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	<title>Comments on: McKibben writes: &#8220;Let&#8217;s Win the War on Warming&#8221;</title>
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		<title>By: Bill McKibben</title>
		<link>https://www.frackcheckwv.net/2016/08/17/mckibben-writes-lets-win-the-war-on-warming/#comment-189581</link>
		<dc:creator>Bill McKibben</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Wed, 17 Aug 2016 14:55:55 +0000</pubDate>
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		<description>&lt;strong&gt;Normally in wartime, defeatism is a great sin&lt;/strong&gt;. Luckily, though, you can’t give aid and comfort to carbon; it has no morale to boost. So we can be totally honest. We’ve waited so long to fight back in this war that total victory is impossible, and total defeat can’t be ruled out. 

While the Democrats were meeting in that depressing St. Louis hotel room last June, I had my laptop open. Even as they voted down one measure after another to combat climate change, news kept coming in from the front lines:

&lt;strong&gt;In Japan&lt;/strong&gt;, 700,000 people were told to evacuate their homes after record rainfall led to severe flooding and landslides. The deluge continued for five days; at its peak, nearly six inches of rain were falling every hour.

&lt;strong&gt;In California&lt;/strong&gt;, thousands of homes were threatened in a wildfire described by the local fire chief as “one of the most devastating I’ve ever seen.” Suburban tracts looked like Dresden after the bombing. Planes and helicopters buzzed overhead, dropping bright plumes of chemical retardants; if the “Flight of the Valkyries” had been playing, it could have been a scene from Apocalypse Now.

&lt;strong&gt;And in West Virginia&lt;/strong&gt;, a “one in a thousand year” storm dropped historic rain across the mountains, triggering record floods that killed dozens. “You can see people in the second-story windows waiting to be evacuated,” one local official reported. A particularly dramatic video—a kind of YouTube Guernica for our moment—showed a large house being consumed by flames as it was swept down a rampaging river until it crashed into a bridge. “Everybody lost everything,” one dazed resident said. “We never thought it would be this bad.” A state trooper was even more succinct. “It looks like a war zone,” he said.

Because it is. &lt;strong&gt;It is now a war&lt;/strong&gt;!   

Sincerely, Bill McKibben

(Want to join the fight against climate change? Sign up on www.350.org )

&lt;&gt;</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><strong>Normally in wartime, defeatism is a great sin</strong>. Luckily, though, you can’t give aid and comfort to carbon; it has no morale to boost. So we can be totally honest. We’ve waited so long to fight back in this war that total victory is impossible, and total defeat can’t be ruled out. </p>
<p>While the Democrats were meeting in that depressing St. Louis hotel room last June, I had my laptop open. Even as they voted down one measure after another to combat climate change, news kept coming in from the front lines:</p>
<p><strong>In Japan</strong>, 700,000 people were told to evacuate their homes after record rainfall led to severe flooding and landslides. The deluge continued for five days; at its peak, nearly six inches of rain were falling every hour.</p>
<p><strong>In California</strong>, thousands of homes were threatened in a wildfire described by the local fire chief as “one of the most devastating I’ve ever seen.” Suburban tracts looked like Dresden after the bombing. Planes and helicopters buzzed overhead, dropping bright plumes of chemical retardants; if the “Flight of the Valkyries” had been playing, it could have been a scene from Apocalypse Now.</p>
<p><strong>And in West Virginia</strong>, a “one in a thousand year” storm dropped historic rain across the mountains, triggering record floods that killed dozens. “You can see people in the second-story windows waiting to be evacuated,” one local official reported. A particularly dramatic video—a kind of YouTube Guernica for our moment—showed a large house being consumed by flames as it was swept down a rampaging river until it crashed into a bridge. “Everybody lost everything,” one dazed resident said. “We never thought it would be this bad.” A state trooper was even more succinct. “It looks like a war zone,” he said.</p>
<p>Because it is. <strong>It is now a war</strong>!   </p>
<p>Sincerely, Bill McKibben</p>
<p>(Want to join the fight against climate change? Sign up on www.350.org )</p>
<p>&lt;&gt;</p>
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