(Despite Alexander Cockburn, Counterpunch continues to publish excellent
material about global warming. The author of this piece is for my money
the most brilliant environmental historian on the scene today.)

Counterpunch Weekend Edition
June 30 / July 1, 2007
Which City is Worse Off Today: New York or New Orleans?
Fiddling While America Sizzles

By DONALD WORSTER

The United States is the richest, most powerful nation in history --
this you have heard many times before. What you have not heard so often
is that America has also been, for nearly 200 years, the safest, most
secure nation ever. Far from being aware of that fact and enjoying it,
we have become a nation filled with fear and anxiety. But we fear the
wrong invader.

Not since the British burned our capital in 1814 has a foreign army
succeeded in invading our continental domain. Pearl Harbor lay thousands
of miles from our mainland homes. And the World Trade Center bombing was
no real invasion or victory of a foreign power, but one act by a handful
of fanatics, all killed. Their brothers are hiding in caves along the
Pakistan-Afghanistan border, no more able to invade America, if we keep
our eyes open, than camels could take over our national parks.

Yet a far more serious threat has appeared that our leaders are
ignoring. It is global climate change. And it has the potential to bring
the United States down economically, socially and agriculturally, making
us a much poorer and weaker nation.

In February the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change released its
latest major report of scientific data. Based on the greenhouse gases
already affecting the atmosphere, and on expected increases in those
gases under various economic scenarios, the IPCC projects -- too
cautiously, many say -- that the Earth's overall surface temperature
will rise 3 to 7 degrees by the end of this century, and the sea may
rise almost 2 feet.

In an April IPCC report, world policy-makers were told to expect
long-term flooding of coastal areas, more intense tropical storms,
increased drought in drought-prone areas, and a decline in crop
productivity with increased risk of hunger.

Here is where the danger comes to the United States: Not only may we be
forced to protect people on the coasts, or move them inland, we will
also be in great danger of losing our agricultural heartland -- the Corn
Belt and the Wheat Belt. Today, half of our wheat crop goes overseas. In
a few decades we may not have enough food to support our own population,
let alone share with others.

And our Western cities may be paying a lot more for water, if they can
find any, than for the last drops of oil.

We are most threatened today, not by terrorists, but by impersonal
physical forces. And as the century goes on, that invasion will gather
speed and effect with biological threats like invasive plants and malaria.

Such talk, we are told, is scare mongering. We also are told that
defensive measures would cost too much.

Yet which place is worse off today? New York, which lost two major
buildings and thousands of lives to terrorists? Or New Orleans, which
lost many lives as well and may never recover much of its displaced
population or destroyed territory after being hit by a hurricane that
drew its energy from warming gulf waters?

And how can we not afford to invest in conservation and alternative
energy sources to defend our own land against the ravages of global
climate change, but afford to fight wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, which
cost $120 billion a year? And pay four to five times that, depending on
the calculation, for the military as a whole? And spend more than $40
billion more on the Homeland Security Department?

All that money to defend a country that is the most secure and safe in
the world from outside human invasion!

Our homeland is facing a change of unprecedented danger, one that we
have helped create by wasteful consumption. This is likely to be the
greatest threat to security and prosperity in our history.

When will our leaders stop beating the drums about "a war on terrorism"
and start facing the real dangers we face? When will they wake up and
take action -- today, this year? Will they wait until Washington is
under water and the Great Plains are a burning desert?

Donald Worster is an environmental historian at the University of
Kansas. He is the author of Dust Bowl: the Southern Plains in the 1930s,
Nature's Economy, and Rivers of Empire: Water, Aridity and the American
West.

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