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Wednesday, May 21, 2008
Jonah Goldberg :: Townhall.com Columnist
The Church of Green
by Jonah Goldberg
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Who won Tuesday's presidential debate?


I admit it: I'm no environmentalist. But I like to think I'm something of a conservationist.

No doubt for millions of Americans this is a distinction without a difference, as the two words are usually used interchangeably. But they're different things, and the country would be better off if we sharpened the distinctions between both word and concept.

At its core, environmentalism is a kind of nature worship. It's a holistic ideology, shot through with religious sentiment. "If you look carefully," author Michael Crichton observed, "you see that environmentalism is in fact a perfect 21st century remapping of traditional Judeo-Christian beliefs and myths."

Environmentalism's most renewable resources are fear, guilt and moral bullying. Its worldview casts man as a sinful creature who, through the pursuit of forbidden knowledge, abandoned our Edenic past. John Muir, who laid the philosophical foundations of modern environmentalism, described humans as "selfish, conceited creatures." Salvation comes from shedding our sins, rejecting our addictions (to oil, consumerism, etc.) and demonstrating an all-encompassing love of Mother Earth. Quoth Al Gore: "The climate crisis is not a political issue; it is a moral and spiritual challenge to all of humanity."

I heard Gore on NPR recently. He was asked about evangelical pastor Joseph Hagee's absurd comment that Hurricane Katrina was God's wrath for New Orleans' sexual depravity. Naturally, Gore chuckled at such backwardness. But then the Nobel laureate went on to blame Katrina on man's energy sinfulness. It struck me that the two men are not so different. If only canoodling Big Easy residents had adhered to "The Greenpeace Guide to Environmentally Friendly Sex."

Environmentalists insist that their movement is a secular one. But using the word "secular" no more makes you secular than using the word "Christian" automatically means you behave like a Christian. Pioneering green lawyer Joseph Sax describes environmentalists as "secular prophets, preaching a message of secular salvation." Gore, too, has been dubbed a "prophet." A green-themed California hotel provides Gore's "An Inconvenient Truth" next to the Bible and a Buddhist tome.

Whether or not it's adopted the trappings of religion, my biggest beef with environmentalism is how comfortably irrational it is. It touts ritual over reality, symbolism over substance, while claiming to be so much more rational and scientific than those silly sky-God worshipers and deranged oil addicts.

It often seems that displaying faith in the green cause is more important than advancing the green cause. The U.S. government just put polar bears on the threatened species list because climate change is shrinking the Arctic ice where they live. Never mind that polar bears are in fact thriving - their numbers have quadrupled in the last 50 years. Never mind that full implementation of the Kyoto protocols on greenhouse gases would save exactly one polar bear, according to Danish social scientist Bjorn Lomborg, author of the book "Cool It!" Continued...

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About The Author
Jonah Goldberg is editor-at-large of National Review Online.
 
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Subject: Rohanlady

Rohan - We don't have the Freedom to Chose (to use Milton Friedman's phrase). Most would chosee to mitigarte energy costs in a competative innovation market. Current regulation and subsidy doesn't allow for rapid innovation. It stiffles initiative.

There is no ascendancy of the best product because governemnt gets in the way.

My conservatism
I'm a Christian and for years called myself a closet environmentalist. Now I'll call myself a conservationist.

We moved to the country 2 years ago to 1.8 mostly wooded acres. I drive 30 miles one way to work, but my car is a bare-bones Corolla. If its not necessary, we have the heat/AC off and the windows open. I have a large garden this year even though I hate gardening. Its being helped by the goodies from my compost bin and not a commercial fertilizer or pesticide is used. We also have 30 chickens in our backyard and when they come of age this summer I'll be introducing fresh eggs to my co-workers and friends and making back a little of the cost it takes to feed my birds, though they free range during the day.

Yes we eat out and buy junk food and have TVs, computers, Wii, cell-phones and all the other trappings of modern living. Still, I like doing *my part*, BUT - its voluntary. It irks the dickens out of me that someone might legislate what I do because they think they know better than I do. Even now stupid laws don't allow me to call my chicken eggs organic because they *gasp* eat meat (bugs, mice, etc). But I'll put their eggs over any eggs you can find in any supermarket anywhere.
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