Global Warming: Maybe Denial is Working for Betty and Lou, but it Isn’t for Their Teenagers…by Scott Thompson

Kevin Anderson, a climate scientist at the University of Manchester in the U.K., is one of those humans who somehow never learned to be a proper, timid professional, and is therefore honest to a fault. One of our species’ success stories: may his genes pass on. So it wasn’t surprising that in a lecture in November, 2012, he said, “…the scientific community repeatedly underplays the story. That’s what I’m trying to show here. Very unpopular with some of my colleagues…

“So across the board everyone’s saying we can’t be honest about two degrees C [of warming above pre-industrial]. I was at an event recently, a Chatham House event so I can’t tell you who was there, but a very senior government scientist and someone very senior from an oil company…these very senior people said, ‘Well, I think we’re on for 4 to 6 degrees C, but we just can’t be open about it.’ But that is going on all the time behind the scenes, that somehow we can’t tell the public.”

Shout it, brother: not only is the public not being told that at least a 4 degree C world is hurtling toward us like a Texas-sized asteroid, it also isn’t being told what that world will be like once it hits. So being Kevin Anderson, he tried:

“For those sort of temperatures you may find that there’s no transport network…this is not a world that we know how to contemplate…you’ll see significant reductions, 30% to 40% reductions in some of the staple crops, in maize and rice and so forth…

…There’s a widespread view that a four degrees C future is incompatible with organized global community as we see it today. Particularly with nine billion people and all the other stresses that we face. It’s likely beyond adaptation. Lots of us will not be able to adapt to the impacts…Some of us might be able to adapt but many people won’t and it’s devastating for the majority of ecosystems. Ecosystems always change but this is a
very fast rate of change. Ecosystems are probably not tuned to this rate of change…”

“…for an outside chance of [only] 2 degrees C [of warming]…we need about a 40% reduction in the next three years in our energy consumption…A 70% reduction by 2020 and basically be completely de-carbonized by 2030 – fridges, planes, ships, cars, everything we do…to give a little bit of space for the poorer parts of the world to help them develop and improve their welfare…So…we’ll all say that that’s impossible. The question I was asked…was, well, is living with 4 degrees C temperature rise by 2050 to 2070, is that any less impossible? The future is impossible.”

Other than Anderson’s academic co-author Alice Bows and the Australian academic Clive Hamilton, who based his seminal book Requiem for a Species on Anderson’s work, and of course The Canyon Country Zephyr’s own Doug Meyer, I don’t know of anyone out there who’s been this blunt about what global warming means.

Close are the American stalwarts Dr. James Hansen of NASA and writer Bill McKibben. The difference is that the latter leave more room for hopeful outcomes, which is a cultural expectation. Because in America, with its boosterism and expansive optimism, those who insist on an unvarnished prognosis for global warming run a greater risk of being shunned. In his book Clive Hamilton said, “Optimism as a social norm is
particularly strong in the United States, where the culture of self-help and self-improvement reigns…Optimism is closely tied to the norm of individualism, because it is believed that hopes are realized through personal accomplishments. Although a caricature, it is sometimes said that in the United States a homeless person is just a millionaire temporarily down on his luck.” (pp. 129-130).

Bill Mckibben. photo source.

Bill Mckibben. photo source.

The flip side of expansive optimism, however, is psychological denial, and even a wonderful caricature that lies at one side of a continuum can end in pathology.

Consider this. According to a Rasmussen Reports “Energy Update,” dated February 19, 2013, only 43% of Americans agreed that global warming is primarily caused by human activity. For over four years this figure has remained stuck at this level, even less at times, in spite of overwhelming scientific evidence demonstrating that global warming is both perilous and human-caused.

If people were the rational creatures they pretend to be, not connecting the dots on something this obvious would be evidence of a learning disability. What it is instead, sadly, is evidence of psychological denial bordering on delusion.

I think the pervasiveness of psychological denial within our borders developed in this way. The last thing a critical mass of our elites want to see happen is the prolonged period of planned economic austerity that is necessary for serious progress in addressing the most devastating long-term consequences of global warming. Nor do they want to witness what will happen to massive fossil fuel companies once the market
value of their oil, gas, and coal reserves, the ones that will never be produced or mined because of global warming, collapses.

Brothers and sisters, these people are protecting the golden calf of economic growth and all its key features at all costs.

Kevin Anderson says it: “So it doesn’t matter if we wipe the planet out, if we all die, so long as we’re not interfering with economic growth.”

That’s why it’s no surprise that none of our mainstream politicians (except for Al Gore) have put themselves on the line to inform the people how dire the scientific findings are. Nor is it a surprise that our major media outlets, which are owned by honcho for-profit corporations, continue to play global warming down by giving it spotty, equivocal, and incomplete coverage. Or that money-suffused right wing sources, including fossil fuel companies, have flooded the airways with propaganda as cruel and warped as that of a dictator regime, without meaningful refutation or response.

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But the hi-jinks and self-absorption of the powerful don’t by themselves explain the pervasiveness of psychological denial in America. The other half of this vicious cycle is that people in the street don’t want to hear about what global warming means– truly means – because they’re not interested in scientific findings that question the American Dream of prosperity. They buy those lottery tickets to keep that dream alive.

Interestingly, if there were a mass demand for a public discussion of the stark scientific truth, as unlikely as that now seems, along with a willingness to endure the austerity measures that would follow such honest talk, there are sympathetic elites who would, after first chewing their nails for awhile, stand up and join them.

Elites are people, too.

But denial reigns supreme and Hurricane Sandy hasn’t changed that. It’s only spawned some polished rhetoric and more equivocal proposals.

***

Psychological denial is hiding the truth from yourself. It is a lie. Here is what the eminent psychiatrist Carl Jung said about how lies work on the mind: “The lie is there objectively, either in the conscious or in the unconscious. If I don’t admit it, if I have not assimilated it, it becomes a strange body and will form an abscess in the unconscious.” (Dream Analysis: Notes of the Seminar by C.G. Jung, 1928-30, p. 20).

Carl Jung. image source.

Carl Jung. image source.

We know such an abscess is there in two ways. First, the person will project his or her own dishonesty onto other people, unfairly perceiving negative motivations or attributes within them. We see this in the irrational suspicion of climate scientists that so many people in denial harbor; in some cases even accusing these scientists of a vast conspiracy to invent global warming in order to procure research funding and destroy capitalism. Second, the person will pass the abscess – the lie and its consequences – down to the next generation: to her or his own children. And if the lie is pervasive it will be passed down to children throughout that culture. Jung covered both levels when he said: “…the more unconscious [that is, younger] children are, the more they are under the influence of the collective unconscious, or they may absorb the unconscious problems of their parents.” (p. 19).

Consciously or unconsciously, children know that their well-being and future should come first, and that a parent who fails to honor this ancient obligation of our species has betrayed them.

This betrayal is almost always sealed with a lie. The parents lie to themselves as much as anyone else, because shoving their kids down a chute violates the conscious picture they have of themselves as proper, caring parents. More important, such parents lie to their kids: “Mommy and Daddy love you, honey. You know that.” Thus implying that their children’s needs have priority when their own actions as parents belie this.

Many of the chronically self-destructive behaviors we see in teenagers – heavy drug and alcohol use, self-mutilation, nose-smashing fist fights, suicidal talk and gestures, risky sexual behavior, school failure, and so on – are rageful responses to these lies. The teenager delivers a sarcastic message indeed: “If you don’t care about my future, why should I.

Now for a common example. (Bear with me: we will return to global warming.)

Let’s say mom is an opiate pain pill addict whose boyfriend is her supplier. In this configuration her teenager’s function in life is to keep them out of jail by not bringing down too much scrutiny from school principals, the juvenile court system, and other authority figures in the community. At the same time, mom and her boyfriend are so obsessed with getting high and the ongoing financial drama associated with it, that they utterly fail to give the teenager the consistent, caring attention and supervision that she or he needs to stay out of trouble.

The kid gets it: getting in trouble means getting even.

Anyone growing up with an addicted parent, regardless of the drug – and alcohol is a drug – knows that it is a consuming spirit. And that procuring an ample supply of the drug, while also avoiding the consequences flowing from its use, are the priorities around which the family’s life must revolve. What might benefit the teenager and help him or her feel appreciated and loved, will receive sporadic attention by comparison. Should the teenager turn away from such an insane family mythology in order to embrace honorable values, family members will respond with cold silence if not scorn and derision.

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There is every reason to expect that most of our teenagers will live long enough to experience either a 4 degrees C world or one that’s moving rapidly toward it. We are fools if we think clear-eyed fifteen and sixteen year olds won’t unearth the works of Kevin Anderson, James Hansen, Bill McKibben, and Clive Hamilton, and spread the true word to their friends. At some point teenagers will realize that those of us over 40, maybe over 30, are denying our responsibility for the long-term consequences of our addiction to cheap energy, thereby condemning them to a dire fate so that we can continue to live in carbon-based comfort.

They’ll also realize that we’ll be safely dead by the time the cataclysm hits them.

Consider the following. While we adults are much more able to process difficult emotions and are far better adapted to workaday reality and relationships, teenagers by contrast are superior in the creativity and flexibility of their perceptions, giving them a knack for seeing through false and obsolete paradigms that we adults often lose. Teenagers also have a superior adaptation to technology, giving them an unlimited capacity to find out virtually anything.

I think two responses by adolescents to the specter of psychological denial are predictable. First, at some point there will be an explosion of adolescent self-destructive behaviors compared to today. If you think multi-drug abuse, including opiate pain pills, is rife among teenagers now – along with the overdose deaths – just wait awhile.

Much of this first response will shade into an utter indifference to what anyone over age 30 thinks. Teenagers will meet adults’ demands for responsible behavior with open contempt.

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The second response is psychological adaptation, which I feel is already beginning. It works as follows. About a hundred years ago Carl Jung came to believe that that the unconscious has a prospective function. He found that dreams, for example, have an uncanny knack for indicating what circumstances a person is likely to face in the future.

The unconscious expresses itself in stories and symbolic images rather than literalistic or rational language. Once you know the difference, popular speculative fiction books and movies, which are loaded with archetypal images, not only tell an entertaining story, but also indicate what the collective unconscious is anticipating. Thus they yield remarkable insights, but on the other hand they are insights that deconstruct rather than bolster psychological denial.

Small wonder they’re not more widely sought.

Dystopian romance novels are written for and marketed to teenagers. Hunger Games is the best known but there are many. And they sell. In these novels the protagonist is an adolescent girl, sometimes a boy, struggling to survive in an oppressive, faltering society that is plainly hostile both to her individuality and survival. In these societies the adult leaders are corrupt, oppressive, and deathly destructive. The teenage characters must rely solely on their inner, that is archetypal, resources and each other to begin to build a new world. My picks are Under the Never Sky, by Veronica Rossi, and Yesterday, by C.K. Kelly Martin, a Canadian.

Given that we’re putting our teenagers on the fast track for 4 degrees C, their unconscious seems to be preparing them for what’s ahead.

Certainly we’re not.

Note: the excerpts by Kevin Anderson are from his lecture,

“Real Clothes for the Emperor: Facing the Challenges of Climate

Change,” which he gave on November 6, 2012. You can find it on

YouTube by typing in “Kevin Anderson Annual Cabot Institute

Lecture 2012.” A transcript can be found at www.ecoshockinfo/

2012/11/kevin-anderson-what-they-wont-tell-you.html.

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To read the PDF version of this article, click here. and here.

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3 comments for “Global Warming: Maybe Denial is Working for Betty and Lou, but it Isn’t for Their Teenagers…by Scott Thompson

  1. Ron Parry
    April 1, 2013 at 11:20 am

    Hi Scott,

    Terrific article. I stumbled across the Kevin Anderson lecture you mention a few weeks ago. The reality of climate change is quite devastating to think about. Your article raises an issue I have been thinking about myself, namely, what will happen when a whole generation of young people, say 10 years out, wakes up to the realization that they have no future because the world has waited too long to aggressively deal with climate change. I suspect the results will be very grim indeed.

  2. Bruce Berryhill
    April 20, 2013 at 12:18 am

    The sky is falling!! In 50 or 100 years… Stop worrying about what might happen and do something today. Grow a garden.

  3. Scott Thompson
    April 26, 2013 at 3:36 pm

    You know, it’s kinda awesome how creative we humans are proving to be in avoiding the urgent and painful issue we most need to face. Gardening? Sure! We can stick our heads in the dirt and lettuce leaves as easily as we can in the sand.

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