By Danny Bloom
CHIAYI CITY, Taiwan â" I cannot see the future and Iâm no prophet, but I have seen the future â" so to speak â" and itâs dank, dark and dystopian.
In 500 years, if we do not tame climate change and global warming worldwide, Israel will be no more and the entire Middle East will be unoccupied by human beings.
Yes, by 2500, Israel will be no more if we do not stop global warming in its tracks now. Itâs written on the wind, and scientists, many of them Jewish, know it.
Did you know that the Hebrew name for Al Goreâs climate change documentary An Inconvenient Truth is Emet Matridah? Yes, and it means âThe Truth That Terrifies.â
Okay, not everyone wants to sit at Mr. Goreâs table, and not all Jews believe in global warming. Some are vociferous critics of the climate ideas of James Hansen and James Lovelock. But there are also many Jewish scientists and climate activists who âget itâ and understand that the very fate of humanity is in question.
Will humans exist a thousand years from now? Will there be any Jews alive?
Will the human species be extinct by then? These are deeply Jewish questions, and I pose them here as a deeply Jewish climate activist and journalist.
Okay, you donât have to agree with me. You may even want to criticize me and ridicule me. Thatâs fine. I am all ears and all points of view are welcome at my home. But let me tell you this, as a modern-day Jeremiah: Godâs creation, the Earth and His people, are at risk because of what we are doing to the His creation with excessive CO2 emissions and other man-made global warming impacts.
So what am I doing about all this? Well, to make a long story short, last year, as a newbie book producer, I commissioned novelist Jim Laughter in Oklahoma to write a book about mankindâs shaky future on this third rock from the sun, and he said yes. Â The novel, titled Polar City Red, is out now, in paperback and on Kindle, and the entire story, from page one to the final paragraph, belongs to Mr. Laughter. His name is on the book cover, not mine, and all profits, if
any, go to him. Itâs his book. But itâs my vision.
What did I do? I gave the book its title, and I suggested, as a former 12-year Alaskan resident, its theme and its setting in Fairbanks. Jim wrote the entire yarn, creating his own cast of characters and giving it his own time frame. I originally suggested setting it in 2500, some 30 generations from now. Jim decided to set the story in 2075, to give it a more immediate and closer to home feel. He was right to do so.
Having read the book as it was being written chapter by chapter, and again as a completed paperback, I can tell you this: climate denialists are going to say itâs not science, and die-hard climate activists are going to say itâs just fiction.
Jews are going to be of two minds, too: Some will champion the novel and see it as a book of prophecy that we need pay attention to, and others, equally eloquent, will give the book a bad grade and send the author to the back of the room. Me? I support and champion Mr.
Laughterâs vision completely, and I feel this small novel could be one of the most important novels ever written by a human being.
Laughterâs âpolar Westernâ is set in Alaska just 60 years from now, and it poses a very important and headline-mirroring question: Will mankind survive the âclimapocalypseâ coming our way as the Earth heats up over the next few centuries? The end is not coming in 100 years, but it might happen by 2500 A.D.
What do the rabbis have to say about all this? They are listening to the climate debate and boning up on the science, and some are already giving sermons on the issue and writing their own blog posts about it.
In Jimâs novel, sea levels rise and millions of âclimate refugeesâ make their way north to Alaska and Canada. Think scavenger camps, âMad Maxâ villages, and U.N.-administered âpolar citiesâ â" cities of domes, as the author calls them.
Polar City Red  is more than mere science fiction. Laughter, a retired grandfather of four, comes across as a probing moralist and a modern Jeremiah. His worldview befits a former Christian pastor who built two churches and finds in his inherited religion both an anchor and a place for hope.
And his book is not just about climate change or northern dystopias. Itâs also about the moral questions that must guide humanity as it tries to keep a lid on global warmingâs worst-case scenarios while also looking for solutions to mankindâs worst nightmare: the possible
final extinction of the human species due to manâs own folly and extravagant ways. This is where the rabbis come in: they need to speak up about the morality and ethics of fighting climate change as a Jewish moral imperative, pro or con.
Can a small, 150-page novel have much of any impact of the world at large? No, itâs just entertainment, fiction, science fiction, a good book to put on your summer reading list. But Iâve already gotten feelers from Hollywood producers in Los Angeles and an Indian director in Mumbai. This story of polar cities has legs. Donât dismiss me out of hand. Read the book first and then say your say.
Writing the novel took Laughter seven months of research and keyboarding, but I have a feeling that what he wrote will last 100 years or more. Itâs not a specifically Jewish book and the author is not Jewish. But the vision came out of this Jewish climate activistâs deeply rooted compassion for the future. I care about 500 years from now. I care about people 50 generations from now. Why? Because Iâm Jewish, thatâs why.
Polar City Red is more than a âcli-fiâ thriller. It also exposes the underbelly of humankindâs most terrifying nightmare: the possible end of the human species and Godâs deep displeasure at what His people have done to His Earth.
The book is prophetic, futuristic and moralistic. As a reader, you will get through this nightmare alive. But will our descendants, those in Alaska and Canada and Norway â" where most Israelis will have fled to in 500 years â" survive the Long Emergency we find ourselves in now? Thatâs the question that Jim Laughter poses. And you donât have to believe in global warming to enjoy the story. And you donât have to be Jewish to understand the dire straits we are in.
I can tell you this: the book ends on a note of hope and redemption, so itâs not a downer at all. Polar City Red might inspire you or it might annoy you, but as the world heads closer and closer to climate chaos, even in Israel, whose very future is at stake due to climate change, Laughterâs book sounds an ominous note.
However, not everyone agrees with me on this, and one of my most perceptive critics, David Brin, whose insightful columns on science often appear here in the San Diego Jewish World, too, is one of them.
He said in a recent email that while he admires the passion that I bring to the issue of human-wrought climate change, and specifically global warming, he is much more optimistic, noting, among other things that he is less pessimistic than I am.  He said: âI do not perceive global climate change rendering Israel or Jews or Humanity extinct. On the other hand, I consider that exaggeration to be vastly more sane than the opposite reaction, of ostriches who bury their heads in the sand while declaring all of the smartest folk in our civilization to be the fools.
âThe continuing War on Science now has expanded to include every knowledge clade in American life. Â Journalists, school teachers, skilled labor, economists, civil servants, diplomats, judges, professors. I can name only two centers of intellect in American life that are not under direct attack by a relentless propaganda machine. Â Indeed, scientists are not being undermined in order to distract from global warming. Â Rather, climate change is being trumped up as an issue in order to denigrate science.â
âIt should not be an issue.  Seven percent of all the men and women who understand the equations and have studied the data have recommended that we take prudent â" economically sound â" measures to mitigate a potentially dangerous situation that could seriously affect the lives and livelihood of our children.  These sensible men and women, many of whom I know personally, who have studied climate on twelve planets, know a heckuva lot more about this than we do, yet fanatics are saying âIgnore expert advice! Go to witch doctors instead!â
âLet us get this straight. Â These are the brilliant minds who transformed the weather report from a four-hour joke to a ten-day reliable forecast, saving us billions every year. Â If you despise them, then stop relying on their forecasts.
âEspecially since the recommendations do not amount to âsitting in the dark and shivering while ruining the economy.â Nobody wants that. Not even hippies.  There are prudent measures we could take now, to prevent the worst mass extinction event in 65 million years. â
âThis is political.  It is a putsch by the same Junkers feudal caste that foisted Hitler on the German people⦠âin order to prevent socialism.â  It is a Big Lie campaign by the feudal aristocracy that started and maintained the diaspora for 2000 yearsâ
âI am an optimist, unlike Danny Bloom. Â I believe we can convince our neighbors to shut off the Fox lie machine and come back into the light, where adults argue and negotiate honorably, listen to expert advice, and then work together to solve problems. Â Like grownups.â
I understand what Mr. Brin has written above, and I appreciate his feedback. He is right, too.
*
Danny Bloom is a former editor of Alaskaâs Capital City Weekly and now works as a book producer and packager in Taiwan. His climate blog is available, here.
http://pcillu101.blogspot.com
Short URL: http://www.sdjewishworld.com/?p=28604
No comments:
Post a Comment