We Don't Need a Green New Deal (GND) ?SOURCE Responding to the RIGHT - Nathan J. Robinson
GND proponents argue that revenue could be generated to cover this by
Under a Keynesian analysis, the issue that the federal government would need to address in funding the GND is:-
The Anti-GND ArgumentsThe only thing certain about CO2 is that it's necessary for life on Earth, "
lt's plant food".
-Marc Morano, Green Fraud Progressives love to prophesize doom about the environment. The ResponseThere are a number of different conservative claims made on Climate. Few people fall into this category anymore. These books are insidious because they appear credible and insist they accept the consensus among climate scientists. But a closer look reveals that in order to support their claim, they have to twist the facts in ways that can easily fool non-experts. Let us look at an example.When the horrific 2019 wildfires occurred in California, many on the left
mentioned climate change as a contributing factor.
Carlson and Shellenberger were just lying.
A recent paper from seven climate scientists was called UCLAs Daniel Swain says there's been a
Then here's Jennifer Balch, director of the Earth Lab at the university of Colorado Boulder, on the connection between that heat and the fires:
Sometimes, then, conservatives just pretend that expert opinion says something other than what it actually says.But sometimes the distortions are a little more clever: But by cherry-picking only small pieces of reality,one can make it seem as if things are the opposite of what they really are.
But I don't feel the need to spend too much time here de-bunking right-wing
dishonesty on the fundamentals of climate change,
10 Trump may see it as a "Chinese hoax" 13 but thirteen of Trump's own administrative agencies put out a major report during his presidency discussing the urgency of climate action.
|
Always Check Their SourcesBen Shapiro, in a passage displaying
his signature combination of
This is one of those examples of a paragraph where so much that is wrong is said so quickly that setting it all straight can take an agonizingly long time:
|
We then get to the position of those who accept the reality of climate
change,
but do not believe that a Green New Deal is needed in order to deal with it.
Take the American Enterprise Institute's
report on the Green New Deal, which warns of the following:
The GND at its core is the substitution of central planning in place of market forces for resource allocation,
in the US energy and transportation sectors narrowly and in the broad industrial,
business, and housing sectors writ large. . .While the effect of the inexorable increase in government authoritarianism resulting from the GND will be difficult to measure, its costs will be very real.
Given the tragic record of central planning outcomes worldwide over the last century, the GND should be rejected. 20
Here we see a classic case of the conservative "speculative story" about
negative unintended consequences.
We have a few tropes here, such as the invocation of
planning as inherently scary,
and intimations that Stalinist tyranny will
result from too much state investment in renewable energy.
It is a large-scale plan to address climate change and social injustice that
has been proposed by progressives as a sensible way to tackle some of the most
crucial challenges currently facing the country and the world.
Its clearest articulation currently exists in the form of a congressional
resolution whose primary sponsors are
Rep. Alexandria Ocasio Cortez and
Sen. Ed Markey.
That resolution Iays out a very general argument:
mass migration by refugees, | |
increasing wildfires, | |
deadly heat waves, | |
colossal damage to the economy, and | |
the destruction of the world's coral reefs. |
stagnant wages, | |
low economic mobility, | |
an inadequately resourced public sector, and | |
colossal income inequality. |
The GND proposes to make sure that our climate solutions are designed so
that they will simultaneously address these other social problems.
It calls this a "fair and just transition", meaning that the transition to
renewable energy will need to be orchestrated in a way that ensures it is fair
to the least well-off.
This is an important aspect of the GND, because it would be very easy for
solutions to climate change to be economically unfair. For instance, if we
simply impose a high gasoline tax,
in the recognition that driving a car has a cost to the climate that we wish to
discourage,
we may well reduce emissions, but we will do so in a way that hurts low-wage
workers who have to drive to work.
This is deeply unfair, especially because we know that
oil and gas companies have reaped
immense windfall profits from the sale of a destructive product.
They manipulated public understanding by casting doubt
on the science of climate change in order to continue
to make vast sums of money.
If the costs of trying to undo this damage are borne by the least
wealthy,
then repairing an environmental problem is creating a new kind of economic
injustice that will make people angry.
It will also make them less supportive of efforts to mitigate climate
change,
as we saw in the case of the "yellow vests"
protests in France, which objected in part to
rising fuel costs. 21
This is important to understand:
the GND framework is often derided as a "left-wing wish list" because it
includes ideas,
like a federal job guarantee, that do not look climate-related.
But an important part of the theory behind the GND is that
addressing people's economic needs has to happen at the same time as addressing
climate policy;
otherwise, they are unlikely to get on board with climate policy.
For instance, if there is new federal funding for retrofitting a school building
to be environmentally sustainable,
but kids are still coming to school hungry, both parents and teachers might find
climate policy to be an absurd and infuriating priority.
It aims to give people
clean air and water, | |
climate and community resiliency, | |
healthy food, | |
access to nature, and | |
a sustainable environment |
while
creating millions of good, high-wage jobs and | |
ensure prosperity and economic security for all people of the United States |
It will do so through new government spending on:
zero-emission vehicle infrastructure and manufacturing, | |||||
clean, affordable, and accessible public transit, and high-speed rail, | |||||
land preservation and afforestation | |||||
cleaning up existing hazardous waste and abandoned sites, | |||||
ensuring economic development and sustainability on those sites | |||||
meeting 100 percent of the power demand
in the United States through clean, renewable, and zero-emission energy
sources, including by
| |||||
spurring massive growth in clean manufacturing in the United States and | |||||
removing pollution and greenhouse gas emissions from manufacturing and industry as much as is technologically feasible", |
It would involve funding:
renewable manufacturing and power production, | |
retrofitting America's buildings to be sustainable, | |
building the "smart grid", | |
overhauling transportation and agriculture, | |
planting trees, and | |
restoring the ecosystem. |
are achieved, in part, by making sure that the jobs
created through these initiatives will be high-quality, well-paying
union jobs. The GND is meant, in part, to address the fairness problem facing
those who currently work in the fossil fuel industry and who face the prospect
of losing their livelihoods.
Realizing that coal miners do not deserve to
suffer through the transition,
the GND emphasizes the importance of treating the energy transition as a jobs
program.
This aspect of the GND has been derided by Bill Gates as communistic,
22
but it means that people will see a real material benefit from climate
policy,
and thus will be more likely to get on board with something that they otherwise
might feel would only affect future generations.
23
GND proposals are easy to caricature, in part because they are deliberately sketchy.
When I talked to GND policy architect Rhiana Gunn-Wright, she told me that the specific programs that would be funded by the plan are intentionally left slightly vague because the GND needs to be developed through a democratic process:
"I love a detail. I have not found a detail yet that I do not love.
I talk about service delivery and public goods way more than anyone should. . . .
But I m actually glad, right now, that we aren't talking about prescriptive policy details, because right now we have to get consensus around these goals, and we have to actually listen.This is going to be such a big transformation,
and the GND, even in resolution form -- it's an economy-wide transition,
so everyone is going to be affected, so we actually have to take the time to talk to people,
to listen to different groups, to hear the debates, to try to build consensus, and then move forward to try to figure out prescriptive policy details from then. . . .I think it actually shows that we're being more judicious than less judicious because racing to have details right now; that's about nothing but impressing the press.
So why not just take the time, talk to people, try to get folks on board, and have a truly participatory policy design process? " 24
This means that climate policy should not be put forth in a completed form by
elite policy wonks who have gotten together and decided what is best for the
country and asked us to give it an up or down vote.
Instead, it should be a statement of what the goals we are trying to
achieve are, and then there should be an inclusive process to decide how exactly
they are best achieved.
What we need right now is a consensus around the values and targets.
A city, for instance, should not be told
how it is going to achieve zero-emissions public transit;
it should come up with a plan and the federal government should support
it.
This democratic aspect of the GND's development means it is quite the
opposite of the conservative caricature,
which treats it as a plan by centralized bureaucrats to seek power.
In fact, the whole reason that the plan has yet to be fully fleshed out is that
its designers do not want centralized bureaucrats to have too much control and
want to emphasize the importance of local participation in the plan.
The GND is not opaque or arcane or a sinister attempt to seize power.
It is grounded in a simple recognition that we face, as a country, a series of
major problems, many of which are linked together and can be addressed together.
It asks us to make a commitment to a series of goals.
It is interesting that Marc Morano in Green Fraud
asks "what criteria" will be used to decide when enough
is enough.
The criteria are actually laid out quite explicitly:
We are trying to
power the U.S. with 100 percent renewable energy and | |
make sure that everyone in the country is paid a living wage and has a high standard of living' |
When the country is powered by renewables and its people are taken care of, the need for the GND ceases.
What we are committing to is:
This should be uncontroversial.
Debates over what to do should take place within the context of broad agreement
that a GND should and will happen.
Noam Chomsky and Robert Pollin - Climate Crisis and the Global Green New Deal: The Political Economy of Saving the Planet | |
Naomi Klein-On Fire: The (Burning) Case for a Green New Deal | |
Ann Pettifor-.The Case for the Green New Deal | |
Kate Aronoff et al.-, A Planet to Win: Why We Need a Green New Deal | |
Kate Aronoff - Overheated: How Capitalism Broke the Planet-And How We Fight Back | |
Varshini Prakash and Guido Girgenti (eds.) - Winning the Green New Deal: Why We Must, How We Can | |
Jeremy Rifkin - The Green New Deal: Why the Fossil Fuel Civilization Will Collapse by 2028, and the Bald Economic Plan to Save Life on Earth | |
Aviva Chomsky- Is Science Enough: Forty Critical Questions About Climate Justice | |
Henry Shue -- The Pivotal Generation: Why We Have a Moral Responsibility to Slow Climate Change Right Now | |
George Monbiot -- Heat: How to Stop the Planet From Burning | |
Bill McKibben --- Fight Global Warming Now: The Handbook for Taking Action in Your Community |
l. Shellenberger and Lomborg do not self-identify, as political conservatives (in fact, they identify as environmentalists), but their books are direct attacks on left-wing climate politics.
2. Michael Shellenberger (@ShellenbergerMD), "2M acres of California have burned
so far this year", Twitter, Sept. 8, 2020, 4:07 p.m.,
https://twitter.com/shellenbergermd/status/1303424670398439424 .
3. A. P. Williarns, et al. "Observed impacts of anthropogenic climate change on
wildfire in Californial", Earths' Future (2019), pp. 892-910.
4. Michaei Goss et al, "Climate Change Is increasing the Likelihood of Extreme
Autumn Wildfire Conditions across California," Environmental Research Letters
15, no. 9 (2020),
https://iopscience.iop.org/article/10.1088/1748-9326/ab83a7 .
5. Anne C. Mulkern, "Climate Change Has Doubled Riskiest Fire Day"s in
California," Screztlic American, April 3, 2020,
https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/climate-change-has-doubled-riskiest-fire-days-in-california
.
6. James Temple, "Yes, Climate Change Is Almost Certainly Fueling Californiat
Massive Fires," MIT Technology Reuiew, Ang. 20, 2020,
https://www.technologyreview.com/2020/08/20/1007478/california-wildfires-climate-change-heatwaves
/.
7. Darryl Fears et al., "Heat Is Turbocharging Fires, Drought and Tropical
Storms This Summer", Washington Posr, Aug. 21, 2020,
https://www.washingtonpost.com/climate-environment/2020/08/21/heat-climate-change-weather
.
8. This is precisely what was done by "skeptical environmentalist" Bjorn Lomborg,
in
False Alarm: How Climate Change Panic Costs Us Trillions, Hurts the Poor and
Fails to Fix the
Planet.
See Bob Ward, "A Closer Examination of the Fantastical
Numbers" in Bjorn Lomborg's New Book. Grantham Research Institute on
Climate Change and the Environment, Aug. 10, 2020,
https://www.lse.ac.uk/grantharninstitute/news/a-closer-examination-of-the-fantastical-numbers-in-bjorn-lomborgs-new-book
. 404 page gone
Lomborg has long been a favorite on the right,
because while he is not a climate change denier, he insists that panic over
climate change is unwarranted and the costs of addressing it in the way
progressives want are too high to be worth it.
As this review shows, Lomborg does this by underestimating the damage that
climate catastrophes will cause
(he thinks it will be a small, manageable hit to GDP) and exaggerating the
costs of transitioning to renewable energy.
Book publishers do not fact-check, and Lomborg is a very skilled manipulator
whose deceptions can be difficult to spot, so he has become one of the most
insidiously harmful pundits on the issue.
The eminent biologist E. O. Wilson lamented Lomborg's presence in the discourse
thusly:
"we will always have contrarians like Lomborg whose
sallies are characterized by willful ignorance, selective quotations, disregard
for communication with genuine experts, and destructive campaigning to attract
the attention of the media rather than scientists"
E. O. Wilson, "On Bjorn Lomborg and Extinctionl' Grist, Dec. 12, 200I,
https://grist.org/article/point .
9. Dinesh D'Souza (@DineshDSouza),
"Hahaha! It's 2020 and the glaciers are still here. If all of this is
'settled science' how come it can't make a single valid prediction?"
Twitter, Jan.8,2020,11:23 p.m.,
https://twitter.com/DineshDSouza/status/1215126884494778373
10. If you would like to see the most common forms of bullshit debunked, this
video is helpful:
"13 Misconceptions about Global Warming" posted by
Veritasium, Sept" 22,2014'
YouTube video,
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OWXoRSIxyIU.
11. Mark Lynas et a1., "Greater Than 99% Consensus on Human Caused Climate
Change in
the Peer-Reviewed Scientific Literature" Environmental Research Letters 16,
no.ll (2021)
https://iopscience.iop.org/article/10.1088/1748-9326/ac2966 .
12. Mark R. Lein, American Marxlsrn (New York: Threshold Editions,20Zl), p.172.
13. Jeremy Schulman, "Every Insane Thing Donald Trump Has
Said about Global Warming"
Mother lones, Dec. 12, 2018,
https://www.motherjones.com/environment/2016/12/trump-climate-timeline .
14. I am quoting here from the following article summarizing the report, not the
report itself.
Brady Dennis and Chris Mooney,
"Major Trump Administration Climate Report Says Damage Is 'Intensifying
Across the Country' ",
Washington Post,Nov.23,2018,
https://www.washingtonpost.com/energy-environment/2018/11/23/major-trump-administration-climate-report-says-damages-are-intensifying-across-country
.
15. '"Our Climate Target" Shell,
https://www.shell.com/energy-and-innovation/the-energy-future/our-climate-target
;
"BP Sets Ambition for Ne'i Zero by 2050,
Fundmentally
Changing Organisation to Deliveri' BP, Feb. i2, 2020,
https://www.bp.com/en/global/corporate/news-and-insights/press-releases/bernard-looney-announces-new-ambition-for-bp.html
.
ExxonMobil, too, has a portion of its
website devoted to convincing the public that it cares about climate change, as
well as a long series of denials that it covered up its knowledge of climate
change and misled the public.
(which it absolutely 100 percent did).
See Shannon Hall, "Exxon Knew about Climate
Change Almost 40 Years Ago," Scientific American, act. 26, 2015,
https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/exxon-knew-about-climate-change-almost-40-years-ago
.)
16. Ben Shapiro, Bullies: How the Left's culture of
Fear and Intimidation silences Americans
(New York: Threshold Editions, 2013), p. 204.
17. lames P. Kossir et a1., "Global Increase in Major Tropical Cyclone
Exceedance Probability over the Past Four Decades"
Proceedings of the National Academy of sciences of the United States l!7,
no.22 (June 2020), pp. 1 1975- 1 1980,
https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1920849117 '
18. Dana Nuccitelli,
"Why the Mail on Sunday Was Wrong to Claim Global Warming Has Stopped,"
The Guardian, Oct. 16,2A12,
https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2012/oct/16/daily-mail-global-warming-stopped-wrong
19.For a rebuttal to Svensmark, see "Henrik Svensmark," OSS,
http://ossfoundation.org/projects/environment/global-warming/myths/henrik-svensmark
'
20. Benjamin Zycher,
"The Green New Deal: Economics and Policy Analysis (One Pager)"
American Enterprise Institute (2019).
https://www.aei.org/wp-content/uploads/2019/03/Green_New_Deal_One-Pager_Zycher.pdf
2l. Adrian Foong,
"Of Yellow Vests and Green Policies"
Climate Diplomacy, April 18, 2019,
https://climate-diplomacy.org/magazine/cooperation/yellow-vests-and-green-policies
22. Specifically, Gates told
Wired'. "I'm enough of a centrist to look at the
Green New Deal and say, what world do you people live in that you're going to
give everyone a job, and you stuck that in a climate bill? You must not be
serious about climate. You must be singing the theme song of the Internationale
and reading Marx".
Bill Gates, "Bill Gates Is Upbeat on Climate, Capitalism, and Even
Politics," interview by Steven Levy, Wired, March
18, 2021,
https://www.wired.com/story/bill-gates-is-upbeat-on-climate-capitalism-and-even-politics
Gates does not understand the basic theory of why it's important to make sure
climate policies are
designed to address people's economic concerns as well so that there will be
mass support for
climate policy. Because he is a technocrat, Gates prefers to focus narrowly on
technological
solutions for climate change and shows little understanding of the political
realities of solving
the problem. For example, in the same interview, he says that he believes
Republicans should
be in power sometimes, because it is important not to have one party always in
charge. But
he does not consider the implications of Republican rule, namely that anyy
further governance by Republicans forecloses the possibility of doing anything
about climate catastrophe.
To want Republicans in charge is to want climate change to go unaddressed.
Gates appears to see the Green New Deal and Republican climate denialisrn as
equally pernicious, which they
are not. Gates appears to be advocating something sensible -- bipartisanship --
but is really advocating something inane -- the preclusion of meaningful climate
action.
For a longer critique of Gates in particular, see Nathan J. Robinson and Rob
Larson,
"Humanity Does Not Need Bill Gatesl' Current Affairs, May 4,2A21,
https://www.currentaffairs.org/2021/05/humanity-does-not-need-bill-gates .
23. Rhiana Gunn-Wright has given a clear and persuasive answer to the
question of
why it is necessary to include more than just explicit climate policy in the
Green New Deal:
" I [keep] seeing a lot of these arguments about how this is too big because it includes inequity,
because we're trying to deal with justice, it should just focus on climate,
why doesn't it just focus on climate, so on and so forth.
And I think there's a few reasons for that.
- The first one is that the two are intertwined. We know that the folks who are the most at risk of basically living through the worst effects of climate change are people of color especially low-income people of color. . . .
So an example of that would be Detroit, which has shed a lot of its population,
and now the residents who are left don't have as much money, are stuck trying to pay for the cost of this big, aging system.
And you could see something like this happening in say, a coastal community, where as climate change gets worse, the people who can afford to move will move, and the people that will be left there are people who can't afford to move. . . .
So the cause could be climate change, but it's going to appear as a municipal finance problem. It's going to appear as a city going bankrupt, because their tax base is eroding.
And then you add on top of that, they're going to have to adapt to the effects of climate change, and this goes across the whole nation, with the heavier storms.
So, for instance, imagine a city like Detroit, that now desperately needs to make updates to Its stormwater system so that it can handle these heavy rains.
And so, to me and everyone else who is working on the GND, why not address those together?
Because in fact, that is a climate issue, and if you do have things like Medicare for All,
where you're unlinking employment from health insurance,
if you are having a jobs guarantee program, that means that people can be mobile.
That means that people who are stuck in that community can now move to places where we need them to move, in order for them to do certain types of work.
Or, they can stay, and still be earning a living wage, and have that money going back into their communities, and into their tax coffers, so that places have a better chance of actually being able to afford the adaptations that they need, and to support themselves in the midst of the sort of changing climate.
That's one of the reasons.
- Another is that people don't experience things as climate change, right?
They experience them as economic loss;
of a job, | |
of a home, | |
of savings. |
So we need to also be able to communicate what the transition will mean
to them, and the benefits for them of transitioning to a green economy,
and similarly, personal terms, in terms of jobs, in terms of equity, in
terms of reinvestment in their community,
because right now, it's kind of separated.
People understand that climate change will cost them something,
and that a transition away from fossil fuels, or whatever else, will
change the way that they live,
but then, we'll communicate about the benefits in a very national way, or
a global way.
We talk about emissions going down, we talk about us being able to
keep warming at 1.5 degrees Celsius.
But that's not telling anybody what they actually stand to gain for
themselves as we transition.
So I think it's also a political move, in the sense that for people to
really act on climate change, or to feel empowered to do it,
we also have to give them a vision of what their
lives will look like after this transition, which we have to
communicate in economic terms".
Rhiana Gunn-Wright, "Rhiana Gunn-Wright on Insurgent Left Policy-Making," interview by Nathan i. Robinson, Current Afairs, ]une 5, 2020, https://www.currentaffairs.org/2020/06/rhiana-gunn-wright-on-insurgent-left-policy-making .
24. Ibid.