shows that conservation actions are effective at halting and reversing biodiversity loss
17 votes -
New rules to overhaul US electric grids could boost wind and solar power
9 votes -
At least 147 dead in monumental flood in Brazil. 127 missing.
25 votes -
‘Hopeless and broken’: why the world’s top climate scientists are in despair
63 votes -
Powering homes with PVT energy, Stirling engines, battery storage
5 votes -
A big new facility built to take carbon dioxide out of the atmosphere opened up in Iceland. It's a stepping stone to bigger plans in the US.
30 votes -
New Environmental Protection Agency regulation requires coal plants in the US to reduce 90 percent of their greenhouse pollution by 2039
33 votes -
America’s wind power production drops for the first time in twenty-five years
13 votes -
Humans might need to re-engineer the climate
16 votes -
Earth Day 2024 megathread
It's Earth day again, and we haven't had a post about it yet in ~enviro. Let's use this space to collect and discuss news articles or other postings that are relevant today.
17 votes -
Farmers reduce methane emissions by changing how they grow rice in Vietnam
14 votes -
Startups want to geoengineer a cooler planet. With few rules, experts see big risks.
15 votes -
Two years to save the planet, says UN climate chief
53 votes -
Is climate change driving the global rise in populism? If so ... how? If not ... what is?
Preamble ... this is another rambling, jumbled soliloquy that may or may not make any actual points ... or, you know, sense. "Climate Change is causing the rise in populism". That is a theory I...
Preamble ... this is another rambling, jumbled soliloquy that may or may not make any actual points ... or, you know, sense.
"Climate Change is causing the rise in populism".
That is a theory I have entertained for many years -- going back to before the 2016 US Presidential election. And--confirmation bias being what it is--since I believe the theory, I keep seeing anecdotal evidence all over the place connecting the two.
But, thinking about it this morning, looking at it logically ... I still think there is probably a connection, but I'm not really sure. It may well just be a coincidence of timing. And even if there is a connection, I'm just not quite sure what it is. If it is true ... why? What is the actual connection?
So ... why do countries keep electing populist "Trump-like" leaders?
That's already a hard question to answer clearly, without quickly descending into personal attacks and ad hominems and such.
Plus, of course, generalization is problematic ... we're talking about different countries, different cultures, different histories driving each vote. It's not all the same. And yet, over and over again, election after election, it sure looks the same.
I think the main reason is a tribal "fear of invaders" reaction, mostly against the rise of immigration, particularly immigration from (to paraphrase Trump) "the shit-hole countries". Maybe it's an even more basic "fear of change" reaction. But I definitely think, in the US, the rise of Trump was a direct result of the illegal immigration issue -- not exclusively, but that was a big piece of the puzzle. In particular, Trump equating Muslims with terrorists, and Mexican immigrants with criminals, etc.
Here in the EU, immigration -- particularly the 2015 refugee crisis caused by the wars in the Middle East -- was probably the top reason for Brexit, as has been most of the populist surge over here since then. One country after another here keeps electing right-wing leadership based on the "we'll keep out the dirty immigrants" campaign promises. Hungary, Italy, Sweden, Finland, the Netherlands, Poland, the list just keeps going. I live in Germany these days, and I gotta tell you, there is nothing scarier than seeing a huge surge in popularity in the German far-right.
The other top reason that seems to be driving it is some kind of sense of nationalistic self-determination. People feeling like their country--their home--is being changed by Outside Forces, and trying to lock it down, trying to find a way back to the good old days when the white people ran things and the brown people cooked and cleaned for them.
In Hungary, Orban routinely gets massive support with his constant rants about "Brussels" (meaning the EU) trying to force their gay liberal anti-Christian agenda down the throats of decent God-fearing Hungarians, and I see variations of that theme in most of the populist movements.
Right now, I want to say the populist trend is a response to (or rather, a denial of) the consequences of Colonialism and resource depletion. I think (again, over-simplified), people here in the Industrial Western World do not want to hear that the problems in the rest of the world are our fault, and that we have a responsibility to the people there, to try to help address some of the problems we've helped cause ... and instead, people are electing leaders who tell them the rest of the world is going to hell but it's not their fault and if they just lock down their borders, everything will stay "nice" in their country.
Something like that, anyway.
Okay ... so, resource depletion and a backlash against the consequences of Colonialism.
Does that seem like a fair and reasonable generalization of what is driving the rise in populism?
Because none of that is really connected to Climate Change. Sure, it depends on "which" resources we're talking about, but even in a magical hypothetical world where burning fossil fuels doesn't cause the planet to heat up ... wouldn't we still be seeing just about the same results from the Colonialism-and-resource-depletion issues?
But then again, at a global level, everything is pretty much connected to everything else. I feel like, coming at it from that angle, I could make a fairly good argument that Climate Change and resource depletion are pretty closely related, regardless of which resources you're talking about.
Oh yeah ... one more wrinkle. I'm primarily talking about populism in the US, Canada, UK, EU. I actually know a lot less about the situations in other regions. Asia. Latin America. Bolsonaro. Millei. I know there are others, but names elude me at the moment, and I don't have an understanding of why they are getting elected. Are they part of this trend? Do they blow a hole in my logic? IDK.
tl;dr
Okay ... I guess that's my new thesis -- populism is primarily being driven by a denial of the consequences of Colonialism and resource depletion ... which may or may not be closely related to Climate Change itself; I'm still just not sure.
Or, more broadly, more Climate-Change-inclusive -- populism is about people seeing that the world is dying, and electing leaders who A) tell them it's not their fault, and B) promise to save their country, even as the rest of the world burns.
Thoughts?
21 votes -
Is collapse coming for us?
7 votes -
The true cost of offshore wind (and its crisis): what can we learn?
6 votes -
Natural gas is scamming America
25 votes -
They grow your berries and peaches, but often lack one item: insurance
9 votes -
Joe Biden administration commits $6B to cut US emissions from high-carbon industries
19 votes -
Joe Biden administration announces rules aimed at expanding US electric vehicles
22 votes -
Potty trained cows are no joke for the climate (2021)
21 votes -
A startling rise in sea-surface temperatures suggests that we may not understand how fast the climate is changing
50 votes -
Melt rate of Greenland ice sheet can predict summer weather in Europe – location, extent and strength of recent freshwater events suggest unusually warm and dry summer
14 votes -
European Commission will open office in Greenland, made strategically important by rare resources and melting ice
7 votes -
Hydropower can be an environmental and human disaster – but do the risks have to be so big?
10 votes -
Analysis: Donald Trump election win could add 4bn tonnes to US emissions by 2030
11 votes