The Great Flood
By Chris Hedges
September 11, 2017 "Information
Clearing House"
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How
many times will we rebuild Florida’s
cities, Houston, coastal New Jersey,
New Orleans and other population
centers ravaged by storms lethally
intensified by global warming? At
what point, surveying the
devastation and knowing more is
inevitable, will we walk away,
leaving behind vast coastal dead
zones? Will we retreat even further
into
magical thinking
to cope with the fury we have
unleashed from the natural world? Or
will we respond rationally and
radically alter our relationship to
this earth that gives us life?
Civilizations over the past 6,000
years have unfailingly squandered
their futures through acts of
colossal stupidity and hubris. We
are probably not an exception. The
physical ruins of these empires,
including the Mesopotamian, Roman,
Mayan and Indus, litter the earth.
They elevated, during acute
distress, inept and corrupt leaders
who channeled anger, fear and
dwindling resources into
self-defeating wars and vast
building projects. The ruling
oligarchs, driven by greed and
hedonism, retreated into privileged
compounds—the Forbidden City,
Versailles—and hoarded wealth as
their populations endured mounting
misery and poverty. The worse it
got, the more the people lied to
themselves and the more they wanted
to be lied to. Reality was too
painful to confront. They retreated
into what anthropologists call
“crisis cults,” which promised the
return of the lost world through
magical beliefs.
“The most significant characteristic
of modern civilization is the
sacrifice of the future for the
present,” philosopher and
psychologist William James wrote,
“and all the power of science has
been prostituted to this purpose.”
We are entering this final phase of
civilization, one in which we are
slashing the budgets of the very
agencies that are vital to prepare
for the devastation ahead—the
National Oceanographic and
Atmospheric Administration, the
Federal Emergency Management
Administration and the Environmental
Protection Agency, along with
programs at the National Aeronautics
and Space Administration dealing
with climate change. Hurricane after
hurricane, monster storm after
monster storm, flood after flood,
wildfire after wildfire, drought
after drought will gradually cripple
the empire, draining its wealth and
resources and creating swathes of
territory defined by lawlessness and
squalor.
These
dead zones will obliterate not only
commercial and residential life but
also military assets. As
Jeff Goodell
points out in “The Water Will Come:
Rising Seas, Sinking Cities and the
Remaking of the Civilized World,”
“The Pentagon manages a global real
estate portfolio that includes over
555,000 facilities and 28 million
acres of land—virtually all of it
will be impacted by climate change
in some way.”
As this column is being written,
three key military facilities in
Florida are evacuated: the
Miami-area headquarters of the U.S.
Southern Command, which oversees
military operations in the Caribbean
and Latin America; the U.S. Central
Command in Tampa, in charge of
overseas operations in the Middle
East and Southwest Asia; and the
Naval Air Station in Key West. There
will soon come a day when
obliteration of infrastructure will
prohibit military operations from
returning. Add to the list of
endangered military installations
Eglin Air Force Base in the Florida
Panhandle, the U.S. missile base in
the Marshall Islands, the U.S. naval
base on Diego Garcia and numerous
other military sites in coastal
areas and it becomes painfully clear
that the existential peril facing
the empire is not in the Middle East
but in the seas and the skies. There
are 128 U.S. military installations
at risk from rising sea levels,
including Navy, Air Force, Marine
and Army facilities in Virginia.
Giant vertical rulers dot the
highway outside the Norfolk naval
base to allow motorists to determine
if the water is too deep to drive
through. In two decades, maybe less,
the main road to the base will be
impassable at high tide daily.
Cities
across the globe, including London,
Shanghai, Rio de Janeiro, Mumbai,
Lagos, Copenhagen, New Orleans, San
Francisco, Savannah, Ga., and New
York, will become modern-day
versions of Atlantis, along with
countries such as Bangladesh and the
Marshall Islands and large parts of
New Zealand and Australia. There are
90 coastal cities in the U.S. that
endure chronic flooding, a number
that is expected to double in the
next two decades. National economies
will go into tailspins as wider and
wider parts of the globe suffer
catastrophic systems breakdown.
Central authority and basic services
will increasingly be nonexistent.
Hundreds of millions of people,
desperate for food, water and
security, will become climate
refugees. Nuclear power plants,
including Turkey Point, which is on
the edge of Biscayne Bay south of
Miami, will face meltdowns, such as
the accident that occurred in the
Fukushima nuclear plant in Japan
after it was destroyed by an
earthquake and tsunami. These plants
will spew radioactive waste into the
sea and air. Exacerbated by
disintegration of the polar ice
caps, the catastrophes will be too
overwhelming to manage. We will
enter what
James Howard Kunstler
calls
“the long emergency.” When that
happens, our experiment in
civilization might approach an end.
“The amount of real estate at risk
in New York is mind-boggling: 72,000
buildings worth over $129 billion
stand in flood zones today, with
thousands more buildings at risk
with each foot of sea-level rise,”
writes Jeff Goodell. “In addition,
New York has a lot of industrial
waterfront, where toxic materials
and poor communities live in close
proximity, as well as a huge amount
of underground
infrastructure—subways, tunnels,
electrical systems. Finally, New
York is a sea-level-rise hot spot.
Because of changes in ocean
dynamics, as well as the fact that
the ground beneath the city is
sinking as the continent recovers
from the last ice age, seas are now
rising about 50 percent faster in
the New York area than the global
average.”
A
society in crisis flees to the
reassuring embrace of con artists
and charlatans. Critics who ring
alarm bells are condemned as
pessimists who offer no “hope,” the
drug that keeps a doomed population
passive. The current
administration—which removed Barack
Obama’s
Climate Action Plan
from the White House website as soon
as Donald Trump took office—and the
Republican Party are filled with
happy climate deniers. They have
adopted a response to climate change
similar to that of the Virginia
Legislature: ban discussion of
climate change and replace the term
with the less ominous “recurrent
flooding.” This denial of
reality—one also employed by those
who assure us we can adapt—is driven
by fossil fuel and animal
agriculture industries that along
with the rich and corporations fund
the political campaigns of elected
officials. They fear that a
rational, effective response to
climate change will impede profits.
Our corporate media, dependent on
advertising dollars, contributes to
the conspiracy of silence. It
ignores the patterns and effects of
climate change, focusing instead on
feel-good stories about heroic
rescues or dramatic coverage of
flooded city centers and storm
refugee caravans fleeing up the
coast of Florida.
Droughts, floods, famines and
disease will eventually see the
collapse of social cohesion in large
parts of the globe, including U.S.
coastal areas. The insecurity,
hunger and desperation among the
dispossessed of the earth will give
rise to ad hoc militias, crime and
increased acts of terrorism. The
Pentagon report
“An
Abrupt Climate Change Scenario and
Its Implications for United States
Security” is blunt. “Disruption and
conflict will be endemic features of
life,” it grimly concludes.
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But as Goodell points out, “In
today’s political climate, open
discussion of the security risks of
climate change is viewed as
practically treasonous.” When in
2014 then-Secretary of State John
Kerry called climate change “perhaps
the world’s most fearsome weapon of
mass destruction” and compared it to
the effects of terrorism, epidemics
and poverty, the right-wing trolls,
from John McCain to Newt Gingrich,
went into a frenzy. Gingrich called
for Kerry’s resignation because “a
delusional secretary of state is
dangerous to our safety.”
James
Woolsey, the former head of the CIA,
wrote in a climate change report for
the Pentagon titled “The
Age of Consequences:
The Foreign-Policy National Security
Implications of Global Climate
Change”:
If Americans have difficulty
reaching a reasonable compromise
on immigration legislation
today, consider what such a
debate would be like if we were
struggling to resettle millions
of our own citizens—driven by
high water from the Gulf of
Mexico, South Florida, and much
of the East Coast reaching
nearly to New England—even as we
witnessed the northward
migration of large populations
from Latin America and the
Caribbean. Such migration will
likely be one of the Western
Hemisphere’s early social
consequences of climate change
and sea level rise of these
orders of magnitude. Issues
deriving from inundation of a
large amount of our own
territory, together with
migration towards our borders by
millions of our hungry and
thirsty southern neighbors, are
likely to dominate U.S. security
and humanitarian concerns.
Globally as well, populations
will migrate from increasingly
hot and dry climates to more
temperate ones.
We will react like most patients
with a terminal disease as they
struggle to confront their imminent
mortality. The gradual diminishing
of space, perception and strength
will weaken our capacity to absorb
reality. The end will be too
horrible to contemplate. The
tangible signs of our demise will be
obvious, but this will only
accelerate our retreat into
delusional thinking. We will believe
ever more fervently that the secular
gods of science and technology will
save us.
As
Goodell writes, “People will notice
higher tides that roll in more and
more frequently. Water will pool
longer in streets and parking lots.
Trees will turn brown and die as
they suck up salt water.” We will
retreat to higher ground, cover our
roofs with solar panels, finally
stop using plastic and
go vegan,
but it will be too late. As Goodell
writes, “even in rich neighborhoods,
abandoned houses will linger like
ghosts, filling with feral cats and
other refugees looking for their own
higher ground.”
The water will continue to rise. “It
will have a metallic sheen and will
smell bad,” Goodell writes. “Kids
will get strange rashes and fevers.
More people will leave [low areas].
Seawalls will crumble. In a few
decades, low-lying neighborhoods
will be knee-deep. Wooden houses
will collapse into a sea of soda
bottles, laundry detergent jugs, and
plastic toothbrushes. Human bones,
floated out of caskets, will be a
common sight. Treasure hunters will
kayak in, using small robotic
submersibles to search for coins and
jewelry. Modern office buildings and
condo towers will lean as salt water
corrodes the concrete foundations
and eats away at the structural
beams. Fish will school in the
classrooms. Oysters will grow on
submerged light poles. Religious
leaders will blame sinners for the
drowning of the city.”
The damage suffered by Houston,
Tampa and Miami is not an anomaly.
It is the beginning of the end. Ask
not for whom the bell tolls. It
tolls for thee.
Chris Hedges, spent nearly two
decades as a foreign correspondent
in Central America, the Middle East,
Africa and the Balkans. He has
reported from more than 50 countries
and has worked for The Christian
Science Monitor, National Public
Radio, The Dallas Morning News and
The New York Times, for which he was
a foreign correspondent for 15
years.
This article was first published
by
Truth Dig
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