Booman Tribune

A Small Slice of Conservative Sanity

by Steven D
Mon Nov 9th, 2009 at 07:29:01 AM EST

For years I've wondered why climate change became a political issue, with conservatives jumping on the denialist propaganda offered up with gusto by the fossil fuel industry funded disinformation campaign. One conclusion I've been able to get my hands around is that many, many conservatives are also conservative Christians with a deeply antithetical stance toward science and the work of scientists. And these Christians are predisposed to oppose scientific inquiry.

Not that this is new. The tension between Christianity and science has long existed because science relies on objective proof, whereas religion relies on faith in traditional doctrines, interpretations of the Bible and revelation. The Church famously denied the theory of Copernicus and prosecuted Galileo when he argued in its favor. Darwin has been and continues to be a curse word for fundamentalist believers, even though the theory of evolution has been the bulwark of many of the advances in biology and medicine over the last 150 years.

Of course, not all scientific research has been condemned by Conservative Christians. Believe it or not, many Christian Organizations, including Baptists, were at the forefront of campaigns to expose the health risks of smoking cigarettes in the 20th Century. So why have they been so reluctant to assume that the science of global warming is a hoax, a pile of lies concocted by Al Gore and his evil minions? I think a lot of it has to do with where they go to get their information about the science of climate change. Conservative talk radio. Fox News. Media outlets with deep ties to the Republican Party and Big Business, which have their own financial interest in muddying the waters on what should be a non-controversial issue.

Which is where the subject of my title finally makes its long awaited appearance. You see, at least one Conservative Christian husband and wife team, he a fundamentalist preacher and she a climate scientist have written a book together to try to convince their Conservative Christian brethren that yes, climate change is real, and yes, we, as human beings, really are the culprits behind global warming and the many dangers it poses to our future:

As an evangelical Christian living in Texas, climate scientist Katharine Hayhoe found that many conservatives had questions about climate change based on things they'd heard on talk radio.

So Hayhoe and her husband, Andrew Farley, the pastor of a nondenominational church in Lubbock, Texas, decided to answer the questions in a new book from religious publisher FaithWords, "A Climate for Change: Global Warming Facts for Faith-based Decisions."

"The observed increase in greenhouse gas levels, due to human production, is the only explanation we can find to account for what has happened to our world," Farley and Hayhoe wrote. "We've dusted for fingerprints. There's only one likely suspect remaining. It's us." [...]

Hayhoe teaches in the Department of Geosciences at Texas Tech University, and she was a lead author of a U.S. government report on climate change in the United States that was released in June. She also was one of some 2,000 scientists on the Nobel Prize-winning Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, which reported in 2007 that there was unequivocal evidence of warming.

Farley, a conservative Republican, is the pastor of Ecclesia, a nondenominational Christian church, and teaches linguistics at Texas Tech.

"To get information on climate change, you have to go to the people who know the information. That's why we wrote this together as a climate scientist and a pastor," Hayhoe said. "He asked the tough questions. He said you've got to talk about this and this and this, and these answers have to satisfy me."

Many of the questions were from the arguments of conservative celebrities.

I welcome anyone who attempts to cut through the dirty haze of the conservative media's disinformation campaign, especially people who are Conservatives and are Fundamentalist Christians. More than any other problem which confronts humanity, this is one in which the traditional divisions between liberal and conservative, left and right, religious faith and scientific research, should not exist.

So I salute Professor Tahoe and her husband Pastor Farley for making the effort to reach out to their fellow believers with the truth about climate change and why it is occurring. The sad irony is that they likely will be condemned by many Conservative Christians for "drinking the liberal Kool-Aid" on global warming because so many right wing believers would rather put their trust in liars and hatemongers like Rush Limbaugh and Glenn Beck, who act as well paid shills for the disinformation campaign of Big Oil, Big Coal, and other industries with a vested interest in the use of fossil fuels, than in dedicated scientists who share their faith, like Professor Tahoe.



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It is always amazing for people from outside the US to see the degree to which Christianity has been hijacked by right wing conservatives, Zionists, gay bashers, climate change deniers, and general head in the sand anti-modernists.  

Although active Christians in Europe are generally more conservative than average in Europe, there simply isn't the same linkage between anti-reality  viewpoints and faith in Europe.  The Pope is the only religious leader of note who comes anywhere close from a European perspective, and he is widely ignored even in conservative Catholic Ireland.  

The only parallel I can see with the US is the active support of Apartheid in South Africa, and the gay bashing of African Christian Churches today.  Such attitudes have nothing to do with Christianity and everything to so with racist, homophobic, sexist, supremicist, and imperialist attitudes which abuse Christianity as cover in order to do the very opposite of what Christ did and taught.

Anybody who can reconcile such attitudes with Christianity is literally living in a parallel universe - one literally on a collision course with our own.  When the New Testament speaks of Armageddon, it didn't intend that Christians should try to bring it about!

"We reported back to hearts what we had seen, and told our footsteps all about where we had been."

by Frank Schnittger (Frankschnittger at hotmail dotty communists) on Mon Nov 9th, 2009 at 07:54:13 AM EST
Very true Frank. A lot of people will basically do whatever the hell they want and then find some bible passage somewhere to support a very small part of what their doing, while ignoring the book as a whole that condemns everything about them.
by CD Rates on Wed Nov 11th, 2009 at 02:30:09 PM EST
[ Parent ]
I've seen numerous comments on Conservative blogs to the effect that God wouldn't give us the ingredients to destroy the earth's climate.  God thinks these things through thoroughly! and only those who have no faith would think otherwise.  Belief in Climate Change is a denial of God.
by Bob Stanley on Mon Nov 9th, 2009 at 08:26:07 AM EST
It's not that I don't believe in global climate change, but that's part of Obama's agenda, so I oppose it.  Down with climate change!!
by BooMan on Mon Nov 9th, 2009 at 08:27:27 AM EST
Steven D, the Baptists and other Conservative Christians opposed smoking because it's a vice, and support climate science denial because they're in favor of large, powerful, paternal institutions.

The more control, the more that requires control. This is the road to chaos. -Frank Herbert, The Dosadi Experiment
by chimneyswift on Mon Nov 9th, 2009 at 09:18:12 AM EST
I'm glad to hear of another case of some conservatives (who are also Evangelical Christians) who have figured out that global warming is real and caused by humans. They aren't unique in this, but they are far too rare. St. Thomas Aquinas wrote in the 13th century that all truth comes from God, including scientific truth, so when science proves something that seems to contradict the Bible, we need to reconsider how we interpret the Bible. John Wesley, who founded the United Methodist Church, picked up some ideas that he got from earlier church thinkers and said that faith depends on four things: the Bible, tradition, personal inspiration, and REASON -- and that a vital faith must rest on all four. And then there is the recent diary that points out that faith, until recent times, meant commitment, not blind acceptance. That's certainly how I use the term. Please don't generalize from the fundamentalists to the entire Christian church. It's a natural mistake -- they make most of the noise. But they aren't the whole of the Christian church. I just hope that this issue will be resolved without using any money now.
by JairU on Tue Nov 10th, 2009 at 01:39:27 AM EST
There's a number of attitudinal trajectories that could account for global warming denialism.

One -- among many -- that occurred to me, is the syncretism between capitalism (or market fundamentalism) and religion. I was thinking of how attitudes regarding Manifest Destiny morphed into a virulent anti-unionism by the end of the 19th century. What later became anti-communism, started as anti-unionism, and it wasn't totalitarianism that offended people but interference with the free market.

Another ideological lineage comes from Dominionism.

http://www.publiceye.org/christian_right/cr_intro.html#dominion

http://www.publiceye.org/christian_right/dominionism.htm

The idea of global warming conflicts with Dominionist beliefs. The core belief of taking dominion over nature (institutions, etc.) involves a dominant relationship with nature. Conceivably, it could involve living in harmony with nature instead (and with women, children, outgroups, etc.), but the authoritarian roots of the belief necessitate otherwise.

   

by colinski on Tue Nov 10th, 2009 at 08:06:39 PM EST


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