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by JohnnyRook
[A couple of days ago I finally took the leap and started my own blog, Climaticide Chronicles. Below, by way of an introduction, I have reprinted my welcoming post from Climaticide Chronicles in the hope that some of you might be interested enough to do me the honor of visiting
Welcome to the Climaticide Chronicles, a blog about politics, society, science and ethics with special attention to global warming and climate change. Climaticide is a term that I coined several months ago (only afterwards did I learn that the term already existed in French but with a narrower meaning [pdf] to describe the human-driven destruction of our Holocene-epoch climate, the climate in which our civilization has developed, thrived and prospered, and which we now threaten to irrevocably alter without regard to the consequences.
I chose Climaticide for several reasons: 1) It accurately describes what we humans are doing to our current climate, which is, quite simply, killing it. 2) It's a catchy, easy to remember term (IMHO) 3) It avoids the ambiguity of other expressions such as global warming, which many people find confusing ("It's not getting warmer where I live. Hell, we got a lot of snow here in the Pacific Northwest this winter. It's June now and it's still cold") and climate change, which doesn't sound sufficiently scary or urgent ("Not all change is bad, you know? "Maybe they'll be able to grow watermelons in Helsinki...") expressing instead a plainly obvious evil. (The Concise Oxford English Dictionary defines the suffix "-cide" "as denoting an act of killing") and 4) it's a perfectly apt descriptor not only of the process but also of the perpetrators: we are the climaticides, the killers of our climate. (Second COED definition of -cide: "denoting a person or substance that kills") Now, obviously, we will not destroy climate per se. What we may do however is destroy the climate to which we are so well adapted. If we fail to take the measures necessary to avoid that destruction (first limiting, then reducing our emission of CO2 and other greenhouse gases into the environment) we will create a world that is, at best, much less hospitable to human civilization, and, in the worst case , one in which not only human civilization but our survival as a species may well be impossible. In her famous, fantasy novel A Wizard of Earthsea, Ursula Le Guin explores the power of what she calls "true names". In Earthsea everything has two names only one of which is "true" or real. In order for a wizard or mage to have power over some object or person, he must know it's true name. If one does not know the true name of something one cannot control it. This is true in our world as well. Why have oil, coal, and gas companies and utilities spent so many millions to confuse the public about Climaticide? The answer is simple: they do not want us to know the true name and nature of the crisis we face. They want us to think that Climaticide is "natural", slow acting, or too nebulous a concept for scientists ever to agree upon. They avoid calling things by their true names because they know that if we do not know the true names we will not be wise enough to act. I use the term Climaticide because it is the true name of the crisis that threatens us. As the poet Thich Nhat Hanh has shown, calling things by their true names makes us aware of their complexity and wary of simplistic solutions.
Call Me by My True Names In the Climaticide Chronicles my goal will always be to call things by their true names, for how we fare from now on is more dependent than ever on our being able to see and say the true names of things. I look forward to your help in discerning those names and then taking the necessary actions.
Thus it happens in affairs of state, for when the evils that arise have been foreseen (which it is only given to a wise man to see), they can be quickly redressed, but when, through not having been foreseen, they have been permitted to grow in a way that every one can see them. there is no longer a remedy [Niccoló Machiavelli, The Prince]
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Why Call it "Climaticide"? The Power of True Names | 0 comments (0 topical, 0 editorial, 0 hidden)
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