When the iconic Gwynne Dyer recently spoke to a sold out crowd at Goldcorp Auditorium at Simon Fraser University he said although terrorism dominates media headlines itโs the global threat of climate change that keeps him up atย night.
Delivering a lecture on his vision of โThe New World Disorder,โ Dyer said the Western world obsesses over the Middle East, overblowing the significance of radical terror groups to globalย security.
โIt’s astounding how little the Middle East matters,โ Dyer told the crowd. โI mean, it monopolizes our news media, but the Middle East contains 10 percent of the world’s people. Only five percent of the world’s people are Arabs. And it accounts for about three percent of the world’s economy, including all theย oil.โ
In his acclaimed book Climate Wars: The Fight for Survival as the World Overheats, Dyer warned that unless we get serious about a wholesale decarbonization of our economies, โthe second half of this century will not be a time you would choose to liveย in.โ
โThis thing is coming at us a whole lot faster than the publicly acknowledged wisdom has it,โ Dyer wrote. โWhen you talk to the people at the sharp end of the climate business, scientists and policy-makers alike, there is an air of suppressed panic in many of the conversations. We are not going to get through this without taking a lot of casualties, if we get through it atย all.โ
Over the course of his career, Dyer has become something of a maverick among his militaryย cohorts.
After serving in three militaries, Dyer obtaining a Ph.D. in Military and Middle Eastern History from the University of London and now provides some of Canadaโs most insightful geo-political analysis โ often criticizing mainstream militaryย action.
When it comes to addressing current threats, Dyerโs analysis is antithetical to Prime Minister Stephenย Harperโs.
The notion that Canada is under imminent threat from both ISIS and Putinโs Russia is Canadian fear mongering, Dyer said, adding that narrative serves to legitimize military action against foreign threats. This happens at the expense of international action on climate change, he said.
In response to Canadaโs recent military action in Syria, Dyer told the SFU crowd that military action was certain to accomplish one thing only: further retaliation from ISIS forces and increasing escalation of conflict in the Middleย East.
Canadaโs response to terrorism has provoked significant criticism, especially in response to the Harper governmentโs recently tabled Bill C-51, an anti-terrorism bill experts say threatens Canadian democracy and civil liberties by expanding surveillance and counter-terrorism activities of spy agencies here atย home.
Dyer said rather than the specter of international terrorism, what truly frightens him is one thing: โClimate change, climate change, climateย change.โ
Image Credit: Klam@s viaย Flickr
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