Below is the speech we NEED to see President Obama deliver and then implement. It is long past time for the United States to take it’s rightful place as the leader on climate change solutions. Our future and our NOW and that of our children, depends on it. As parents, we are regularly moved to action by our children’s tears, their thoughts and their ideas. As parents, we are all powerful to move mountains in our owns spheres of influence…
As Winston Churchill once said: “The Americans will always do the right thing… after they’ve exhausted all the alternatives.” At ClimateMama we feel that as a nation, we have reached that time..we’ve tried all the alternatives…it’s now time to act.
This wonderful guest post touched us deeply and we think you will find much “food for thought” in it. This post is written by Climate Reality Leader David Goldstein, and was first published in the Huffington Post on May 16, 2013. We republish it here, in part, with David’s permission, for all of our Climate Mamas and Papas. For the full text, please visit the Huffington Post.
OBAMA ON CLIMATE CHANGE AND SAVING OUR WORLD: By David Goldstein
Bulworth/War of the Worlds Productions brings you the full text of President Obama’s historic, legacy-forging climate change speech.
Good evening my fellow Americans:
Tonight I speak to you concerning a matter of the utmost gravity. It is a matter of national security. It is a matter of human rights. It is a matter of economic and social well-being. I speak to you tonight about a major shift in my approach to climate change.
I am the president but I am also a father. Last week my younger daughter Sasha came to me. In science class, she has been learning about climate change. Sasha overheard one of her classmates saying that his parents said that the president was not doing nearly enough about climate change, that I was playing politics. This classmate’s parents went on to say that I am not providing the forceful leadership necessary and am thereby placing our children and grandchildren at risk.
I’ll be honest. My first reaction was to be irritated. In my mind, I started to list the policies my administration has put in place to mitigate climate change: higher fuel efficiency standards, incentives to invest in green energies. But then I looked into my daughter’s eyes… and I saw tears, and something happened; my rationalizations and justifications fell away. In that moment of clarity, I admitted to myself that her classmate’s parents are right. When it comes to addressing climate, I have fallen short, substantially and significantly short. But that is about to change. When it comes to this elephant in the living room that I and Congress and, indeed, most of our leaders and much of our citizenry have been doing our best to ignore, from this moment forward I say this: “Not on my watch!”
As president, I must work with both Houses of Congress in order to bring policy onto law. I cannot simply draw up a program and say, “This is how it is going to be.” Compromise and negotiation are an integral part of the political process. And so what I say tonight will not automatically become the law of the land. I recognize that. But for too long, in the name of appeasement, in the name of finding a middle ground, I have avoided a simple and undeniable truth and in doing so have been doing a grave disservice to the American people.
The truth is this: Climate change is an emergency. Right here. Right now. Climate change presents a clear and present
danger to the national interests of the United States of America and to the well-being of its citizens. Before I go into details, I want to address the notion that there is still uncertainty among the scientists who are studying our climate. I want to make this clear; there is no uncertainty as to whether human activities, especially the burning of fossil fuels, are warming our planet. They are. There is no uncertainty as to whether the effects of this warming will be mostly negative. They will be. There is no uncertainty as to whether the longer we go without taking needed action the more people will suffer and the more expensive it will become.The only uncertainty that remains is how quickly things will worsen if we do not act now to reduce carbon emissions.
I understand that for many climate change is still a vague and distant phenomenon. For example, you might be aware that the Arctic ice is melting before our eyes; it is simply vanishing. You might think, “So what? How does that affect myself, my loved ones? We need good jobs, we need to pay our mortgages.” This is what makes climate change the enormous challenge that it is: To most of us it happens relatively slowly, and even if we are experiencing drought or flooding, we know that droughts and floods have always happened. On a day-to-day level, climate change does not set off our survival alarms.
As we put more greenhouse gasses into the atmosphere, our planet warms. The extra heat enters our oceans and our landmasses every minute of every hour of every day. The climate systems upon which we have depended as we have built our nation; where and how we grow our food, where and how we get our drinking water, where and how we build our cities and towns, are slowly being pushed out of balance.
The climate system is complex and climate science is complicated. I have learned as much as I can as quickly as I have been able, but at a certain point I simply have to trust the scientists. A strange thing has happened in our country recently. The findings of our scientists, these good men and women who devote their lives to investigating and examining our world in the name of progress and understanding… their findings are being treated as a political matter. It has gotten to the point, where certain high-ranking politicians and business people have leveled baseless accusations impugning the integrity of our scientific community. I can think of few things more dangerous to the functioning of a healthy democracy.
The bottom line is this: Climate change is happening. It is real. What will happen if we do not address it now? It will get worse. It will be more expensive to address later on. There is even the possibility that we will lose the ability to manage the situation altogether. Because of insufficient action on the part of the United States and other nations, humankind is behind the curve when it comes to addressing climate change. What now are our options?
One option is to stay behind the curve. This week, for the first time in at least three million years, the carbon dioxide level in our atmosphere passed 400 parts per million. Three million years ago the Earth was seven degrees Fahrenheit warmer than today and present day New York City, Miami and many coastal cities in the United States and around the world would have been underwater.
Before the use of fossil fuels, these types of temperature rises happened over thousands of years. But we are changing things much, much more quickly. As difficult as this may be to grasp, if we stay behind the curve, according to the latest research, my daughters and your children and grandchildren are looking at a world of “unprecedented heat-waves, severe droughts and major floods.”Again, I realize that it is not easy for any of us to wrap our heads around, but the nature of climate change is that the longer it remains unaddressed the more quickly it builds momentum. The time to address it is now before the momentum takes the ability to manage it out of our hands. Staying behind the curve will mean a much more difficult world, perhaps an unlivable world, for our children and grandchildren
But we have another option: We can get ahead of the curve. In 1961, speaking of his intention to put a man on the moon, John F. Kennedy said, “We mean to be a part of it. We mean to lead it. Our leadership in science and industry, our hopes for peace and security, our obligations to ourselves as well as others, requires us to make this effort; not because it is easy, but because it is hard. Because that goal will serve to organize and measure the best of our energies and skills.”
Do we need to create more jobs? Do we want a robust economy? Creating jobs and addressing climate change actually go hand-in-hand.
When the will, resources, creativity and resolve of the American people are focused on a goal, we have shown, repeatedly, that we are capable of greatness. And so tonight I am announcing the Green Patriot Program. It is the intention of this program to put us ahead of the curve. We will build-up our manufacturing and create millions of jobs in the areas of solar, wind, geothermal and tidal energy as well as the supporting technologies of battery storage and smart grid capability.
I spoke earlier of having two options. We also have two options for funding the Green Patriot Program. One is a massive build-up of government bureaucracy. The other is a market option that will keep government intervention to a minimum. I will tell you right now and in no uncertain terms, there is only one way to make the market option possible and that is by instituting a carbon tax.
I am a father and I love my daughters as much as I love anything on this Earth. Now, some may say, “President Obama is attempting to completely revamp our economy and society because his daughter had tears in her eyes.” Not so. You have elected me to be your president and Commander-In-Chief. It is my foresworn duty to put forth policy that I deem to be in the best interest of the people of the United States of America. Across the board; economically, ecologically, morally and in terms of national security that is what I have done tonight. We may or may not be able to get this program through Congress now or six months from now or three years from now. I don’t know. But as your president and, yes, as a father, I will not stop trying.
Thank you, God bless you and good night.
“The Americans will always do the right thing… after they’ve exhausted all the alternatives.”
Do you mean address animal agriculture’s contribution to climate change? The thing about changing our diet to fight global warming is that we don’t have to wait on anyone else to start doing the right thing now.
Thanks Kamal, Great point!
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