Is the U.S. Mainstream
Media’s Climate Coverage Criminal?
By David Ray Griffin
February 27, 2015 "ICH"
- "GR"
- Thom Hartmann has written an article
entitled “The Mainstream Media’s Criminal
Climate Coverage.” Given what we know about
global warming, he said, “it’s hard to see
the mainstream media’s coverage – or lack
thereof – of climate change as anything less
than morally and ethically criminal.”2
This is harsh criticism. Is it justified?
1. America’s Climate
Complacency
A Washington Post story,
reporting the results of a Pew Research poll
in 2013, headlined its story, “Americans Are
Less Worried about Climate Change than
Almost Anyone Else.” In 2014, a poll of 20
wealthy countries found that America leads
the world in climate denialism, with 52
percent of the U.S. population stating that
climate change is a natural phenomenon
(rather than being the result of burning
fossil fuels) and denying that the world is
headed for environmental disaster unless it
quickly changes its habits.3
Why is the United States
first in climate complacency? According to
leading climate scientist James Hansen,
there is in this country “a huge gap between
the public’s understanding of the situation
and the scientific understanding.”4
But why does this gap exist in America?
Physicist Joe Romm, who
started the website Climate Progress, has
written that, although “our scientific
understanding of business-as-usual
projections for global warming has changed
dramatically,” the U.S. public largely
“remain in the dark about just how dire the
situation is. Why? Because the U.S. media is
largely ignoring the story,” which Romm
called “the story of the century, if not the
millennium.”5
Romm is far from the only
person to give this assessment. Eric Pooley,
one of America’s leading journalists,
offered a parable:
“Suppose our leading
scientists discovered that a meteor,
hurtling toward the earth, was set to
strike later this century; the
governments of the world had less than
ten years to divert or destroy it. How
would news organizations cover this
story? Even in an era of financial
distress, they would throw teams of
reporters at it and give them the
resources needed to follow it in
extraordinary depth and detail. After
all, the race to stop the meteor would
be the story of the century.”
In Pooley’s parable,
carbon-using humanity is the meteor, which
is threatening to destroy civilization. This
threat is, Pooley said, the “great story, of
our time. But news organizations have not
been treating it that way.”6
Likewise, Hartmann said:
“The mainstream media is failing us when it
comes to covering the story of the century.”
Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist Ross
Gelbspan said that the climate crisis is
“undoubtedly the biggest story of this
millennium.”And in her inimitable way,
Rebecca Solnit wrote that people a century
from now “will think the newspapers should
have had a gigantic black box above the fold
of the front page every day saying “Here are
some stories about other things, BUT CLIMATE
IS STILL THE BIGGEST STORY OF ALL.”7
However, granted that the
U.S. media have not done a good job, is it
fair to blame them for the fact that America
has more climate denialists, and less
concern about climate change, than other
wealthy countries? After all, fossil-fuel
companies, especially ExxonMobil and Koch
Industries, have spent tens of millions of
dollars to fund dozens of organizations,
including the Tea Party, to make climate
denialism appear to have arisen
spontaneously from concerned citizens.
However, according to
journalist Mark Hertsgaard, the
responsibility of the fossil-fuel companies
does not lessen that of the media. “As a
journalist,” he wrote, “it shames me that
the [carbon] lobby could never have
succeeded without the assistance of the
media.”8
2. How the Mainstream
Media Have Failed
A central reason for the
media’s failure involves the journalistic
norm of “balanced” reporting. As one
discussion put it: “Balance aims for
neutrality. It requires that reporters
present the views of legitimate
spokespersons of the conflicting sides in
any significant dispute, and provide both
sides with roughly equal attention.”9
False Balance
In a study entitled
“Balance as Bias,” Maxwell Boykoff and Jules
Boykoff said:
“[B]alanced reporting
can actually be a form of informational
bias. Despite the highly regarded IPCC’s
[Intergovernmental Panel on Climate
Change’s] consistent assertions . . . ,
balanced reporting has allowed a small
group of global warming skeptics to have
their views amplified.”10
In explaining how balance
can be bias, the Boykoffs quoted Gelbspan,
who wrote:
“The professional
canon of journalistic fairness requires
reporters who write about a controversy
to present competing points of view.
When the issue is of a political or
social nature, fairness – presenting the
most compelling arguments of both sides
with equal weight – is a fundamental
check on biased reporting. But this
canon causes problems when it is applied
to issues of science. It seems to demand
that journalists present competing
points of views on a scientific question
as though they had equal scientific
weight, when actually they do not.”11
With regard to the idea of
giving equal weight to “both sides,” Naomi
Oreskes and Erik Conway, authors of the
great book Merchants of Doubt, said:
“[O]nce a scientific
issue is closed, there’s only one
‘side.’ Imagine providing a ‘balance’ to
the issue of whether the Earth orbits
the Sun, whether continents move, or
whether DNA carries genetic information.
These matters were long ago settled in
scientists’ minds. Nobody can publish an
article in a scientific journal claiming
the Sun orbits the Earth.”12
Disputing this issue,
Washington Post denialist Charles
Krauthammer wrote: “There is nothing more
anti-scientific than the very idea that
science is settled, static, impervious to
challenge.”13
However, although
“science” is never settled, because new
facts are continually found, some of which
require new theories, this does not mean
that there are no settled facts. Although
plate tectonics was once fiercely debated,
it no longer is. Climate science is still
evolving, with many remaining questions
(such as “climate sensitivity”). But central
issues have been settled, including the fact
that increased CO2 in the
atmosphere is raising the planet’s average
temperature and that this global warming is
causing climate disruption.
Not only is this a
consensus today, with over 97 percent of the
world’s active climate scientists agreeing,
consensus has existed for a long time. As
early as 1997, the Washington Post published
a story entitled “Consensus Emerges Earth Is
Warming – Now What?”14
Recently, however, the
media have largely ignored the distinction
between disputed opinion and settled fact.
As a result, the media have produced bias.
Having studied the stories about global
warming in the U.S. “prestige press” (the
New York Times, the Washington Post, the Los
Angeles Times, and the Wall Street Journal)
between 1988 and 2002, Boykoff and Boykoff
reported that a majority of the stories were
“balanced” in this sense:
“[T]hese accounts gave
‘roughly equal attention’ to the view
that humans were contributing to global
warming, and the other view that
exclusively natural fluctuations could
explain the earth’s temperature
increase.”
For stories to be truly
balanced, they should give only as much
attention to the views of contrarian
scientists as their numbers represent. In
2014, English comedian John Oliver, on his
faux TV news show, “Last Week Tonight,”
humorously demonstrated what true balance
would be. Having described the typical TV
debate between a climate scientist and a
climate denier, he pointed out that the
debate should really be statistically
representative of the two positions. So
after having two more people join the
denier, Oliver brought in 96 more to join
the scientist.15
Gelbspan had suggested
something like this many years ago, saying
that, if reporters about the climate used
the relevant type of balance, a story would
primarily discuss the views of mainstream
scientists, ”and the skeptics a couple of
paragraphs at the end.”16
In any case, the problem
with false balance is that it gives
unknowing readers the impression that the
scientific community is divided on the
issue, and this problem primarily exists in
the U.S. media. According to a 2012 report
comparing the New York Times and Wall Street
Journal with leading newspapers in Brazil,
China, France, India, and the United
Kingdom:
“America is unique
when it comes to giving a platform to
climate deniers and skeptics. According
to a new analysis of data released [in
2011], American newspapers are far more
likely to publish uncontested claims
from climate deniers, many of whom
challenge whether the planet is warming
at all.”17
A particularly egregious
example of giving an unworthy scientist a
platform, in the name of false balance,
appeared in an otherwise excellent Associate
Press story about the recent IPCC report,
which said that if global warming continues,
there will be “severe, pervasive and
irreversible impacts for people and
ecosystems.” The AP then quoted denialist
John Christy as saying: “Humans are clever.
We shall adapt to whatever happens.” But
“quoting John Christy on climate change,”
said Romm, “is like quoting Dick Cheney on
Iraq.”18
Sometimes, moreover, the
press does not even give equal attention to
climate science. A 2014 report showed that
fringe scientists who rejected the consensus
have actually received most of the press
coverage, while those who said that
“greenhouse gases have caused strong global
warming” received only 15% of the coverage.19
Explicit Denialism
Beyond the implicit
denialism involved in false balance, there
is also a lot of explicit denialism in
American media.
The two media giants who
are worst in reporting on the climate are
owned by Rupert Murdoch’s News Corporation:
Fox News and the Wall Street Journal (WSJ).
In September 2012, the Union of Concerned
Scientists examined the articles during the
previous year in the WSJ’s opinion section
dealing with climate science, finding that
the “representations of climate science were
misleading 81 percent of the time.” But that
was pretty good compared with Fox News,
whose stories over a six-month period in
2012 “were misleading 93 percent of the
time.”20
In 2013, the WSJ published
an opinion piece entitled “In Defense of
Carbon Dioxide,” in which the authors said:
“[T]he conventional wisdom about carbon
dioxide is that it is a dangerous pollutant.
That’s simply not the case. Contrary to what
some would have us believe, increased carbon
dioxide in the atmosphere will benefit the
increasing population on the planet by
increasing agricultural productivity,”
ignoring that this is true only in cold
countries.21
CNBC has not been much
better. Examining its stories that dealt
with either “global warming” or “climate
change” during the first half of 2013, Media
Matters found that 51 percent of the stories
“cast doubt on whether manmade climate
change existed.” The only scientist that
CNBC hosted about climate was William
Happer, the chairman of the denialist George
C. Marshall Institute, who was one of the
authors of the aforementioned WSJ opinion
piece, “In Defense of Carbon Dioxide.”22
Even the Washington Post
has given a lot of space to denialists. In
2011, the editor of the Post’s editorial
pages wrote, “The GOP’s climate-change
denial may be its most harmful delusion.”
But then he continued to publish pieces by
his resident denialists, Charles Krauthammer
and George Will. Krauthammer, whose claim
that there is no settled science was cited
earlier, has written so much that Joe Romm
referred to a 2014 piece by Krauthammer as
“his umpteenth falsehood-fest.”23
Will’s anti-scientific
nonsense had gotten so bad in 2009 that
other Post reporters contradicted him in a
news article. But his perversity continued:
In 2014, Will mocked the finding that 97
percent of climate scientists believe that
carbon pollution is causing global warming.
Asking rhetorically, “who did the poll?”
Will suggested that the finding was no more
worthy of belief than “100 Authors Against
Einstein” produced by a Nazi publishing
company. What Will did not tell readers was
that what he called a “poll” was actually,
as Romm pointed out, “a peer-reviewed
analysis of more than 10,000 recent
scientific papers on climate science.”24
Fortunately, a reaction
against denialism in the media has begun. In
general, good newspapers do not publish
letters that are based on the denial of
basic science, and in 2013 the Los Angeles
Times enacted this policy with regard to
climate science, with letters editor Paul
Thornton explaining:
“I do my best to keep
errors of fact off the letters page. . .
. Saying ‘there’s no sign humans have
caused climate change’ is not stating an
opinion, it’s asserting a factual
inaccuracy.”
Hartmann responded by
saying:
“It’s time for the
rest of the media to follow suit. All
media outlets, TV, radio, print
or otherwise should immediately stop
publishing the factual inaccuracies of
climate change deniers.”25
Next, Forecast the Facts,
hoping to speed up the process, created a
petition addressed to five leading
newspapers, saying:
“The Los Angeles Times
recently announced that they are
refusing to publish letters that deny
climate change. . . . Sign the petition
below to tell the editors of The New
York Times, The Washington Post, USA
Today, and The Wall Street Journal: our
country’s most respected newspapers
should refuse to print letters that deny
basic science.”
In addition, CREDO
Mobilize started a petition addressed to all
newspapers, “Tell Newspapers: Don’t Publish
Climate Change Deniers.”26
In the U.K., the BBC,
perhaps responding to John Oliver’s show,
announced that its programs will henceforth
give denialists only the amount of coverage
their prominence merits. But by the
beginning of 2015 this policy has not yet
been adopted by most of the U.S. media
companies.27
Reduction of
Coverage
The U.S. mainstream
media’s coverage has also failed by giving
inadequate coverage, which can be regarded,
along with false balance, as implicit
climate denial.
Although the U.S. media’s
coverage of climate change has never been
very high, its coverage went up in 2009,
that being the year of the “Climategate”
allegations and the climate conference in
Copenhagen – which had been widely discussed
as the world’s last chance to prevent
catastrophic climate change. But although
there were lots of “climategate” stories,
“only a few of the major U.S. news outlets,”
reported the Energy Daily, “published
accounts of the Copenhagen gathering, which
received heavy coverage by news outlets in
Europe and Asia.”28
Since 2009, moreover, the
coverage has consistently gone down, in
spite of the increasingly extreme weather
and the ever-fasting melting of glaciers
(which is becoming so bad that Glacier
National Park will soon need to change its
name, and the same will be true of the
Peruvian mountain range called Cordillera
Blanca, or “White Range”). In spite of all
such developments, the number of articles in
the U.S. media mentioning global warming
declined from 2,286 to 2006 to 1,353 in
2013.29
This type of implicit
climate denial can be illustrated by actions
of the New York Times and the Washington
Post.
NYT Eliminates Climate
Desk: The most important of the reductions
in coverage was what happened at the New
York Times in 2013. At the beginning of that
year, the Times eliminated its climate desk,
which consisted of seven reporters and two
editors. Describing the changes as merely
“structural,” the paper’s executive editor,
Jill Abramson, declared: “We will continue
to cover these areas of national and
international life just as aggressively.”
But as venerable journalist Dan Froomkin
asked, “How is that possible?” And Margaret
Sullivan, the Times’ public editor, said
that preventing the coverage of the
environment from suffering “will be a
particular challenge.”30
The warnings by Froomkin
and Sullivan were not misplaced. Near the
end of 2013, Sullivan reviewed how the
Times’ environmental coverage had fared
since its “structural changes.” Whereas in
2012, there were 362 print articles that
featured climate change prominently between
April and September, during those same
months in 2013 this number dropped to 247.
In addition, the number of front-page
stories slipped from nine to three.31
When the results for the
entire year came in, the number of NYT
stories mentioning either “global warming”
or “climate change” had plummeted more than
40 percent. According to the University of
Colorado, which tracks such changes, this
drop was bigger than that of any other
newspaper. This was a radical change from
2012, when the Times “had the biggest
increase in coverage among the five largest
U.S. daily papers,” and when Glenn Kramon,
assistant managing editor of the Times, had
said: “Climate change is one of the few
subjects so important that we need to be
oblivious to cycles and just cover it as
hard as we can all the time.”32
NYT Eliminates
Environmental Blog: Two months after the
Times’s elimination of its climate desk, it
canceled its Green blog, which had a dozen
contributors in addition to its two editors.
The Times had created the Green blog in
2008, which was to keep readers up to date
on “the high-stakes pursuit of a greener
globe.” Then in 2010, “taking things up a
notch,” the Times introduced a “more
ambitious online effort, broadening our lens
to include . . . politics and policy,
environmental science and consumer choices.”
This was timely, the paper’s editors
explained, because the Wall Street Journal
had shut down its green blog. The NYT’s
blog’s editor, Tom Zeller, said: “Better
informed citizens are crucial to building a
better, greener civilization.”33
But three years later, the
paper’s editors wrote: “The Times is
discontinuing the Green blog, which was
created to track environmental and energy
news and to foster lively discussion of
developments in both areas.” This surprise
announcement led Curtis Brainard, the editor
of the Columbia Journalism Review, to write:
“The Green blog was a
crucial platform for stories that didn’t
fit into the print edition’s already
shrunken news hole. . . , and it was a
place where reporters could add . . .
information to pieces that did make the
paper.”34
The editors who made this
decision, continued Brainard,
“should be ashamed of
themselves. They’ve made a horrible
decision that ensures the deterioration
of the Times’s environmental coverage at
a time when debates about climate
change, energy, natural resources, and
sustainability have never been more
important to public welfare.”35
Similarly, Drexel
University’s Robert Brulle, who according to
the Times is “an expert on environmental
communications,” said: “The NY Times
coverage of the environment has continued
its journey from bad to worse. It continues
to abrogate its responsibility to inform the
public about critical issues.” More
sardonically, Slate entitled its response:
“The Times Kills Its Environmental Blog to
Focus on Horse Racing and Awards Shows.”36
It did not take long for
the Times’s reduced coverage to be noticed.
In August 2013, for example, the New York
Times failed to cover the NOAA’s [National
Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration’s]
258-page State of the Climate report, which
is used to set U.S. climate policy. This
failure, said Media Matters, “calls into
doubt the extent to which the paper can be
trusted to maintain strong attention to
environmental issues in the face of recent
organizational changes.”37
Washington Post Does
Likewise: The same weekend, the Washington
Post reassigned its top environmental
reporter – who was a bright spot on a paper
blighted by climate deniers such as George
Will and Charles Krauthammer. Making a
lipstick-on-a-pig announcement, the editors
said:
“We’re very excited to
announce the latest evolution of our
political team — an online strike force
that will help lead our journalism
during the day. Juliet Eilperin will
return to the world of politics to cover
the White House. Juliet has had a
terrific run on the environment beat,
becoming one of the country’s leading
reporters on climate change.”
Joe Romm wrote:
“Yes, no point in
keeping one of the country’s leading
reporters on climate change on the story
of the century. She had a good run, but
that climate story is so five minutes
ago.”38
Then the following year,
the Post dropped first-rate blogger Ezra
Klein, who regularly informed readers about
science-based coverage of climate change,
and replaced him with a website called the
“Volokh Conspiracy.” This website was aptly
named, pointed out a writer at Grist,
because many of its bloggers promoted the
idea that global warming is a conspiracy, a
hoax. It is alarming, said Romm, that “[new
owner] Jeff Bezos of the Washington Post
would think such uninformed conspiracy
mongering belongs at the Post.”39
Television’s
Inadequate Coverage
In addition to reducing
its coverage, U.S. television networks
commonly give woefully inadequate coverage
to important events, sometimes ignoring them
completely. Saying that “the TV news is a
disgrace,” media critic Todd Gitlin wrote,
“Despite the record
temperatures of 2012, the intensifying
storms, droughts, wildfires, and other
wild weather events, the disappearing
Arctic ice cap, and the greatest
meltdown of the Greenland ice shield in
recorded history, their news divisions
went dumb and mute.”
Moreover, Gitlin said,
“The Sunday talk shows, which supposedly
offer long chews and not just sound bites. .
. , were otherwise occupied.” Media Matters,
he reported, gave this summary of the TV
coverage of climate change in 2012:
“The Sunday shows
spent less than 8 minutes on climate
change. . . . ABC’s This Week covered it
the most, at just over 5 minutes. . . .
NBC’s Meet the Press covered it the
least, in just one 6 second mention. . .
. Most of the politicians quoted were
Republican presidential candidates,
including Rick Santorum, who went
unchallenged when he called global
warming ‘junk science’ on ABC’s This
Week. More than half of climate mentions
on the Sunday shows were Republicans
criticizing those who support efforts to
address climate change. . . . In four
years, Sunday shows have not quoted a
single scientist on climate change.”40
In June 2013, President
Obama gave a major speech, laying out his
plan to cut carbon pollution. But except for
MSNBC’s Melissa Harris-Perry, the Sunday
morning news shows, which supposedly deal
with the big stories of the week, ignored
it. For the most part, those who relied on
TV for their news had to rely on Jay Leno,
David Letterman, and Jon Stewart.41
In 2014, the IPCC’s
massive fifth assessment report, on which it
had been working for several years, was
published. MSNBC appropriately devoted
almost 20 minutes to it, laying out the
risks detailed by the report along with the
ineffective attempts to cut carbon. But the
coverage by both Fox News and CNN was
pathetic.
Fox News did what one
would expect: It spent only five minutes on
it, most of which was devoted to attacking
the idea of climate change, with Bill
O’Reilly accusing the climate scientists of
wanting to destroy the economy with its
“phantom global warming theory.” Although
CNN did not attack the IPCC report, it
virtually ignored it, devoting only one
minute and eight seconds to it. CNN’s Jack
Tapper did acknowledge that “all of human
civilization could be at risk,” but CNN
considered this point deserving of only 48
seconds.42
Ignoring Climate
Change while Discussing Extreme Weather
Given the increasingly
extreme weather of the past several years,
the media were virtually forced to discuss
it. But they usually have not felt compelled
to connect the extreme weather with climate
change, which was true of both newspaper and
television coverage. This was even true of
2013, which was “a big year for climate,”
especially “the increase in ferocity of our
weather.” The extreme weather events of that
year included “deadly flooding in Colorado,
the string of major wildfires across the
American West, and bouts of unseasonable
temperatures across the country.” But
according to Fairness and Accuracy in
Reporting, a study of 450 stories in the
nightly news showed that “96 percent of
extreme weather stories never discussed the
human impact on the climate.”43
(This failure cannot be
justified by the reluctance of climate
scientists to attribute particular weather
events to global warming. Climate scientists
now agree that, in Kevin Trenberth’s words,
“Global warming is contributing to an
increased incidence of extreme weather
because the environment in which all storms
form has changed from human activities.”
Likewise, James Hansen said: “We now know
that the chances these extreme weather
events would have happened naturally —
without climate change — is negligible.”44)
Media Matters reported
essentially the same thing, referring to the
Midwest floods in the spring of 2013.
Whereas ABC, CBS, NBC, and CNN had devoted a
total of 74 segments to the flooding, not
one mentioned climate change (CBS came the
closest, mentioning that heavy downpours
have increased). Media Matters found the
newspaper stories hardly better. In a total
of 35 articles about the floods, only one by
USA Today mentioned climate change. Reuters
and the Associated Press, Los Angeles Times,
New York Times, and Wall Street Journal
stories remained silent about it.45
Even NPR was guilty of
this failure. In 2013, after commenting
about an NPR story that mentioned the
melting of glaciers without explaining why,
Joe Romm said, “apparently we won’t be
hearing more about why more glaciers are
receding or speeding up — or what it all
really means for humanity, like say, that
whole sea level rise thing.”46
3. The U.S. Media’s
Ultimate Crime
In 2014, a host for a CNN
show, reflecting on what it would take to
change the thinking and actions of average
Americans, wrote:
“Here’s what is
missing from our national conversation
about climate change: an emotional
charge that hits you in the gut. . . .
We need in-your-face cause and effect.
Every day, it seems, a new extreme
weather catastrophe happens somewhere in
America and the media’s all over it,
profiling the ordinary folks wiped out
by forest fires, droughts, floods,
massive sinkholes, tornadoes. But do
reporters covering the who, what, when,
where and how, ever talk about the real
why? . . . . No. It’s still considered
inappropriate to talk about the big
elephant in the field, namely what we
have long accepted as an act of God is
increasingly becoming an act of man.”47
As for what a good story
would be like, an example was provided by
reporter Clayton Sandell of ABC News. In a
segment headed “Extreme Weather from Mother
Nature,” Sandel said:
“Scientists say
human-caused climate change is already
helping shift the planet’s natural
balance. Creating more heat waves,
drought, and intense downpours. A stormy
and expensive reality, that’s already on
our doorsteps.”48
In addition, a writer for
the New Yorker has explained how slight
changes in typical presentations could help
people connect extreme weather with climate
change. Whereas exceptionally cold weather
generally weakens Americans’ belief in
climate change, in the UK it strengthens it.
The reason for the difference, concluded
researchers at Cardiff University, is that
the UK media “had framed the weather within
the context of climate change, emphasizing
that it was unnatural, rather than simply
cold. Perhaps,” said the writer, “if people
here were told that it’s not just brutal out
there, it’s unnaturally brutal, they, too,
might jump to a different conclusion.”49
Accordingly, there are
simple things the media could do that could
help the public understand the reality and
seriousness of climate change. But as it is,
Gelbspan said, the U.S. press coverage of
the crisis is “a betrayal of the public
trust.”50
The culpability of the
American press has also been expressed by
journalist Wen Stephenson, who had worked at
NPR, PBS, the Atlantic, and the Boston
Globe. In an open letter to his former
journalism colleagues, Stephenson said:
“[Y]ou are failing.
Your so-called ‘objectivity,’ your
bloodless impartiality, are nothing but
a convenient excuse for what amounts to
an inexcusable failure to tell the most
urgent truth we’ve ever faced. What’s
needed now is crisis-level coverage.”
Spelling out what this
would mean, Stephenson continued:
“In a crisis, the
criteria for top news is markedly
altered, as long as a story sheds light
on the crisis topic. In crisis coverage,
there’s an assumption that readers want
and deserve to know as much as possible.
In crisis coverage, you ‘flood the
zone.’ The climate crisis is the biggest
story of this, or any, generation — so
why the hell aren’t you flooding the
climate ‘zone,’ putting it on the front
pages and leading newscasts with it
every day?”51
Besides being an
inexcusable failure and a betrayal of the
public trust, the U.S. media’s failure can
be considered the ultimate crime.
Writing in the Guardian,
Stephan Lewandowsky said: “The media failed
to accurately report facts prior to the Iraq
War; climate reporting is failing in similar
fashion.” Some journalists who had supported
the Bush-Cheney administration’s claims
about weapons of mass destruction felt
anguish about having used “’evidence’ now
known to be bogus” to support the push for
war. “The lethal fallout from misinformation
a decade ago,” wrote Lewandowsky, “primarily
affected the people of Iraq.” But “the
fallout from misinformation about climate
change is likely to affect us all.”52
Indeed, some journalists –
besides Eric Pooley, who was quoted above –
have said that unmitigated climate change
threatens the very continuation of
civilization.
- In his criticism of
the mainstream media’s climate coverage
as criminal, Hartmann said: “After all,
the future of all life on Earth is at
stake.”
- In his critique of
U.S. press coverage as a “damning
betrayal of public trust,” Gelbspan said
climate change “threatens the survival
of our civilization.”
- Romm said that
“unless we start cutting carbon
pollution soon, the impacts threaten to
destroy the stable climate that made
modern civilization possible.”53
Moreover, it has become a
consensus among scientists, along with
others who know the scientific facts, that
climate change caused by global warming
threatens to bring civilization to an end.
- “Global warming,”
said Nobel laureate Paul Crutzen, “[is]
raising concerns about the [ability] of
Earth’s environment . . . to maintain
viable human civilizations.”
- Lester Brown
subtitled a book Mobilizing to Save
Civilization.
- National Medal of
Science recipient Lonnie Thompson,
explaining the new outspokenness of
climate scientists, responding to the
question of why sober climatologists
have begun speaking out publicly about
the dangers of global warming, said that
“virtually all of us are now convinced
that global warming poses a clear and
present danger to civilization.”
- Former Vice President
Al Gore, speaking of the climate crisis,
said: “What hangs in the balance is the
future of civilization as we know it.”
- In 2011, Lester
Brown, Bill McKibben, and a large number
of other environmental leaders, wrote a
letter to the presidents of the United
States and China, saying: “It is time to
publicly acknowledge that the continued
burning of fossil fuels threatens the
survival of civilization.”
- In 2012, twenty
previous winners of the Blue Planet
Prize said that “society has no choice
but to take dramatic action to avert a
collapse of civilization.”54
The destruction of
civilization, some writers have pointed out,
would amount to suicide:
- New Yorker writer
Elizabeth Kolbert famously said: “It may
seem impossible to imagine that a
technologically advanced society could
choose, in essence, to destroy itself,
but that is what we are now in the
process of doing.”
- Mohamed Nasheed,
while he was the president of Maldives,
said that if the nations fail to sign a
commitment to bring carbon emissions
down, they will in effect have signed a
“global suicide pact.”
- Paul and Anne
Ehrlich, saying that climate disruption
is threatening human civilization with
collapse, added: “Humankind finds itself
engaged in what Prince Charles described
as ‘an act of suicide on a grand
scale.’”55
However, unlike suicide in
the normal sense, the suicide involved in
the destruction of civilization would take
not simply the politicians, media moguls,
owners of fossil-fuel companies, and others
who actively caused it, but all the rest of
us, too. Accordingly, in light of the
stakes, the U.S. media’s coverage of climate
change is not simply a crime, but the
ultimate crime.
In 2013, Tom Engelhardt,
recognizing that genocide is usually
considered the ultimate crime, coined the
term “terracide” to describe an even more
ultimate crime, writing:
“To destroy our planet
with malice aforethought, with only the
most immediate profits on the brain,
with only your own comfort and wellbeing
(and those of your shareholders) in
mind: Isn’t that the ultimate crime?
Isn’t that terracide? It would be,
because it would be not only the
‘ultimate crime against humanity’ but
also ‘against most living things.’”56
The fossil-fuel companies
are guilty of the ultimate crime, he said,
because they are earning their “profits
directly off melting the planet, knowing
that their extremely profitable acts are
destroying the very habitat, the very
temperature range that for so long made life
comfortable for humanity.”57
As indicated, Engelhardt
directs his indictment at fossil-fuel
companies. But as Hartmann and Hertsgaard
both pointed out, the fossil-fuel companies
could never have been able to continue their
polluting ways – long after the scientific
community had reached consensus about
connection between fossil-fuel emission,
global warming, and climate change – without
the assistance of the media. And so the U.S.
media share the responsibility for terracide.
Noam Chomsky has
explicitly connected the U.S. media to the
ultimate crime: Besides writing that “we are
moving toward what may in fact be the
ultimate genocide – the destruction of the
environment,” Chomsky said: “The media
cooperate by not even reporting the
increasingly dire forecasts of international
agencies and even the U.S. Department of
Energy.”58
Conclusion
Accordingly, Hartmann’s
charge is correct in spades: Besides being
guilty of betraying the public trust, the
U.S. mainstream media’s climate coverage is
guilty of facilitating the move toward the
ultimate crime, terracide.
David Ray
Griffin is
emeritus professor at Claremont Theology
School and Claremont Graduate University.
His most recent book is Unprecedented: Can
Civilization Survive the CO2 Crisis?
(Clarity Press, 2015).
Notes
1. This essay is an adaptation of a chapter
entitled “Media Challenge” in Unprecedented:
Can Civilization Survive the CO2
Crisis? (Clarity Press, 2015).
2. Thom Hartmann, “The Mainstream Media’s
Criminal Climate Coverage,” 26 February
2014.
3. Max Fisher, “Americans Are Less Worried
about Climate Change than Almost Anyone
Else,” Washington Post, 27 September 2013;
referring to “Climate Change: Key Data
Points from Pew Research,” Pew Research
Center, 2 April 2013; Joanna B. Foster,
“Poll: U.S. Leads the World . . . in Climate
Denial,” Climate Progress, 22 July 2014.
4. Richard Gray, “Climate Scientists Are
Losing the Public Debate on Global Warming,”
Telegraph, 8 April 2012.
5. Joe Romm, “Media Largely Ignores Latest
Warning from Climate Scientists,” Climate
Progress, 19 March 2009; Romm, “A Stunning
Year in Climate Science Reveals that Human
Civilization Is on the Precipice,” Climate
Progress, 15 November 2010.
6. Eric Pooley, “How Much Would You Pay to
Save the Planet? American Press and the
Economics of Climate Change,” Joan
Shorenstein Center on the Press, Politics
and Public Policy, John F. Kennedy School of
Government, January 2009.
7. Hartmann, “The Mainstream Media’s
Criminal Climate Coverage”; Ross Gelbspan,
“U.S. Press Coverage of the Climate Crisis:
A Damning Betrayal of Public Trust,” The
Heat is Online, June 2010; Rebecca Solnit,
“Everything’s Coming Together While
Everything Falls Apart: The Climate for
2015,” TomDispatch, 23 December 2014.
8. Mark Hertsgaard, Hot: Living Through the
Next Fifty Years on Earth (New York:
Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, 2011), 263.
9. Robert M. Entman, Democracy Without
Citizens: Media and the Decay of American
Democracy (New York and Oxford: Oxford
University Press, 1989), 30.
10. Maxwell T. Boykoff and Jules M. Boykoff,
“Balance as Bias: Global Warming and the US
Prestige Press,” Global Environmental Change
14 (2004), 125–136.
11. Ross Gelbspan, The Heat Is On: The
Climate Crisis, the Cover-Up, the
Prescription (Perseus Press: Cambridge,
1998), 57-58.
12. Naomi Oreskes and Erik M. Conway,
Merchants of Doubt (New York: Bloomsbury,
2010), 214.
13. Charles Krauthammer: The Myth of
‘Settled Science,’” Washington Post, 20
February 2014.
14. A 2009 study found that, when asked
whether “human activity is a significant
contributing factor in changing mean global
temperatures,” 97.5% of climatologists who
actively publish research on climate change
responded “yes”; Peter T. Doran and Maggie
Kendall Zimmerman, “Examining the Scientific
Consensus on Climate Change,” Earth and
Environmental Sciences 90/20 (20 January
2009); Joby Warrick, “Consensus Emerges
Earth Is Warming – Now What?” Washington
Post, 11 November 1997. Washington Post, 11
November 1997.
15. Boykoff and Boykoff, “Balance as Bias”;
Joe Romm, “The 97 Percent: Watch John
Oliver’s Hilarious ‘Statistically
Representative Climate Change Debate,’”
Climate Progress, 12 May 2014.
16. Gelbspan, “U.S. Press Coverage of the
Climate Crisis.”
17. Stephen Lacey, “American Newspapers Are
Number One in Climate Denial,” Climate
Progress, 14 October 2012.
18. Joe Romm, “Climate Scientists Spell Out
Stark Danger and Immorality of Inaction in
New Leaked Report,” Climate Progress, 27
August 2014; referring to Seth Borenstein,
“Draft Of Upcoming IPCC Report Presents
Stark View of the Future As Climate Change
Rages On,” Associated Press, 26 August 2014.
19. John Abraham and Dana Nuccitelli, “New
Study Finds Fringe Global Warming
Contrarians Get Disproportionate Media
Attention,” Guardian, 11 August 2014.
20. “Science Group Calls on News Corp. to
Improve Climate Science Content,” Union of
Concerned Scientists, 21 September 2012.
21. Harrison H. Schmitt and William Happer,
“In Defense of Carbon Dioxide,” Wall Street
Journal, 9 May 2013.
22. Shauna Theel, “CNBC’s Climate Denial Is
Bad for Business,” Media Matters, 18 June
2013.
23. Fred Hiatt, “On Climate Change, the GOP
Is in Never-Never Land,” Washington Post, 15
April 2011; Joe Romm, “Shameless Flameout:
Washington Post Once Again Publishes George
Will’s Anti-Scientific Nonsense,” Climate
Progress, 17 January 2013; Romm, “Paging
Jeff Bezos: George Will Compares Climate
Scientists to Nazis,” Climate Progress, 28
February 2014
24. Joe Romm, “Washington Post Publishes Two
Strong Debunkings of George Will’s Double
Dose of Disinformation,” Climate Progress,
21 March 2009; Joe Romm, “Washington Post
Reporters Take Unprecedented Step of
Contradicting Columnist George Will in a
News Article,” Climate Progress, 7 April
2009; Romm, “Paging Jeff Bezos: George Will
Compares Climate Scientists to Nazis.”
25. Paul Thornton, “On Letters from
Climate-Change Deniers,” Los Angeles Times,
8 October 2013; Thom Hartmann, “The
Mainstream Media’s Criminal Climate
Coverage,” 26 February 2014.
26. “Tell Newspapers: Don’t Publish Climate
Denial,” Forecast the Facts.
27. Emily Atkin, “To Improve Accuracy, BBC
Tells Its Reporters to Stop Giving Air Time
to Climate Deniers,” Climate Progress, 7
July 2014.
28. Quoted in Joe Romm, Straight Up:
America’s Fiercest Climate Blogger Takes on
the Status Quo Media, Politicians, and Clean
Energy Solutions (Island Press, 2010), 58.
29. Douglas Fischer, “Climate Coverage Down
Again in 2011,” Daily Climate, 17 January
2012; Jack Shafer, “Why We’re So Blasé about
Global Warming,” Reuters, 30 August 2014.
30. Margaret Sullivan, “Keeping
Environmental Reporting Strong Won’t Be
Easy,” New York Times, 11 January 2013.
31. Joanna M. Foster, “Climate Coverage
Drops at the New York Times after Paper
Closed Its Environmental Desk,” Climate
Progress, 25 November 2013.
32. Joe Romm, “Silence of the Lambs: Climate
Coverage Drops at Major U.S. Newspapers,
Flatlines on TV,” Climate Progress, 14
January 2014; Douglas Fischer, “Climate
Coverage, Dominated by Weird Weather, Falls
Further in 2012,” Daily Climate, 2 January
2013.
33. Tom Zeller, Jr., “Green: A New Name, a
Broader Mission,” New York Times, 21 April
2010.
34. Curtis Brainard, “NYT Cancels Green
blog,” Columbia Journalism Review, 1 March
2013.
35. Ibid.
36. Joe Romm, “In Epic Blunder, NY Times and
Washington Post All but Abandon Specialized
Climate Science Coverage,” Climate Progress,
4 March 2013.
37. Max Greenberg, “Two Big Climate Stories
You Didn’t Read About in The New York Times:
Times Skips Stories Soon after Closing
Environmental Desk and Green Blog,” Media
Matters, 7 August 2013.
38. Romm, “In Epic Blunder, NY Times and
Washington Post.”
39. Joe Romm, “Washington Post Drops Climate
Hawk Ezra Klein, Adds Climate Confusionist
Blog Volokh Conspiracy,” Climate Progress,
23 January 2014.
40. Todd Gitlin, “Is the Press Too Big to
Fail?
It’s Dumb Journalism, Stupid,” in
“The Tinsel Age of Journalism,” Tomgram, 25
April 2013.
41. Joe Romm and Andrew Breiner, “Sunday
News Shows Ignored Obama’s Climate Plan but
Late-Night Comics Picked Up the Slack,”
Climate Progress, 1 July 2013.
42. Andrew Breiner, “CNN Ignores Major
Climate Report, But Fox News Does Something
Even Worse,” Climate Progress, 2 April 2014.
43. Emily Atkin, “96 Percent of Network
Nightly News’ Coverage of Extreme Weather
Doesn’t Mention Climate Change,” Climate
Progress, 19 December 2013.
44. John M. Broder, “Scientists See More
Deadly Weather, but Dispute the Cause,” New
York Times, 15 June 2011; Amanda Holpuch,
“NASA’s Scientist’s Study Quantifies Climate
Change Link to Extreme Guardian,7 August
2012.
45. Jill Fitzsimmons and Shauna Theel,
“Media Ignore Climate Context of Midwest
Floods,” Media Matters, 7 May 2013.
46. Joe Romm, “NPR Airs Story on Melting
Glaciers without Explaining Why They Are
Melting,” Climate Progress, 30 May 2013.
47. Jane Velez-Mitchell, “Let’s Tell the
Truth about Extreme Weather,” CNN, 16 May
2014.
48. Clayton Sandell, “Extreme Weather from
Mother Nature,” ABC News, 24 June 2013.
49. Maria Konnikova, “Hot Heads in Cold
Weather,” New Yorker, 7 February 2014.
50. Gelbspan, “U.S. Press Coverage of the
Climate Crisis.”
51. Wen Stephenson, “A Convenient Excuse,”
The Phoenix, 5 November 2012.
52. Stephan Lewandowsky, “Media Failure on
Iraq War Repeated in Climate Change
Coverage,” Guardian, 6 December 2013.
53. Hartmann, “The Mainstream Media’s
Criminal Climate Coverage”; Gelbspan, “U.S.
Press Coverage of the Climate Crisis”; Joe
Romm, “Climate Change 101: An Introduction,”
Years of Living Dangerously.
54. Paul J. Crutzen, “The Anthropocene: Are
Humans Now Overwhelming the Great Forces of
Nature?” Ambio 36/8 (December, 2007),
614-21; Lester Brown, Plan B 4.0: Mobilizing
to Save Civilization, substantially revised
edition (New York: W. W. Norton, 2009);
Lonnie G. Thompson, “Climate Change: The
Evidence and Our Options,” Behavior Analyst,
33/2 (Fall 2010), 153–70; Al Gore, “Climate
of Denial: Can Science and the Truth
withstand the Merchants of Poison?” Rolling
Stone, June 2011; Lester Brown et al.,
“Presidents Obama, Hu: Declare Global
Climate Emergency, say Green Business
Leaders, NGOs,” Sustainable Business, 19
January 2011; The Blue Planet Laureates,
“Environment and Development Challenges: The
Imperative to Act,”February 20, 2012.
55. Elizabeth Kolbert, Field Notes from a
Catastrophe: Man, Nature, and Climate Change
(Bloomsbury, 2006), 189; Nasheed Fears
‘Suicide Pact’ at Copenhagen,” Agence
France-Presse, 9 November 2009; Paul R.
Ehrlich and Anne H. Ehrlich, “Can a Collapse
of Global Civilization Be Avoided?”
Proceedings of the Royal Society B, 9
January 2013.
56. Tom Engelhardt, “The Biggest Criminal
Enterprise in History,” TomDispatch, 23 May
2013; “Is Climate Change a Crime against
Humanity?” TomDispatch, 22 May 2014.
57. Engelhardt, “The Biggest Criminal
Enterprise in History.”
58. Noam Chomsky and Andre Vitchek, On
Western Terrorism: From Hiroshima to Drone
Warfare (Pluto Press, 2013), 2; Noam
Chomsky, “Destroying the Commons:
How the
Magna Carta Became a Minor Carta,” in
“Tomgram: Noam Chomsky, The Great Charter,
Its Fate, and Ours,” TomDispatch, 22 July
2012.
Copyright © David Ray Griffin