By John Kanelis / johnkanelis_92@hotmail.com
We have reached critical mass, it appears to me, on the issue of climate change.
There should be no more debate on what to do “when the time comes.” It has come. We’re there. Earth’s climate, I fear, has changed to the point that it might be too late to stop the effect we human beings are having on the planet we call home.
That, however, shouldn’t preclude our efforts to try to do something. Anything! We need to find solutions to stop what is happening to us in real time.
That Bootleg Fire in Oregon? It’s now creating its own weather system as it scorches more than 600 square miles of my home state. Icebergs the size of small U.S. states continue to break off Antarctica, drifting into the Southern Ocean and continuing to contribute to the rising sea levels around the world. We continue to emit too many carbon gases, diminishing the oxygen supply that is supposed to help cool our dear planet.
Oh, and this story needs to be covered more intently: Third World countries continue to destroy millions of acres of forestland, depriving animals of their habitat and, of course, depriving the atmosphere its primary source for oxygen.
The fire seasons are raging out of control. They are arriving sooner, it seems, each year. They are burning more intensely.
What is the world’s most indispensable to do about it? Our Congress is tying itself up in knots over climate change. Republicans still don’t want to confront it. Democrats see the urgency but are fighting among themselves over the scope and breadth of what to do legislatively.
Meanwhile, President Biden is trying to include climate change into an infrastructure package he wants enacted as soon as humanly possible.
This dithering, dawdling and debating isn’t helping us deal with a problem that is destroying our planet in real time.
Let’s get busy.