The environmentalist against modernity

Jerry Rogers:
Environmental activist Bill McKibben played an integral role in the White House's decision to block the Keystone XL pipeline. Now, Mckibben has a new project: Get universities to divest from fossil fuels.

McKibben's website makes his case clearly enough: "We can burn 565 more gigatons of carbon and stay below 2°C of warming -- anything more than that risks catastrophe for life on earth ... Fossil fuel corporations now have 2,795 gigatons in their reserves, five times the safe amount. And they're planning to burn it all -- unless we rise up to stop them."

This is a fool's errand. Fossil fuels provide over 80 percent of the energy used in the United States, and they're expected to continue to provide the bulk of our power for decades. But McKibben's environmentalism has never been about what's practical -- or effective. There's a myopic radicalism underlying his agenda, which is pretty obvious from his own public statements -- often a bit too sincere for his own good.

McKibben has explicitly said that "I don't think everyone can live a middle-class American lifestyle all over the world, including middle-class Americans ..."

This was his advice to the hundreds of millions of Americans that use their cars to commute to work: "If you carpooled [six miles per day], you'd have about three pounds of CO2 left in your daily ration -- enough to run a highly efficient refrigerator. Forget your computer, your TV, your stereo, your stove, your dishwasher, your water heater, your microwave, your water pump, your clock. Forget your light bulbs, compact fluorescent or not."

It gets worse. This the alternate food reality McKibben wants for America: "Local, labor-intensive, low-input agriculture." And this is how he sells it: "You'll be standing guard over your vegetable path with your shotgun, warding off the marauding gang that's after your carrots." Yes, seriously: A man that has heavy sway in the Obama White House wants you to drop that grocery bag and go load up on bullets and carrot seeds.

According to McKibben's twisted math, the poorer we are, the better for the planet, because "one-seventieth the income means one-seventieth the damage to the planet." And he doesn't just want to shrink our incomes. He's also looking to shrink the size of human civilization overall. As he's put it, his environmental vision means "the human population would need to get gradually smaller."
... 
There is more.

Has someone taped McKibben's light switch into the off position  and pulled the plug on most of his appliances.  Does he still drive a car?   Frankly I would rather be a few degrees warmer than live the way people like McKibben have in mind for us.

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