John Kerry
Related: About this forumJohn Kerry, the forgotten soldier on climate change
in Rolling Stone, and it's about time that Sec. Kerry's lifelong efforts on environmental issues were recognized:
http://www.rollingstone.com/politics/news/john-kerry-on-climate-change-the-fight-of-our-time-20151201
(figure legend: "John Kerry has been actively working to protect the environment since the U.S.'s first Earth Day, in 1970."
After touring the base in Norfolk, Kerry gave a speech at Old Dominion University that tried to sum up the connections between climate change and national security. "The bottom line is that the impacts of climate change can exacerbate resource competition, threaten livelihoods, and increase the risk of instability and conflict, especially in places already undergoing economic, political and social stress," Kerry said. "And because the world is so extraordinarily interconnected today economically, technologically, militarily, in every way imaginable instability anywhere can be a threat to stability everywhere." Kerry's audience was not just the several hundred Virginia dignitaries and students gathered at Old Dominion, but also Republicans in Congress who were gearing up to derail the upcoming U.N. climate talks in Paris, which both Kerry and Obama see as an important turning point in the fight against climate change. In effect, Kerry was saying to climate deniers in Congress: If Paris fails, terrorists win.
. .
(interviewer)To most people, climate change is an environmental issue. It's something that affects trees and frogs and weather. Why should Americans think about climate change as a security issue?
(Sec. Kerry) Because it is. Sixteen members on the board of the Center for Naval Analysis, who are all flag officers generals, admirals, three-star, four-star, retired have all said this is a major threat multiplier. And there are many different ways in which a security challenge can emerge. You have drought, therefore, perhaps, huge food shortages. Where there is water today, there may not be in the future. That could cause mass migrations. That creates conflict. The water itself there are wars over water. Already, tribes are fighting in part of the Sahel and other places where water once existed, and now it's dried up. There's a history of conflict where resources are finite or scarce.
So if you look around the world, the potential for mass dislocation is rising exponentially right now. We saw massive numbers of people uprooted in Syria and moving into Damascus. The drought in the region did not cause what happened, but it exacerbated what happened. It creates greater instability.
. . much,much more at the link.
mylye2222
(2,992 posts)Great sum-up and fair article.
It is true that JK DESERVES more recognition for is decades-old work of environemental issues.
Plus ... I never saw that pic of him before, or dont remember it. Great one. As always he looks both serious, pensive, and more, totally fucused and full-listening to the apparent conversation.
MBS
(9,688 posts)at the time of the Vietnam protests.
karynnj
(59,969 posts)At the same time, it has probably the best explanation of all his real work on climate change over decades, a great list of his real accomplishments as Secretary of State along with a very good, respectful interview (conversation? ) with Kerry.
Nice to see him getting the respect he has earned.
MBS
(9,688 posts)YvonneCa
(10,117 posts)beachmom
(15,239 posts)John Kerry has been a truly historical Secretary of State. I'm so proud of supporting him in those dark days of 2005.
and nice to "see" you again!
karynnj
(59,969 posts)YvonneCa
(10,117 posts)They were pretty dark days, weren't they? I'm pretty proud of how this group supported him then and how we...each in our own way...have continued to do so.