Friday, December 15, 2023

Crises within Crises

For this blog post, I originally intended to write only about COP28, the international meeting dealing with the ever-growing environmental crisis. Then, I read powerful opinion pieces by Robert Kagan and became alarmed at the expanding political crisis in the U.S.

But how can we neglect to consider the crises in Gaza, Ukraine, and other countries where warfare continues, such as in Myanmar and Sudan that get far less press coverage? In addition, there are millions of individuals in our world who are facing personal crises of various sorts.

Indeed, there are crises within crises that threaten the well-being and even the survival of individuals, nations, and the world civilization as a whole. Please think with me about these crises, beginning with the outer circle that includes the whole world and moving down to the inner circle of individuals. 

The ever-growing environmental crisis was the central concern of COP28, which met in Dubai, the largest city in the United Arab Emirates, from Nov. 30 to Dec. 12.*1 The first COP meeting, convened in Berlin, was in 1995 and there have been yearly meetings since then.

As I have repeatedly pointed out over the last two years, the current ecological predicament is a crisis that threatens the very existence of the world as we know it (TWAWKI). Some progress was made toward alleviating the global environmental crisis at COP28, but it’s probably too little too late.*2

There will be dire consequences for most of the world’s population if drastic changes are not made soon, which is highly unlikely. This is the existential crisis in which all the other crises exist.

The wars in Ukraine and Israel/Gaza are crises for people living in those areas of the world. But there is an ongoing possibility that they will expand into larger wars. In the worst-case scenario, either of these wars could conceivably escalate into World War III.

These crises are rather localized now, but they might conceivably enlarge to rival the ecological crisis as an existential threat to TWAWKI.

Within these two larger crises is the political crisis in the United States. While this crisis is only brewing at present, there is a real and present danger of democracy being replaced in the U.S. with a form of fascism.

I had not been aware of scholar and journalist Robert Kagan until this month, but he is an editor at large for The Washington Post (WaPo) and has been a foreign policy adviser to U.S. Republican presidential candidates as well as to Democratic administrations via the Foreign Affairs Policy Board.

During the 2016 U.S. presidential election campaign, Kagan (b. 1958) left the Republican Party due to the party's nomination of Donald Trump and endorsed Hillary Clinton for president.

Kagan’s Nov. 30 and Dec. 7 WaPo articles were titled “A Trump dictatorship is increasingly inevitable. We should stop pretending,” and “The Trump dictator-ship: How to stop it.” (These are long pieces, but well worth reading and reflecting on.)

Some Republican politicians are sounding the same warning. For example, former Congresswoman Liz Cheney's new book (released Dec. 5) is titled Oath and Honor: A Memoir and a Warning. (Hear her talk about that in this Dec. 4 interview on NPR.)

On Dec. 10, Sen. Mitt Romney, the Republican presidential candidate in 2012, expressed the same sentiment, although more mildly, on “Meet the Press.”*3

There is a lot that can happen between now and Election Day next November, but USAmericans must be aware of the danger of losing their democracy—and minorities, the poor, and the underprivileged are the ones who would suffer most under a non-democratic government.

We common people may not be able to do much about the ecological crisis or the crisis in Ukraine or Gaza, but we do have the power to vote and to encourage our friends and neighbors to be informed and to vote accordingly.

The inner circle is the crisis of individuals who are suffering from illness, poverty, discrimination, or personal tragedies. We pray that many of these people will experience new hope during this Christmas season. Who is one such person you can help between now and December 25?

_____

*1 COP stands for the Conference of the Parties to the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change. (Click here to access the UNFCCC website.)

*2 Here is the link to a helpful summary of the mixed results of COP28 on The Guardian’s Dec. 14 website.

*3 See here; Romney’s discussion of this matter begins at about 7 min. 45 sec. into the program. 

11 comments:

  1. The first comments received this morning (before 6 a.m.!) were from local Thinking Friend Joseph Ndifor. He wrote,

    "Good morning, Prof! Yes, Robert Kagan is a great scholar. I've read many of his writings. On authoritarianism, there was a fascinating article that Kagan wrote about two years ago titled 'The return of the strongmen.' An amazing author!"

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    1. Thanks, Joseph, for reading and responding to my blog post early this morning. The breadth and depth of your reading continues to impress me.

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  2. Thinking Friend Mike Greer in Kentucky shares these thought-provoking comments:

    "Excellent. I find any celebration to be somewhat obscene these days. The crisis at the border is indicative of how dire the climate crisis is for the vulnerable of this world. Most are fleeing an impending death that an accelerated climate collapse is making life impossible in the poorest countries of the world. The reality is that they are leaving areas that contribute the least to environmental pollution and destruction. Biden's role in the creation of a hell on earth in Gaza leaves me with little hope for the Democratic party here. I am wondering if he does not have a case of moral dementia or if he just fears the potential for an apocalypse in the middle east. Most Christians here are looking away from the hellish reality of Gaza and Ukraine. I see the snapshots of dead and torn bodies of the women and children there and hope is not on my plate this holiday season."

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    1. Thanks for your stimulating comments, Mike. I was thinking about what you wrote this morning while I was jogging and decided that, in contradiction to what I said in my email to you Thinking Friends this morning, I would write another blog article about the Israel/Gaza crisis and post it perhaps on Thursday next week.

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  3. Thinking Friend Glenn Hinson, who is also in Kentucky, comments,

    "You raise many of the issues whirling around in my mind and heart, Leroy. The one that troubles me most after reading Heather Cox Richardson this morning is the U.S. House going on vacation and leaving behind critical issues that can’t wait. What prompts people to vote for them?"

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    1. Dr. Hinson, I was interested in hearing that you read Heather Cox Richardson. I read her "letters" early every morning as I did this morning before making the blog post at 5:30. I, too, find it appalling that the Representatives have left Washington for three weeks with so much that needs to be done right now. And it is, indeed, appalling not just that people keep voting to elect such irresponsible Representatives but that in the upcoming Republican primary elections Trump is seeming going to win overwhelmingly--and not only that, according to the polls, he will also defeat Biden in November next year. Incredible!

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  4. I agree with most of your blog post Leroy, and lament the overall state of the world.

    However, I guess I'm somewhat sceptical and cynical regarding COP28. There was no political or environmental will among the rich, oil producing nations. They called the shots, and consequently, there is no mention of phasing out fossil fuels.

    Moreover, I lament and am extremely disappointed in our provincial (Alberta) government's adversarial attitude towards our federal environmental minister and our federal government's goals to speed up the phasing out of fossil fuel dependency.

    To end on a more hopeful note, I do wish you a blessed Christmas, as people of faith around the globe celebrate the birth of Jesus, the Messiah and Saviour, who keeps us from falling into complete despair, and graces us with the gifts of faith, hope and love.

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    1. Thanks for your comments, Garth, and yes, it was disappointing that, according to the U.S. website, "Nations at COP28 in Dubai approved earlier on Wednesday a roadmap for 'transitioning away from fossil fuels' – a first for a UN climate conference – but the deal still stopped short of a long-demanded call for a 'phaseout' of oil, coal and gas."

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  5. Another prominent Republican who has recently come out against Trump is former Speaker of the House Ryan. Traditional Republican to the core. VP candidate with Romney in 2012. My hope is that many of these MAGA representatives in the House will be rebuffed in 2024. And that a significant minority of GOPers will find Trump a bridge too far, if he is, as seems likely, the GOP presidential candidate in 2024. He has told us who he is. We best believe him!

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  6. Thanks, Charles, for sharing these comments. I hadn't seen/heard that about Ryan, but just now I found this on yesterday's Huff Post: https://www.huffpost.com/entry/paul-ryan-slams-donald-trump_n_657ac9d0e4b00e36d2d652b8

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  7. We are playing a global game of Jenga. In that game, a stack of repeating 3 boards crossing 3 boards is set up to about a foot high. Then players take turns carefully pulling a block from a lower level of the stack, and placing it on top. Turn by turn the stack gets both taller and more wobbly, until one unfortunate player loses when the whole pile suddenly collapses as that player takes their turn. On the one hand, our world is much more complex than the game, with many sometimes separate piles all climbing up. On the other hand, the player who knocks down a stack or two does not specifically lose. Rather, whoever was depending on that stack loses. Which means that as more and more stacks collapse, eventually we all lose. Global warming is indeed getting worse, as 2023 wracks up record hot month after record hot month on its way to being the hottest year in recorded history. We are dancing on the 1.5C safety limit, and have dangerously explored beyond it. In a separate problem, the world's dangerous overpopulation builds its own Jenga pile higher and higher every year. The oceans are becoming dangerously acidified. Plastic and chemical pollution spreads poison across land and sea. Toxic economic and political policies rile up populations around the world. Societies are destabilizing as global refugees number in the tens of millions. What will happen when refugees number in the hundreds of millions, or even billions? Hearts are hardening, and fear is spreading. We are flirting with extinction without batting an eye. Perhaps this is why we are seemingly alone in the universe. Perhaps no technological civilization can last long enough to leave more than a blip in the universe. Theorists have called this possibility "the great filter." You can read about the great filter here: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Great_Filter#:~:text=The%20Great%20Filter%20is%20the,detectable%20extraterrestrial%20life%20exceedingly%20rare.

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