Weโre only a minute into watching a brief low-budget video โ one that begins by alleging U.S. President Barack Obama is a bully because he suggests that climate change deniers should be โcalled outโ โ when Ezra Levant sits down in the chair next toย me.
The Rebel Commanderย himself.
According to organizers, heโs the reason attendance of tonightโs $45-per-head fundraiser in Calgary โ casually titled โClimate Leadership Catastrophe: Carbon Taxes, Job Loss, Freedoms Deniedโ and organized by the so-called โFriends of Scienceโ โ spiked from 200 to 445 people after he was announced as its keynoteย speaker.
And heโs the same intensely controversial pundit who I met in late November at another Calgary event called โGeneration Screwedโ which I covered for Vice Canada while wearing a โDreamy Trudeauโย sweater.
โHey James,โ he says, reaching out his hand to shakeย mine.
We briefly chat as the video moves on to clips of testimonies from human-caused climate change denying scientists like Roy Spencer and Willie Soon (the latter took $1.25 million from fossil fuel companies and lobby groups for his research). Levant relays a hilarious and self-deprecating story to me about his flight from Toronto to Calgary during which another person fell asleep onย him.
I scribble a few observations in a notepad. He scrolls through his phone, probably Twitter mentions given he sports almost 50,000ย followers.
After a few minutes he gets up to leave. I remind him that I tweeted at him a while back about how the Alberta NDP was elected on Karl Marxโs birthday, which seems like crucial information to include in his vehemently anti-NDP and pro-capitalist onlineย show.
We opt to โfollowโ each other on Twitter. He wandersย off.
The whole interaction seemed tense. But also, well, profound; Levant has a disposition that makes one feel strangely a part of something, even if youโre ideologically opposed toย him.
Itโs awfullyย disconcerting.
Little has happened in the interim. The slides that greeted each attendee as they walked in and had their tickets scanned by an enthused 15-year-old boy before moving to the buffet tables set the tone for the evening: โSay No To Climate Co2ercion,โ โ$WINDle,โ โClimate โ Change Yourย Mind.โ
The video, itself backgrounded with close-up shots of the stars of the American flag, features a bizarre graduation of presumed rights from โfreedom of thought,โ to โfreedom of rational dissentโ to โfreedom to expose the 97 per cent consensus propaganda.โ
Such pun-inspired sayings seem hokey at best. But as the remainder of the night proves, dismissing such sloganeering is as dangerous as ignoring what makes Levant a genuinely enjoyable human to interactย with.
For denial of human-caused climate change has very little to do with facts or data (which is why they can argue that CO2 has nothing to do with increased average temperatures and, minutes later, point out that forest fires produce far more emissions than human activity which seems to acknowledge the relevance of CO2 to theย discussion).
Many climate change psychologists have observed that oneโs views on the issue depend heavily on factors such as in-group biases, pre-existing political leanings and personal connections to carbon-intensiveย lifestyles.
As a result, it seems deeply naive to chalk the existence of groups like Friends of Science up to a lack of info. Pushing facts like the 97 per cent tidbit will likely only further alienate this kind of audience, fostering a martyrย complex.
Take the nightโs first presentation. The speaker, John Harper, has worked as a petroleum geologist for the likes of ConocoPhillips and Shell Canada. Itโs unclear why he was picked as the person to deliver the technical lecture as opposed to, say, an actual atmospheric or climateย scientist.
โWhat are the rocks telling us?โ serves as his mantra for the talk, despite the fact the Geological Society of America agrees that โhuman activities โฆ are the dominant cause of the rapid warming since the middleย 1900s.โ
The levels of carbon as measured by parts per million are nothing compared to previous eons, he says, โand the earth is still hereโ (a curious notion given thereโs no way humans could exist in such conditions). He suggests global warming is inevitable. The real problems are population growth and human excrement. Blame theย sun.
The trap that believers in human-caused climate change fall into is they rely on interpretation instead of actual assessment of the data, Harper says; he doesnโt know what politicians pushing for policy to address climate change even mean byย โevidence-based.โ
This statement is made entirelyย unironically.
Most attendees seem fairly disinterested. Ringtones keep goingย off.
The only truly captivating part of the entire presentation is an illegible graphic that spastically bounces up and down to demonstrate the fluctuations in average temperatures across theย millennia.
The science presented is near impossible toย follow.
But it doesnโt matter what Harper says. The point isnโt that he says the right things but that he is the right person: someone who the crowd can trust (former director of energy at the Geological Survey of Canada) and presenting in the right place (after a tasty meal and while sitting among people who look and think likeย you).
Levant โ the star of the event โ is announced as someone whoโs been deemed by various publications as the โmost irritatingโ and โtalking head youโd most like to silence.โ Each โachievementโ is greeted with a raucous applause. The emcee, Michelle Sterling, clarifies that โI didnโt write this, by the way, they gave this toย me.โ
Of course she didnโt. Levant is a perfectly composed character. Itโs very tricky to discern what he actually believes and what he plays up for aย profit.
Either way, his intro as a โrebelโ perfectly serves his cause: heโs an iconoclast representing the few who refuse to believe in human-caused climate change (just because a vast majority of scientists happenย to).
Levant has no specific focus in his sermons. Thereโs certainly a thematic goal though: building a staggeringly convincing enemy-oriented narrative by pointing out the hypocrisy, insensitivity and alleged anti-Albertan nature of government and environmentalย organizations.
In the span of half-hour, he hops from slamming Calgary Mayor Naheed Nenshi for the Uber debacle, to ridiculing hemp rope bags, to noting that forest fires are natural, to linking environmental efforts with energy poverty, degrowth and deindustrialization (which inevitably led to a Unabomber comparison), to charting foreign donations to Canadian environmentalย non-profits.
Anyone who has seen Levant speak before knows theย drill.
A standing ovation serves as a brief punctuation between his speech and Q&A session. Two mid-life-crisis-aged men in the washroom exchange thoughts about how โour governments are crazy,โ โtheyโre a waste of our time and the countryโs timeโ and how โRalph Kleinโs sacrificeโ is beingย forgotten.
Levantโs responses to questions from the audience such as โwhy canโt Albertans oust the NDP?โ and โwhy wonโt governments stand up for Canadaโ hones in on hyper-specifics. The mainstream environmental movementโs take on GMOs is ridiculed. Weโre made of carbon, we eat carbon, we exhaleย carbon.
He makes a fart joke (โI buy carbon credits for when I tootโ). The โdairy cartelโ isnโt taxed as the oil industry is even though its product โ cattle โ emit massive amounts ofย methane.
Etย cetera.
Itโs a spellbinding performance. The crowd occasionally responds to Levant with applause and to the targeted enemies with boos (for an ostensibly tax-averse crowd, they take the reduction of the provinceโs firefighting budget very, very seriously). The energy in the room can be described as nothing less than spiritual inย nature.
Thereโs an unshakable sense of unity and drive, which likely has something to do with the fact everyoneโs: a) white; b) rich; and c) feel persecuted by people concerned about climateย change.
But itโs a force that must be acknowledged by climate changeย activists.
Itโs not enough to dismiss Levant and the so-called Friends of Science as fringe groups that simply misconstrue data and graphs and decontextualized policy decisions to suit theirย mandates.
Of course, they do indeed do that. But such entities also tap into very powerful and deep-seated emotions โ trust and pride, anxiety and anger, hyper-awareness of environmentalists who also fly around the world in privateย jets.
Good luck beating those back withย facts.ย
Image: The Rebel/Facebook
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