āI Said Why? They Said They Didnāt Knowā
Let history record that on Wednesday, September 6th, 2017, 14 days after climate change-fueled Hurricane Harvey made landfall in Texas and 4 days before Hurricane Irma hit southern Florida, the climate-denying President of the United States Donald Trump went to North Dakota to deliver a ātax reformā speech before hundreds of workers and managers at a major oil refinery. The president made comments so senseless and stupid that one must read them twice to believe they were uttered:
āIā¦want to tell the people of North Dakota and the Western states who are feeling the pain of the devastating drought that we are with you 100 percent ā 100 percent. Ā (Applause.) Ā And Iāve been in close touch, numerous times, with our Secretary of Agriculture, who is doing a fantastic job, Sonny Perdue, who has been working with your governor and your delegation to help provide relief. Ā And weāre doing everything we can, but you have a pretty serious drought. Ā I just said to the governor, I didnāt know you had droughts this far north. Ā Guess what? Ā You have them. Ā But weāre working hard on it and itāll disappear. Ā It will all go away.ā
Then Trump got into the real eco-cidal meat of the matter ā the de-regulation of energy and the lifting of restrictions on fossil fuel extraction and burning:
āWeāre getting rid of one job-killing regulation after another. Ā Weāve lifted the restrictions on shale oil. Ā Weāve lifted those restrictions on energy of all types. Ā Weāre putting our miners back to work. Ā Weāve cancelled restrictions on oil and natural gas. Ā Weāve ended the EPA intrusion into your jobs and into your lives. Ā (Applause.) Ā And weāre refocusing the EPA on its core mission: Ā clean air and clean water. Ā (Applause.). In order to protect American industry and workers, we withdrew the United States from the job-killing Paris Climate Accord. Ā Job killer. Ā People have no ideaā¦And right here in North Dakota, the Dakota Access Pipeline (DAPL) is finally open for business. Ā (Applause.) Ā Now, what other politician, if elected President, would have done that one? Ā They would have stayed so far away. Ā And I did it immediatelyā¦It was the right thing to do. Ā And that is flowing now beautifully. Ā So it was the right thing to do. Ā (Applause.)ā
āā¦We opened it despite so many people that were on the other side calling and asking for this not to happen: Ā Please, we donāt want it to happen. Ā I said, why? Ā They didnāt know. Ā There was no ā they just didnāt want it to happenā¦So I did that. Ā I also did Keystone. Ā You know about Keystone. Ā (Applause.) Ā Another other one, big one ā big. Ā First couple of days in office, those two ā 48,000 jobs. ā
Where to begin in gaging the absurdity of the presidentās words in North Dakota?Ā Weāre āworking hardā on the drought and āit will disappearā? Seriously?
His militantly anti-environmental EPA was working for āclean air and water.ā For real? Ā The truth was precisely the opposite.
Job-creation?Ā Renewable energy would generate far more and better paying positions ā jobs that would save livable ecology rather than destroy it (and thereās no jobs on a dead planet).
The really mind-blowing statement for me was Trumpās assertion that the people who fought the DAPL ā the tens of thousands who camped and protested in Standing Rock, the pipeline resisters (I was one of them) across Iowa ā ādidnāt know whyā they opposed the pipeline.
What was someone supposed to say in response to something that soul-numbingly idiotic? Anti-DAPL activists spoke loudly and clearly about the reasons for their opposition: defense of tribal lands, water-protection, and climate sanity.
Trumpās bizarre Bismarck address included this creepy little daddy-daughter interlude:
Donald Trump: āAnd, by the way, Ivanka Trump ā everybody loves Ivanka. Ā (Applause.) Ā Come up, honey. Ā Should I bring Ivanka up? Ā (Applause.) Ā Come up. Ā Sometimes theyāll say, āYou know, he canāt be that bad a guy. Ā Look at Ivanka.ā Ā (Laughter.)Ā ā¦Now, come on up, honey. Ā Sheās so good. Ā She wanted to make the trip. Ā She said, āDad, can I go with you?ā Ā She actually said, āDaddy, can I go with you?ā Ā I like that, right? Ā āDaddy, can I go with you?ā Ā I said, āyes, you can.ā āWhere you going?ā Ā āNorth Dakotaā. Ā Said, āoh, I like North Dakota.ā Ā Hi, honey. Ā (Applause.) Ā Say something, baby.
Ivanka Trump: āHi, North Dakota. Ā (Applause.) Ā We love this state, so itās always a pleasure to be back here. Ā And you treated us very, very well in November and have continued to, so we like sharing the love back. Ā Thank you. Ā (Applause.)ā
Donald Trump. āThank you, honey. Ā Thanks, baby. Ā Come. Ā (Applause.)ā
You canāt make stuff like this up.Ā (In case you think this is a satire and that I am making Trumpās comments up, read his Bismarck speech here).
Missing: The Biggest Story of Our or Any Time
Michael Wolffās instant bestseller Fire and Fire: Inside the Trump White House is chock full of disturbing quotes from ā and alarming reflections on ā the malignant orange beast who fouls the White House and makes a laughingstock out of the U.S. Wolff even replicates in its entirety of theĀ mind-bogglingly moronic, delusional, and disjointed āspeechā that the Sick Puppy-in-Chief gave at the CIAās headquarters on the first day of his presidency ā the one where the new president blustered that āwe should have kept [Iraqās] oilā and that āmaybe youāll have another chance.ā Reading this weird rant in its entirety is a disturbing experience.Ā Itās enough to make you cringe (as did most of the CIA agents and managers who heard it) again at the āholy shit!ā realization that a man stupid enough to say such things sits in the worldās most powerful job. āIn the seconds after [Trumpās CIA monologue] finished,ā Wolff notes, āyou could hear a pin drop.ā
The equally weird Bismarck oration did not make it into Fire and Fury.Ā Neither does anything else relating to climate, fossil fuels, and the environment.
That is quite an omission, since anthropogenic ā really capitalogenic ā climate change (CCC) has clearly emerged as the biggest issue of our or any other time in human history and Donald Trump and the Republican Party have shown themselves to be militantly dedicated to the Greenhouse Gassing-to-death of life on Earth ā a crime that promises to surpass all others in the ruling classesā long rap sheet.Ā Even more than how Trump ups the risk of nuclear war and emboldens the proto-fascist right, this has always been the gravest danger posed by Agent Orange ā his threat to advance Big Carbonās mad determination to trump livable ecology once and for all.
I really shouldnāt single out Wolff.Ā He is hardly alone in this deletion.Ā Itās been chilling to watch the entire corporate U.S. media fail to cover the climate question in any serious or sustained way under Trump ā this even as epic storms, fires, floods, and landslides rooted in CCC ravage the nation and world, even as the planet speeds to 500 carbon parts-per-million by 2050 (if not sooner), and even while scientists report the ever-more near-term peril of true, species-threatening catastrophe. The news cycle has been dominated by a seemingly endless series of outrageous Trump Tweets and statements, by a constant White House soap opera (with a bizarre and shifting cast of characters), Ā and by the related interminable Russiagate story.
The last constant news story is about how Moscow supposedly stole something that doesnāt actually exist ā āAmerican democracyā ā in 2016. So what if actually existing livable ecology is burning to death under the command of carbon-addicted capital?
Jeff Zucker: āOkay, a Day or So but Weāre Moving Back to Russiaā
āSo, my boss, I shouldnāt say this. ⦠Just to give you some context, Trump pulled out of the climate accords and for a day and a half, we covered the climate accords. ⦠The CEO of CNN [Jeff Zucker, the flagship cable news networkās president] said in our internal meeting ⦠āGood job everybody covering the climate accords, but weāre done with that. Letās get back to Russia.ā ⦠So, even the climate accords, he was like āOK, a day or so, but weāre moving back to Russia.ā ā
So said CNN co-producerĀ John Bonifield to an undercover guerilla journalist with the conservative media watchdog group Project Veritas (PV) last summer.
By āthe climate accords,ā Bonifield was referring toĀ President Trumpās decision in June of 2017 to keep his campaign promise to pull the United States out of the Paris climate agreement. The accord, at least symbolically, committed the U.S. to joining the rest of the world in reducing carbon emissions with the hope of averting human extinction through anthropogenic global warming.
PV caught Bonifield on the same tape expressing doubts about the Russia and Trump story. Bonifield told PV that CNN had been running with this story to an extraordinary degree in pursuit of liberal eyeballsāand the advertising dollars that follow with a growing audience:
PV journalist: So you think the Russia thing is a little crazy, right?
Bonifield: Even if Russia was trying to swing the election, we try to swing their elections, our CIA is doing shit all the time, weāre out there trying to manipulate governments. You win because you know the game and you play it right. She [Hillary] didnāt play it right.
PV: Then why is CNN like constantly, Russia this, Russia that?
Bonifield: Because itās ratings. Our ratings are incredible right now. ⦠There are a lot of, like, liberal CNN viewers who want to see Trump get really scrutinized. If we would have behaved that way with President Obama, and scrutinized everything he was doing with as much scrutiny as we applied to Donald Trump, I think our viewers would have been turned off. They would have felt like we were attacking him. ⦠Iām not saying all of our viewers are super-liberals, but thereās just a lot of them.
PV: So Trumpās good for business, youāre saying.
Bonifield: Trump is good for business right now.
Ecocide is bad for business and ratings.Ā This Week in Terrible Trump and Russia (TWITTR) is good for business (including those parts of the U.S. military-industrial complex invested in the weaponization of Eastern Europe) and ratings.
(For those who like sound empirical data produced by respectable scholars [I do], please see this excellent report by communications professor Jennifer Brook on how the seven leading U.S. corporate television networks severely downplayed the relevance of climate change while obsessing over āTrumpā in its coverage of last yearās epic hurricanes. Trump throwing paper towels at Puerto Ricans after Hurricane Maria was a huge story.Ā The role of climate change in the lethal intensification of hurricanes was not. How childish.)
āEverything Else Wonāt Matterā
Itās not just the climate issue that has been trumped by TWITTR. Also unduly pushed too far to the margins have been the really big problems of racism, sexism, nativism, class inequality, plutocracy, militarism, nuclear escalation, urban despair, mass incarceration, police shootings, and the general trashing of democracy by the profits system. Arguably, though, the environmental problem has emerged as the most urgent matter of all. Itās not just good jobs, health care, social justice and democracy that are going in the tank while dominant media obsesses endlessly over TWITTR. Itās life itself thatās at risk ā yes, life itself.
CCC (global warming) is not just one among numerous āsingle issuesā that should concern progressive and serious liberals. If this unfolding environmental cataclysm isnāt averted soon,Ā Noam Chomsky explained six years ago, then āeverything else weāre talking about wonāt matter.ā All bets are off on prospects for a decent future unlessĀ homo sapiensĀ acts quickly to move off fossil fuels and on to renewable energy ā a technically viable project. Standard liberal and progressive struggles over how the pie is distributed, managed and controlled (and for whom) lose their luster when the pie is poisoned. Who wants to turn the world upside down only to find it riddled with disease and decay? Who hopes to inherit a dying earth from the wealthy few?
Unlike many of the other issues ordinary citizens, liberals and progressives rightly care about, there are no letter grades with the climate issue. ItāsĀ pass-fail. We either quickly (historically speaking) make the leap across the chasm and move from fossil fuels and the madness of nuclear power to water, wind and solar, or we fail to survive. Thereās very little room for cutting an incremental deal here. You donāt negotiate with physics.
Of all the endlessly infuriating and insane things about the malignant narcissist Trump, the most dangerous of all is his climate change-denialist promise to āderegulate energyā ā rightly described by Chomsky as āalmost a death-knell for the species.ā Not that the Paris agreement offered anything like a full solution, but Bonifield was right to be disturbed to see āeven the climate accordsāĀ trumped by the Trump-Russia story at CNN.
There are some Americans who have been paying rapt attention to Trump and the GOPās exterminist war on livable ecology ā a network of hard-right millionaire and billionaire political donors under the direction of carbon ecocide kings and fossil fuel uber-capitalists Charles and David Koch.Ā According to an important recent report from The Intercept:
āIn the background of a chaotic first year of Donald Trumpās presidency,Ā the conservative Koch brothers have won victory after victory in their bid to reshape American government to their interests.ā
āDocuments obtained by The Intercept and Documented show that the network of wealthy donors led by billionaire industrialists Charles and David Koch have taken credit for a laundry list of policy achievements extracted from the Trump administration and their allies in Congress.ā
āThe donors have pumped campaign contributions not only to GOP lawmakers, but also to an array of third-party organizations that have pressured officials to act swiftly to roll back limits on pollution, approve new pipeline projects, and extend the largest set of upper-income tax breaks in generations.ā
āāThis year, thanks in part to research and outreach efforts across institutions, we have seen progress on many regulatory priorities this Network has championed for years,ā the memo notes. The document highlights environmental issues that the Koch brothers have long worked to undo, such as the EPA Clean Power Plan, which is currently under the process of being formally repealed, and Trumpās withdrawal from the Paris Climate Agreement, among their major accomplishments.Ā The memo also highlighted administration efforts toĀ walk back planned rules to strengthen the estate tax in a list ofĀ 13 regulatory decisions favored by the network.ā
The evil geocidal Koch brothers and their planet-melting billionaire brethren get it ā and they approve. Theyāve been paying attention, even if CNN hasnāt.
āThe rich,ā as Le Mondeās ecological editor Ā Herve Kempf reported 11 years ago, āare destroying the Earthā ā and enjoying themselves a great deal along the way. Some of the oligarchs doing that today are Russians.Ā A much bigger and more significant number of them are U.S.-Americans. Someone tell a U.S. reporter!
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