Monday, October 29, 2018

OpEd on climate, science, civilty

10/26/18


On Monday, October 29, an important trial is scheduled to begin at the Federal Courthouse in Eugene. In Juliana v. The United States, young plaintiffs who are concerned about the accelerated rate of greenhouse gas emissions by the USA and other nations is putting their future at risk, due to global warming. The science, including recent updates by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), warn of alarming consequences to our atmosphere, oceans, water balances, and flora and fauna. This alarm is based on sound peer-reviewed science conducted across the world. And the USA, China and others are not doing nearly enough to stem the dangerous rate of emissions caused by human activity.

Our scientists who work for federal agencies are being silenced, neutered, or reassigned to unscientific jobs, while scientific advisory panels are being eliminated, and not just in the EPA (UO graduate Ryan Zinke in Interior is doing his part as well). Scientists come in many types – we are women and men. We are white and we are people of color. We are immigrants and refugees. We are human. Scientists make mistakes probably just as often as any reader of this paper. Scientists are trained to be objective in how they treat results they obtain. They strive to work harder at finding answers, and publish their results through rigorous peer-review in scientific journals. You can read them in libraries.

Nowadays we find our scientific community under attack, whether it is related to climate change or not. And these individuals are not all Republicans, so let’s not tar the entire GOP with that brush. Here in the Willamette Valley we are represented by reasonable men in Washington DC who accept the scientific evidence of climate change, because they believe the scientists they talk to. It does not require a “belief” in science to be there, too. But it helps to have a skeptical approach towards claims that have not undergone such scrutiny, and are advanced by heavily funded groups that receive funding from large political action committees or fossil-fuel companies. Scientists are not in it for the money, as is so often claimed. We are the curious and industrious truth-seekers who strive to understand and make things better.

The present anti-science approach to federal government policy is reprehensible. Your ballot may provide an opportunity to raise your voice against it. We owe it to the future of our children and our grandchildren to pay attention. Let’s all do our part to reduce our dependence on fossil fuels and encourage our representatives at local, state and federal levels to increase their diligence in this matter. 

Fortunately there are still good scientists working on this issue both inside and outside of the federal government. In Oregon, we have the Oregon Climate Change Research Institute (OCCRI) at Oregon State University (http://www.occri.net). The national climate information portal is also a great resource for this information; you can find them at https://www.climate.gov. Both of these resource sites contain very readable summaries of the scientific evidence for the human footprint on climate change, and its likely impacts going forward. I, as a climate scientist, still have hope, that our governments will take action to reduce our dependence on carbon and to induce individuals to take responsible action as well. We also must do this being responsive to those who are more likely to suffer from environmental injustices, and encourage a restoration of funding of environmental justice and environmental education programs with a basis in sound science.

Sincerely,

Paul Ruscher, PhD

Ruscher is a Fellow of the American Meteorological Society and serves Lane Community College as its Science Dean. 

PS - I’ve been inspired by the turnout at the Federal Courthouse this AM supporting @youthvgov. Here’s an op-Ed I submitted to the R-G last Friday. Maybe they'll publish it but it's here in case they don't!

Wednesday, October 24, 2018

It’s Autumn in America - and T-13 Days

Riverbend Medical Complex, Springfield, Oregon, 24 October 2018

T-13 Days

Autumn in America should not be a time of concern. Yet, here we are with what could be our driest fall season on record in the southern Willamette Valley, an election looming in which my Congressman is running for reelection against one of the most notorious anti-climate-science deniers on the planet, and trust in government, science, and media are at all-time lows. Can we do better? I have a few thoughts. 




Thirty-one years ago this month, I defended my PhD dissertation at Oregon State University in Atmospheric Sciences – Diagnostic Studies. My 6 years of graduate study at OSU led me through climate diagnostics and modeling, turbulence and convection, an appreciation for data collection in the field, and ultimately developing my own numerical models of weather phenomena and routines suitable for weather and climate study. I also studied learning theory and higher education, to be better able to teach (a PhD minor consisting of 8 graduate classes in education baffled my graduate committee members, but I think it served me, and my students, well). I became a meteorology professor at a world-renowned academic institution (Florida State University), and worked across disciplines in fields as disparate as education, psychology, engineering, and hydrology, while still honing my mad weather, climate (and water) science skills. I am a climate scientist, atmospheric scientist, geoscience educator, fluid dynamicist, and sometime hydroclimatologist. I’ve trained hundreds of new degreed scientists and hundreds of math and science educators. I may be an old white guy, but I’ve long been a champion of diversity in science and society. And after 25 years at FSU, I moved back to Oregon, to a community college, where over 40% of our nation’s future scientists start their higher education careers.

1988 was my first year as a tenure-track faculty member, and while I was teaching general meteorology, synoptic meteorology, climatology, boundary layer meteorology, and atmospheric chemistry, I was also beginning my own exploration of this evolving science area of global warming and anthropogenic climate change. Work by Wally Broecker and Jim Hansen was revolutionary, and now, more than 30 years later, their “predictions” of future climate states are remarkably true, particularly given the infancy of our scientific knowledge and computing power at that time. I committed at that time to learn as much as I could, particularly to help blunt political partisanship that was already rearing its head. I remember meeting then Senator Al Gore at the 1991 American Meteorological Society meeting when he was our keynote speaker; we got to the bar after the event at the same time, and we spoke for about 10 minutes on the importance of getting his message out to educators, to help the teachers relate the science to the young people — they are our hope.

There are so many reasons for me, a husband, parent, grandparent to be hopeful for the future, because I see what the young people are doing today. I see the plaintiffs in Juliana v. United States working hard, I see students across the globe doing solid work in the GLOBE program (globe.gov) and other international environmental education programs, and I see my own children and grandchildren and their respect for our environment and the people who live in it. Despite the fact that I remain a very hopeful person, I write today regarding something substantively worrying about my America.

The USA today is a place of bifurcation. Bipartisanship has evaporated, and those few voices who have reached across the aisle have either departed the chamber with that aisle, or have retreated to what they view as the safer confines of cloak rooms and political money-machines. What were once reasoned voices who embraced the notion that science could inform public policy have retreated to their base, but in ways that are much more complex than party politics. 

Democrats from coal-mining or gas-guzzling states are more concerned about environmental legislation that limits mining, or places restrictions on water, air, and soil contamination than they are with environmental justice. Ethanol affecianados in the midwest tout growing our own fuel, propping up the corn farmers and collectives, in what is arguably one of the worst possible plant-based solutions for ethanol. And those from auto-manufacturing states or states with high proportions of commuters are more concerned about maintaining low gasoline prices than they are about clean air, dangers of hydrofracking, transportation of bitumen from tar sands, or offshore drilling. 

This does not get the Republicans off the hook, of course, either. They have almost in lock-step supported the Trump administration in its diabolical abandonment of principles of environmental protection for our lands, our biosphere, our air, and our water. Two anti-environmental directors of EPA, as well as those who lead the Department of Agriculture and Interior, have led to reversal of national environmental policy that has its roots in administrations of Theodore Roosevelt and Richard Nixon, among other Republicans who’ve supported environmental initiatives. These political appointees, supported by many in the Democratic party when they appeared before the Senate, aided by other appointees who do not require Senate confirmation, are dismantling regulations supported by their own agency scientists, hired competitively for their scientific chops, and not their political leanings. Many of them are speaking out and/or are leaving their agencies. 

This national move had an experimental laboratory in state government in Florida, the state where I fully developed my own scientific credentials, thanks to competitive grant funding from agencies like NOAA, NASA, and NSF. I witnessed first-hand Republican Governor Charlie Crist send out marching orders to all of his state agencies to have a climate action plan. I worked directly with scientists and planners at the Division of Emergency Management, Division of Forestry, and Department of Environmental Protection, helping them to do their work. I worked with the Department of Education to adopt climate change and evolution in the K-12 science standards that the state adopted (rather weakly, as it turns out) in 2008. I trained many of the individuals who went to work for these agencies, and they worked to develop their action plans and consider and write regulations to support their scientific work and implement sound policy. I then witnessed the abrupt transition to the administration of Governor Rick Scott, who proceeded to dismantle sensible environmental regulations that were written with broad (at the time) legislative support. The transformation of the Florida GOP to a party of denial had been completed and has been amplified by Governor Scott. Many of the people who I worked with in these state agencies are long gone, in many cases having left because their agency just did not support their scientific (not political) values.

We are witnessing an age where truth is no longer respected, where outright falsehoods, lies, and make-believe numbers are shared by leaders, probably in full knowledge that these are false, but furthering their belief that if these are repeated enough, a drumbeat of support will develop. Scientists and science communicators are becoming unhinged as our work is ignored, mischaracterized, and maligned by a largely ignorant or uninformed public. Violence against your opponent (outside of the boxing ring) is now not only tolerated, but encouraged. I’m pointing at you, Congressman Gianforte. I’m pointing at you, President Trump. And I’m pointing at you, politicians in state houses and Congress, who are enabling this behavior.

You are also enabling a nationalistic tendency of America First across the world, and ignoring basic human rights principles of refugees, immigrants, indigenous populations, and right to thrive and live in a world which we, in America, are largely responsible for creating — one in which fossil fuel extraction and development, devoid of any rational action to curb deleterious impacts but only beholden to the profit motive, has for decades harmed the planet.

I’m lucky in some ways. I witnessed the 1960s and 1970s, an era when people cared about peace, and people cared about each other and the environment enough to lead to action. Those actions led to abandonment of a war on the people of Vietnam. America began to act to clean up the waters of our national rivers, to admit that we had been poisoning people who lived in our poorest communities with bad air and soil, and where clean-ups were noticeable, and the dawn of the Civil Rights movement. I spent a year in LA in graduate school in the late 1970s in times when the air quality was horrible, and I’ve been back enough times to see how clean air regulation has improved air quality there. We have witnessed how trace amounts of poisons can harm us, and science has shown us the way out. Now is not the time to roll these laws regulations back. It is not the time to blunt efforts to regulate greenhouse gases, and mercury and other toxics. The Trump Administration likes to claim that they are reducing unnecessary and redundant regulations. How long do you think our environmental efforts of the last 50+ years will continue to reap rewards if the polluters not only no longer pay, but they are allowed to operate without controls? 

The election of 2018 is not one where Trump is on the ballot. And yet, he is a presence, as locally, regionally, and at the state levels, actions are often taken following partisan playbooks that seem organically-driven, but end up coming from entities such as ALEC, the Heritage Foundation, or Koch Brothers. Big oil, big sugar, big industry. They drive the agenda when they can, and the press often will be ignored as the veritable 4thestate does its best, but is monikered with prefixes such as the “Lying Washington Post” or “Failing New York Times” by people in power.

I am not sure the sky will fall if the Democrats don’t recapture the House of Representatives, seats in state legislatures or Governor’s mansions, but I can be sure of one thing, if bipartisanship and reasoned governance and international cooperation does not the ground running in Washington DC in January, we are destined to be further isolated, further scorned by our international partners, and destined to watch as other American nations, and the rest of the world trade and treat with each other respectfully, leaving us to become increasingly self-reliant, and relying on fear. Is that the America we all want? One where our military might and nationalistic tendencies govern what we do as a nation? To our people? To our environment?

Think about this before you fill out your mail-in, early, or in-person ballot on or before Election Day. What can you as an individual do to restore faith in government? Build and stock safe rooms? Prepare for rapture? Speak-out and act on things that you care about? Whatever you do, do it from a perspective of love and respect, if you can, and let’s not be the nation that is trying to bomb ex-residents of the White House and journalists (the new thing today, apparently). The voices of our ex-Presidents and their spouses, and those of the members of the 4thestate who are attacked at every Trump rally, may be our only hope for the future.

As George Carlin once riffed – Earth will be fine, we humans are screwed. Our respect for each other as humans, the flora and fauna around us, and our land, air, and water are all foundational to the better aspects of human evolution (“nature”). I would not call the political influences that characterize the Trumpist behavior and development “nurturing” — rather the classic debate of “nature vs. nurture” that makes us human seems to be careening towards fear-based individualism. We can do better. It started with events like the Women’s March, the March for Science, and People’s Climate March. But its roots are in social justice movements that began many decades ago. 

Let’s keeping speaking, marching, and moving the bar forward, not backward to a paternalistic, racist, anti-science trope. Which I might call tripe. 

Paul Ruscher • Eugene, Oregon • 24 October 2018 • T-13 days

Monday, October 8, 2018

Resistance is not futile

/resume (continued from a threaded tweet ... )

Upon reflection, I am happy to report that my teenage years were spent protesting war, in particular in Vietnam. Only 12, I volunteered for the campaigns of Eugene McCarthy and then Bobby Kennedy who were ready to upend the status quo of the two-party system, 50 years ago this year. My dad supported George Wallace. That was awkward. Neither of us got our preferred candidate, as Nixon won, and Nixon became acceptable to him and many others of the "Silent Majority". He was going to end the war. But he lied, cheated, and conspired to hide it all. Sound familiar? It should. His right-hand legal advisor? Roy Cohn. And who did Roy bring along as his apprentice? Roger Stone. From my high school, FFS! Yeah, he was using political dirty tricks while we were both in school during student government elections. But that's another story.

By 1972, my senior year, I was a McGovern supporter, and my Dad still wanted George Wallace, but he ran as a Democrat (southern Democrats were still a racist thing, as the Republicans were still the party of Lincoln, sort of, while the emerging Goldwater branch of the #GOP answered to the John Birch Society; read Max Boot’s column today for more on this). I decided to apply to become an alternate service conscientious objector. I did not wish to flee to Canada, which was an easy cop-out. My 1-AO status would have allowed me to serve as a medic. I applied for the 1A-O, and then my number came up in the last draft lottery - 20 out of 365. Shit! The war was not yet winding down, but Peace talks had resumed (the ones Nixon's crew sabotaged in 1968). Coast Guard, here I come unless I get picked for a service! When I received my draft notice envelope, my father waited with glee to see which service I’d be reporting to. The county draft board’s letter affirming my request shocked him to his core, and I felt righteous. It also broke our already damaged relationship, which took years to rebuild. I was such a jerk as a teenager in so many ways. Weren't we all, in at least some respects? I was no Brett or Bart or Donald, though.

But the draft ended as the war wound down and I could go to college without a deferment. Things got quiet after Nixon for a while. Then the hawks (in both parties) started exploding the debt & deficit to restart the arms race with the Soviet Union - gotta have a bogeyman if you want to keep the American public afraid. I protested the buildup of the nuclear arsenal as scientists with my entire family (only 3 kids at that time) and #UCS imagined a nuclear winter. Little Corvallis had one of the largest marches in the country.

I protested with Greenpeace against whaling, as we surrounded a Norwegian whaling ship anchored in Portland's Columbia River harbor ... we surrounded it with our canoes. Yeah those strategies were useful.

Some things never change. It is time for action, resistance, integrity to take over the dialog. Movements like #BlackLivesMatter, #MeToo, #MMIW, and #IBelieveHer are critical. And so often disrespected. By people like me. An old white man. But so not me.

I was the first in my family to get a 4-year degree. I did not want, as the oldest son, to take over the factory that my grandfather built. As an apprentice and journeyman #sheetmetal worker, I learned a lot from my Dad, who had followed in his footsteps. But more from his foreman, an immigrant, who escaped from Nazi Germany after the putsch. And the Portuguese immigrants, and descendants of slaves who commuted from Harlem to their non-union job.

The #MarchForScience was to be transformational. And when I was invited to speak in Eugene, I was proud, not of myself, but of everyone who showed up and have not let the dream die. The movement was inspired by the #GOP War on Science that others have written about, and Trump. Dreams dashed, with only the free press and courts to buffer.

The dreams of Harriet Tubman. Of Gandhi. Of Russell Means. Of David Oppenheimer. Of Martin Luther King, Jr. Of Carl Sagan, Jane Goodall, and Jacques Cousteau. Of Dag Hjalmar Agne Carl Hammarskjöld, Ban-ki Moon, and Kofi Annan. Of Malala Yousafzai. Of James Hansen. Of Harvey Milk. These are some of my heroes who had dreams, too.

But our dreams have become nightmares. The administration has demonized the press for doing its job, and is using every trick in the book to pack the court with “strict constitutionalists” (except when it comes to #2A, for example). And by making up new rules to ignore a valid Presidential nomination to the Supreme Court, just to wait for 11 months for a “good” one, and then add another, this time one of highly dubious integrity and credibility. And the "silent majority" has returned anew; the same one that resulted in a near Constitutional crisis in the mid-1970s. Another president later would use his stature to create what should have been a #MeToo moment, and a different Supreme Court Justice was chosen and ratified by a Senate that should not have assented. And the Senate will likely still be in GOP control in January 2019, whereas the House will likely move to the Democrats. We can't count on any of this happening.

As an individual I can do stuff. As a manager of a large #science academic unit I am constrained. Somewhat. In some respects I can’t wait until I retire. But I confess to feeling safer knowing that my employer-covered health insurance and #Obamacare still precludes insurance companies from excluding preexisting conditions. I’m luckier than 10s of millions of Americans. 

I participated in a fundraising event on Saturday night that rocked me to my core. Over 100,000 in my county alone are food-insecure; 3/8 of our population!. Thousands are not well-sheltered. The economy is roaring, while those who are not in it fail to thrive. Poverty is increasing and our nation, among the #G20 nations, is among the worst in terms of our social contract with its people.

Those of us who can need to up our game. Because a corrupt fringe of one party has enough power now that it can consolidate acceptance across the monied establishment parts of the GOP and Democratic Parties. There are some heroes out there, atheists, Christians, Jews, Muslim, Buddhist, etc., working together. Don't be bound by a narrow social definition who you are. 

I don’t know if, for 2018, there is any answer other than not the GOP in the broad scheme of things. I know of some dedicated, committed people who won their GOP primary races, particularly from science and education careers. They are probably really good. Everyone should be engaged in voting and helping others vote. Talk issues. Take action. Demand more of you representatives from the city hall or town/county seat to the US Capitol. Get involved.

/fin