Don't you just love it
when a problem occurs and the one who caused says something like, "Now is
not the time to talk about it."
Huh?
Such as when Harvey
hit Houston, a hurricane made into a monster by the extra-warm Gulf of Mexico,
and all that additional warmth in the ocean produced by human-caused climate
change. Streets became rivers, houses and people were swept away.
Hurricane Irma leveled
towns roared through the Caribbean, twisting and killing in September.
Fossil fuel burning--oil,
gasoline, natural gas--warmed the air, warmed the ocean, and what did Trump’s
EPA head, Scott
Pruitt say? Now is not the time to
talk about climate change.
Seriously. That is exactly the best time to talk about it.
When cities are inundated is when folks need to know why. Floridians want to
know if there is any way to prevent unprecedented storm surges and record
sustained winds sometimes nearing 200 mph, ripping off roofs and flattening
trees and buildings.
When conflagrations
are burning down the astonishingly beautiful forests of the Pacific Northwest,
when iconic parklands
and treasured places are in flames and we cannot breathe, when we wake up
in my town of Portland and everything is covered with the ash from these
firestorms, that is precisely when we need to talk about changing course and
fixing this.
Now 59 people shot
dead and more than 530 wounded from automatic gunfire and what does Sarah
Huckabee Sanders, the White
House spokesperson say in response to questions about gun control?
"Now is not the time to talk about it."
Hogwash. It is precisely the time to talk about it.
Why, indeed, does
Donald Trump immediately tweet about his travel ban and wall after every news
item about either a terror attack anywhere on Earth or an undocumented Hispanic
person getting a parking ticket (this
is almost not exaggerated)?
Time to talk. Time to
study. Time to act.
Seriously address
anthropogenic climate chaos. Reward clean energy. Rapidly phase out Keystone
pipeline dirty tar sands oil. Rapidly phase out coal-burning
electric-generating plants. Radically reduce the highly fossil-fuel-consuming
US foreign military presence and thus carbon footprint. Now.
Repeal the Stupid
Second Amendment. That is how citizens, towns and states can regain their
rights. As it is, when a city tries to ban certain weapons the NRA rolls in
with their kill squad and finds plaintiffs to sue. The Supreme Court
eventually says, hey, no local or state control for you--it's in the
Constitution. Gun rights trump human rights.
Ironically, those who
historically clamor for states' rights are now the ones smashing states' rights.
They wanted states' rights to discriminate against various races, genders,
sexual identities, and unions, most notably in the infamous U.S. Supreme Court 1857 Dred Scott decision in favor of slaveowners but many times since. Now,
hypocritically, they want to do away
with a state's right to ban as many proven killer weapons as they wish.
Some of us want to
live amongst others in civil society in which issues are resolved without guns,
where someone with a concealed mental health issue cannot carry a concealed
weapon--because no one is carrying
weapons in that town.
Some want to live in
states with essentially no limits to weapon ownership short of a nuclear bomb.
Great. Good luck with that, Texas and Idaho. But when Chicago--formerly the
murder capital of the US before it banned certain guns--tries to pass bans on
some guns and they are
told they cannot, that the ban is lifted, what sort of freedom is that?
Guns do not produce
freedom; guns are often the direct enemy of freedom. Each locality needs its
freedom back, the freedom as it defines it.
Now is the time to talk about it.
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