In columnist Margaret Wente’s periodic rant (to which the Torontoย Globe and Mail denies access unless you are an online subscriber), we are treated to the rhetorical question: โWhy wreck a good story with the fineย print?โ
Why, indeed? Certainly, Wente is careful not to offend on thatย count.
ย Her general tack on climate change โ an issue into which she regularly dips her toe, but no more โ is to dismiss the issue asย unknowable, and to castigate anyone who expresses concern as a wrong-headed enviro-whackoย or a dupe. In a recent column, for example, she made fun of her uptown friends who have switched to driving hybrid SUVs, a gesture that Wenteย condemned as hollow. It turns out that fuel efficiency inย a hybrid SUV, while an improvement, is still much worse than, say, a bicycle. Wente ridiculed her friends’ unwillingness to makeย a bigger sacrifice as a show of insincerity. Really, if you’re going to be cavalier, why not deny the problemย altogether?
Wente’s own allergy toย complexity leads her frequently to the same conclusion. As she says in this column, after offering up some strained contradictions: โWho’s right? How should Iย know?โ
Wente is proud toย keep an open mindย โ a mind uncluttered by theย facts thatย created a consensus amongย the best climate scientists in the world. But her avowed lack of insight doesn’tย keep her from joining the debate. Far from it, sheย continues to argue strenuously that everyone should stick to their full-gas Hummers pending final, irrevocable, undeniable, incontrovertible proof that the last gasping climate change denier is aย charlatan.
And the precautionary principle beย damned.
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