The leading source for credible citizen reporting

Report Your News
Take the tour...

Global warming: the psychology of denial

New York City : NY : USA | 26 days ago  
Views: 1,089
  • Cartoon of climate denier by Toles
    Cartoon of climate denier by Toles
    Posted by: DelilahStarling
    Cartoon of climate denier by Toles 10-29-09
  • Members of the African Group board attend a news conference during the Barcelona Climate Change Talks
    Members of the African Group board attend a news conference during the ...
    Source: Reuters
  • Head of the U.N. Climate Change Secretariat de Boer attends a news conference during the Barcelona Climate Change Talks
    Head of the U.N. Climate Change Secretariat de Boer attends a news ...
    Source: Reuters
  • An assistant works during the Barcelona Climate Change Talks at Fira Gran Via in Barcelona
    An assistant works during the Barcelona Climate Change Talks at Fira ...
    Source: Reuters
  • File photo of U.S. Special Envoy for Climate Change Todd Stern speaking during a news conference in Cuernavaca
    File photo of U.S. Special Envoy for Climate Change Todd Stern ...
    Source: Reuters
  • View of the Fira Barcelona Gran Via, venue of the Barcelona Climate Change Talks
    View of the Fira Barcelona Gran Via, venue of the Barcelona Climate ...
    Source: Reuters
  • File photo of U.S. Special Envoy for Climate Change Stern at a news conference in Cuernavaca
    File photo of U.S. Special Envoy for Climate Change Stern at a news ...
    Source: Reuters
Cartoon of climate denier by Toles

Updated 11/5/09. The question has been raised many times in the past few years: what makes some people so adamant about denying global warming and the resulting climate change, when the evidence is so overwhelming?

On July 24, 2009 the White House released a report on climate change and it determined that Global warming is unequivocal and primarily human-induced. Global temperature has increased over the past 50 years. This observed increase is due primarily to human-induced emissions of heat-trapping gases.

Forty of the world’s leading climate scientists, including former IPCC chair Sir John Houghton, have called for industrialized countries to make a commitment at the United Nations climate summit in Copenhagen to cut carbon emissions to at least 40 percent below 1990 levels by 2020 “to avoid the worst impacts of climate change.”

The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) has found that to reach even 450 ppm CO2eq (corresponding to approximately 400 ppm CO2), the emissions of the United States and other developed countries should be reduced by 25 to 40 percent below 1990 levels by 2020.1 Thus, to reach 350 ppm CO2, the United States must achieve or exceed the upper end of this range.

So, why are there still so many skeptics and deniers willing to spit into the wind of a mountain of 40 years of scientific evidence?

Personal skepticism about global warming is forged from ideological beliefs and peer beliefs, which result in people gravitating to what ever evidence they can find that reflects those beliefs.

This would explain the popularity of people like Rush Limbaugh and Sean Hannity and other conservative types, who tend to use their media platform to promote as much misinformation about global warming as possible.

Global warming deniers tend to exhibit a certain pride in being skeptics and associate it with challenging the government on everything in the percieved need to protect their freedom.

Millions of dollars have been spent by gas, coal, and oil industries to lobby against climate regulations that would cut into their profits.

According to a report by George Marshall, founder of Climatedeniers.org, research indicates that of over 192 books written on climate skepticism, 92% were found to have been associated with, or funded by, right-winged conservative think-tank groups.

In an effort to determine what makes climate deniers tick, Marshall, reported these observations:

1. Disturbing research shows that 60% of people believe that “many scientific experts still question if humans are contributing to climate change”. Thirty per cent of people believe climate change is “largely down to natural causes”, while 7% refuse to accept the climate is changing at all.

2. Nearly 80% of people claim to be concerned about climate change. However, delve deeper and one finds that people have a remarkable tendency to define this concern in ways that keep it as far away as possible. They describe climate change as a global problem (but not a local one) as a future problem (not one for their own lifetimes) and absolve themselves of responsibility for either causing the problem or solving it.

3. In the United States three times more Republicans than Democrats believe that global warming is not an issue and skepticism is rooted in a sustained and well-funded ideological movement.


Cultural anthropologist, Myanna Lahsen, from the University of Colorado explains why some scientists transferred from believer to denier: the largest common factor was the loss of status and respect as a result of years of environmental climate research and they were looking for some way to regain prestige.

One academic study concluded that the denial of climate change has been a careful and deliberate web of fabrication as a tactic of an influential movement against tree hugging environmentalists.

Opposition to scientific advancements and environmental activism comes from people, who don’t want change. They don’t feel that protecting forests, or animals, or waterways, or insects, or plants—should ever happen at the inconvenience of man kind. They don’t see the Earth’s systems as interconnected. They say: so what if species go extinct, forests are clear cut, water ways are polluted, CO2 climbs off the chart, mountains are strip-mined for coal—who cares?

Roman Krznaric, expert on Empathy at The School of Life in London, feels that lack of empathy for other people, who may be experiencing the ravages on climate change on the other side of the world—is part of the problem.

Krznaric wrote on climatedenial.org: Individuals, governments and companies are currently displaying an extraordinary lack of empathy on the issue of climate change. We are ignoring the plight of those whose livelihoods are being destroyed today by the consequences of our high emission levels, particularly distant strangers in developing countries who are affected by floods, droughts and other extreme weather events, such as flood refugees in the Indian state of Orissa.

According to Krznaric, society should also be aware of what kind of planet future generations will inherit from our actions today: We are failing to take the perspective of future generations who will have to live with the detrimental effects of our continuing addiction to lifestyles that result in emissions beyond sustainable levels. Thus there is a lack of empathy through time. We would hardly treat our own family members with such callous disregard and continue acting in ways that we knew (would harm them now or in the future).

In conclusion, the psychology of global warming deniers seems to boil down to one main principle—conservative perception is conservative reality--no matter how much evidence is available to the contrary.

***Copyright DelilahStarling 2009

  • Print
  • Share:
  • Share
  • Digg
  • Reddit
  • Facebook
  • Stumbleupon

Related Allvoices Contributions

News Stories
 
  • News Source: Scoop | 23 days ago
    Specifically, progress on adaptation, technology cooperation, reducing emissions from deforestation in developing countries and mechanisms to disburse funds for developing countries was made in Barcelona. “It is essential that practical action is...
  • News Source: International Business Times | 24 days ago
    A U.N. climate deal due to be agreed in Copenhagen at talks from December 7-18 may fall short of a legally binding treaty, according to the United Nations. If Copenhagen fails to live up to hopes of a strong pact to slow global warming, what are the...
Blogs
 >
  • Blog Source: www.civilianism.com
    So, to deniers and skeptics: Read and bookmark this site and the other sites I have linked to from here, and you will start to understand the overwhelming evidence there is for climate change science. Also, listen to the Futurism Now Radio podcast, ..
  • Blog Source: www.kiwiblog.co.nz
    We may as well play Daniel Vettori and 10 cardboard cutouts, the man is a legend, 34 off 10 in a high scoring game, and almost highest scorer as well. But the rest of the monekys.. cha (418) Vote: Add rating 4 Subtract rating 0 Says: ...
Images
 >
 
Videos
 >
 
  • Posted By Dragonfly6878 Dragonfly6878 | 26 days ago
    Yeah, I agree--"conservative perception is conservative reality."

    I loved the cartoon--very appropriate!
  • Posted By dmccall dmccall | 22 days ago
    Good article! Keep them coming!
  • Reported by DelilahStarling
    Report Your News Got a similar story?
    Add it to the network!

    Or add related content to this report

    Cell phones Cell phones use report code: @4560047

    Most Popular Reports

    Related Tweets

    • adanigelis

      @adanigelis RT @Disco_Tracy: RT @JaymiHeimbuch: How the Bushmen of Africa Can Save Us from the Global Water Crisis (Video) http://bit.ly/3qOvHQ

      21 days ago
    • Disco_Tracy

      @Disco_Tracy RT @JaymiHeimbuch: How the Bushmen of Africa Can Save Us from the Global Water Crisis (Video) http://bit.ly/3qOvHQ

      21 days ago
    • HowardKurtz

      @HowardKurtz I'm in favor of global warming so we can have more days like this in the winter

      21 days ago
    • 9brandon

      @9brandon Climate Change Denial Is Spreading http://ff.im/-baCyd

      22 days ago
    • katerock7

      @katerock7 katerockin: It's 80 degrees in DC. "if this is global warming, bring it on."

      22 days ago
    • si_jimtrotter

      @si_jimtrotter SI_JimTrotter: 60s in foxboro in november? what in the name of global warming is going on?

      22 days ago
    • KGeee

      @KGeee check out my writeup on the huge global effort to kill climate progress: so maddening but unsuprising http://bit.ly/2nV5Pe

      25 days ago

    Related Allvoices Reports

    Related People

    Contributions

    Help and Accounts


    Use of this site is governed by our Terms of Use Agreement and Privacy Policy.

    © Allvoices, Inc 2008-2009. All rights reserved.