By Dramatizing Planet's Perils, Politicians Create New Ones
Václav Klaus, the president of the Czech Republic, knows what it is like to live under a totalitarian government. He spent 41 years of his life under the repressive communist regime of Czechoslovakia. Ever since the peaceful Velvet Revolution in 1989, when his country ended the communists’ monopoly on power, Klaus has been an ardent defender of the dignity of the individual and a proponent of political and economic freedom.
Communism, like other 20th century ideological movements, promised a complete transformation of civil society and political structure in order to attain a higher purpose. The goal, in the case of communism, was material equality for all people. In order to accomplish this, leaders of the movement demanded a complete surrender of political and economic liberties, which the people often willingly granted. We have seen this pattern repeat itself in many countries, and not just in association with communist ideology. Nazis and fascists also called for individuals to submit to the state or the cause while relinquishing their freedom.
Klaus made a speech earlier this year commemorating the 60th anniversary of the communist take-over in Prague. He said that future threats to individual freedom will not always appear in the same manner. “The ideology will be different. Its essence will nevertheless be identical: the attractive, pathetic, at first sight noble idea that transcends the individual in the name of the common good and the enormous self-confidence on the side of its proponents about their right to sacrifice the man and his freedom in order to make this idea reality.”
He could have been talking about many different modern political movements, but he was specifically referring to what he calls “climate alarmism.” This alarmism, premised on the rise of the average yearly temperature for the last century, calls for major economic reforms to reduce the emission of greenhouse gases. Scientists and academics who are skeptical that we should invest a significant amount of resources mitigating climate change have often faced ridicule and hostility by environmental dogmatists, greatly hindering the debate on climate change policy that we should be having.
I do not want to address the scientific arguments for and against human-induced global warming. I want to discuss our society’s reaction to it, so I will assume that global warming is indeed a result of human activity.
The reaction among climate alarmists has been one of unbridled hysteria. Sea levels are going to rise, hurricanes will become increasingly severe and, by the end of the next century, the sky will fall. Their rhetoric, often apocalyptic in terminology, is also increasingly censoring of dissenters. Columnist Ellen Goodman wrote in The Boston Globe last year: “I would like to say we’re at a point where global warming is impossible to deny. Let’s just say that global warming deniers are now on a par with Holocaust deniers, though one denies the past and the other denies the present and future.” There is an extremely intolerant attitude, especially in Europe, to those who, in good faith and with valid scientific arguments, deny that human activity is such a major cause of climate change that an immediate response is needed to solve it.
This intolerant and closed-minded attitude to such an important topic exemplifies the creeping ideology that Klaus fears will translate into statism. Climate alarmists’ policies will necessarily result in significant reductions in economic growth, which has been responsible for the unprecedented improvement in standard of living and technological advancement across the world. More disturbingly, many alarmists advocate a larger regulatory role of government in economic affairs.
I hasten to add that there are many environmentalists who want to address climate issues in a market-friendly way. Even the most committed defender of free markets believes that government has a role in making sure that it creates an environment where economic freedom can flourish. Policies like carbon taxes, while arguably economically infeasible and not very effective in addressing global temperature, are not threats to our market-oriented economy.
The problem is, as Klaus realizes, that a knee-jerk response to many problems by leftists is more government control. Climate alarmism is but one ideology that pushes the agenda of more state control over economic, political and personal life. In the United States, Democrats often accuse Republicans of sacrificing liberty for security in the war on terror. However, some of their most prominent positions call for the sacrifice of essential economic liberties to make way for bigger government. One can see this not only in the global warming debate, but also in the Democrats’ advocacy of government control over the healthcare market.
Klaus maintains that this debate is not ultimately about climatology, but about freedom. There will always be problems in the world, and many ideologies claim to have the solution. But any ideology that views human freedom as something to be harnessed in pursuit of a larger goal, ostensibly the idea of the “common good,” is a tool of suppression. The supposed problem of man-made global warming will be better resolved with an open debate that tolerates dissenting views and that keeps in mind the dangers of big government. If we surrender the right to control our own economic activities, even voluntarily, we will lose our dignity as individuals and become cogs in the vast machine of a state-controlled economy.
Americans should heed Klaus’ advice. He understands the harsh reality of a totalitarian ideology, one with a noble goal but a dim view of individual freedom. Let us address climate change with a little less hysteria and instead a commitment to the core American value of individual liberty.
Stephen Kenny is a senior in the College. He can be reached at kenny@thehoya.com. AGAINST THE WIND appears every other Tuesday.







Kenny's piece here drips with hypocrisy. It is intolerant and insulting to compare those who deny man-made global warming to holocaust deniers, but not intolerant and insulting to claim that those who see the need to regulate economic activity in order to ensure continued human survival are Stalinists?
Why is it inappropriate to harness the Holocaust, an act of genocide, for political motive, but not to allude to the Soviet Union's atrocities (genocide included) to do the same?
On top of those issues, Kenny seems to completely miss the point. He claims he's going to accept for the purposes of this column that man-made global warming is real. If that assumption is made, how then can he criticize those who predict doom? If, in fact, our actions are causing temperatures to rise, and they continue to do so, then ice will melt, sea levels will rise, etc, etc. If he is going to accept all of this as truth for the purpose of this article, how can he argue that our foremost concern must be "individual liberties?" What does he have to say about the individual liberties of the many millions of displaced persons that will have their homes and lives destroyed if such an event occurs? For individual liberty to have any meaning, it cannot allow for one man to impose his will upon another: your liberty ends where mine begins. If one individual's actions harm the planet in such a way as to threaten the lives and wellbeing of others, then one cannot justify such actions under the rhetoric of individual liberty, any more than one can justify murder, rape or theft as such.
Thank you for the comment Conor, but I think your two points mischaracterize what I say. First, I do not compare climate alarmism to Soviet communism. I merely point out an inherent danger in placing a cause above individuals' freedoms. The quote from Klaus I use explicitly says the "ideology will be different." Ideologies can range from benign to dangerous, and nowhere do I equate the ideology of climate alarmists to Stalinists. Second, I totally agree with you that one person's freedom ends where another person's begins, and the government has the duty to protect that. I actually say in the article that government has a role in the market economy. The point of my article was not to address potential solutions to global warming, and I certainly do not advocate doing nothing about global warming. My goal was to warn that our response should not be driven by panic and we need to put a lot of thought into every power we give the government to regulate our economic affairs for this transcendent cause.
Kenny makes a valid point that I wish more academics and politicians would listen to. I think the first problem is dogmatic closedmindedness that prompts the knee-jerk defensiveness on so many issues. During my time at Georgetown discussing such issues I encountered mostly knee-jerk reactions when the "accepted" view was challenged. The typical reaction is mostly a predictable routine of denial, insults, and inappropriate hypotheticals, followed by a resumption of going down the list of political talking points.
In the case of climate alarmism, it's not only that people aren't considering freedom, not only that they're talking in the language of dogmatism, not only that they're unscientifically monopolizing the science, but that they have already surrendured themselves to the "greater good" and totally invested themeselves in its defense, and they have closed their minds to anything that may contradict their "truth."
If you understand this fundamental problem, then it will make perfect sense to you that we can assume that human activity is indeed causing harmful climate change, and still want to debate the cost v. benefit of the drastic (and dangerous) economic reforms and government expansion instead of bowing to the "greater good" and closing our minds and surrendering our freedoms.
Kenny complains of a "totalitarian ideology, one with a noble goal but a dim view of individual freedom." Yet Kenny is the one blindly espousing an ideology - one that says that government is inherently bad and that market intervention equals totalitarianism.
The US government has been intervening in markets for a century, forcing draconian measures like requiring a summary of ingredients on food (which actually lowers information costs and thus makes the economy more efficient) and prohibiting cigarette ads on TV (which arguably frees up for productive uses the resources society would otherwise pour into fixing would-be smokers' lungs later in life). These were for the greater good.
In spite of this intervention, I do not see any evidence that we are approaching a totalitarian society, as Kenny would suggest. The stability of our economy prevents extreme socialist and fascist movements from ever gaining traction in American politics. Our economy continues to grow at a fast clip, even though our free-market hardliners predict economic doom every time the EPA director shows up for work in the morning. Americans still enjoy a relatively low tax rate, although the federal budget is suffering. So I'll take my chances with the "climate alarmists," thanks.
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