Alarmist NYTimes Environmental Reporter Justin Gillis Fears 'Mass Extinctions' on Horizon
Justin Gillis, the New York Times' s alarmist environmental reporter, was at it again in a post to the paper's "Green" blog, "Are We Nearing a Planetary Boundary?"
Gillis's preoccupation with the alleged dangers of overpopulation and overuse of natural resources are reminscent of the alarmism created by Paul Erlich's book The Population Bomb, which notoriously predicted in 1968 that 65 millions Americans would die of starvation in the 1970s (more like dieting).
Gillis, a true believer, proudly admitted his "climate change" activism in an April interview with the Columbia Journalism Review. His Wednesday worrying was based on a new report from the environmental journal Nature.
The earth could be nearing a point at which sweeping environmental changes, possibly including mass extinctions, would undermine human welfare, 22 prominent biologists and ecologists warned on Wednesday.
Acknowledging in a new paper that both the likelihood and timing of such a planetary “state shift” were uncertain, the scientists nonetheless described warning signs that it could arrive within a few human generations, if not sooner.
The problems are familiar by now: they include a planetary warming that, while slow on the scale of a human lifetime, is extremely rapid on a geologic time scale, the scientists said. And human population growth and economic expansion continue to demand new resources like energy and food, to claim new land and to cut natural landscapes into disconnected patchworks.
Humans have already converted about 43 percent of the ice-free land surface of the planet to uses like raising crops and livestock and building cities, the scientists said. Studies on a smaller scale have suggested that when more than 50 percent of a natural landscape is lost, the ecological web can collapse. The new paper essentially asks, what are the chances that will prove true for the planet as a whole?
In interviews, scientists involved in writing the paper acknowledged that the 50 percent threshold was simply a best guess, based on extrapolating the earlier research. But they said they were deeply concerned about many of the trends on the planet and the seeming inability of the world’s political leadership to grapple with them.
Gillis explained that the article is one of a package from "the journal Nature as part of the lead-up to Rio+20, a global sustainability summit meeting in Rio de Janeiro." He defensively admitted that apocalypse skeptics would accuse the paper's authors of "alarmism," then supported the group's findings.
The United States has taken only minimal steps on climate change, for instance, and global emissions have soared, not fallen, in the 20 years since the Earth Summit. Expectations for the Rio+20 conference, meant as a follow-up to the original, are low, but many environmental groups are pushing for action.
The Nature special issue was under wraps until Wednesday afternoon, and most scientists have not seen it yet. Based on history, there is little doubt that the authors of the new paper about a planetary “state shift” will be accused of alarmism.
....
Yet the authors marshal clear examples of ecological disasters that have already had serious effects on human society: the collapse of cod fisheries in the North Atlantic, for instance, and the outbreaks of mountain pine beetles that are devastating forests in the West. As humans continue to push planetary limits, are we due for a lot more of this sort of thing, and on a broader scale?
- Clay Waters's blog
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Comments
My take away
Submitted by Kingfish17 on Fri, 06/08/2012 - 1:15pm.
Long John Silvers is going to be serving deep fried mountain pine beetles.
"You can’t go take a trip to Las Vegas...on the taxpayer’s dime." Barack Obama
Another Malthusianite with
Submitted by rbosque on Fri, 06/08/2012 - 1:32pm.
Another Malthusianite with more doom and gloom. The population and resources always take care of themselves. Advances in food production and the free markets help with food distribution. Islam, Socialism and civil wars are what causes mass starvations.
But, then again...
Submitted by CobraMan on Fri, 06/08/2012 - 1:40pm.
"The earth could be nearing a point at which sweeping environmental changes, possibly including mass extinctions, would undermine human welfare, 22 prominent biologists and ecologists warned on Wednesday."
But, then again, it could be entering a golden age, like during the Carboniferous Period, when the Earth's temperatures were about 15 degrees higher than the highest global average we've seen since humans first learned to pick the seeds of a plant and place them into the ground much closer to where they live, which is what we call "agriculture." As the "prominent biologists and ecologists" themselves admit, the future, even the near future, is "uncertain," so ether scenario is equally plausible.
The Citizens of each State shall be entitled to all Privileges and Immunities of Citizens in the several States. The US Constitution
Unless you're a fetus. The US Supreme Court
Or Anwar al-Awlaki.
Cobra,
Submitted by Agnostic on Fri, 06/08/2012 - 1:47pm.
I can't prove this but I remember being taught in middle school many eons ago that as humans evolved we were going to become shorter on average and lose all body hair. The pictures had humans developing into a SciFi version of an Area 51 reject.
The shape of things to come.
Submitted by CobraMan on Fri, 06/08/2012 - 2:06pm.
Well, now they have a new theory. Personally, I like this scenario better.
The Citizens of each State shall be entitled to all Privileges and Immunities of Citizens in the several States. The US Constitution
Unless you're a fetus. The US Supreme Court
Or Anwar al-Awlaki.
shape of things?
Submitted by Agnostic on Fri, 06/08/2012 - 2:17pm.
The first one straight out of Wall-E so I guess that is their new theory.
The second is a better looking appearances - just hope there is no collective Borg type of thinking involved.
Impending Mass Extinctions?
Submitted by CO2Maker on Fri, 06/08/2012 - 3:09pm.
That's great! No more Catholic services! Whoo-hoo! The NYT will have self-induced orgasms! (Not that there's anything right about that.)
Oops
Submitted by CO2Maker on Fri, 06/08/2012 - 3:03pm.
Never mind.
-Emily Litella
And environmental journalists will be the first to go!
Submitted by drsamherman on Fri, 06/08/2012 - 4:36pm.
If all is such doom and gloom and everything is inevitable, doesn't that make his histrionic babble obsolete and unneccessary?
Mass extinction will occur
Submitted by American.Patriot on Fri, 06/08/2012 - 4:58pm.
A Congressional study from 2008 predicted the threat of a nuclear detonation over Omaha (300 miles in atmosphere), will exterminate 1/2 the US population in 6 months.
See the EMP Commission report here --- http://empcommission.org/docs/A2473-EMP_Commission-7MB.pdf
or the Heritage Foundation summary here ---
http://www.heritage.org/research/reports/2008/10/electromagnetic-pulse-e...
There is a reson why this administration is a clear and present danger to America...
OK, I will probably regret this...
Submitted by Kingfish17 on Fri, 06/08/2012 - 8:12pm.
...but I'll take the bait.
What does a report issued in 2008 about an EMP Pulse attack have to do with a nuclear detonation over Omaha. And what do these reports have to do with an administration that wasn't sworn into office until the following year?
I'm putting the chance of a response on this one at about 12%.
"You can’t go take a trip to Las Vegas...on the taxpayer’s dime." Barack Obama
Recommend you read the report
Submitted by American.Patriot on Sat, 06/09/2012 - 9:11am.
It will open your eyes and make you think....
1. The study was based on the threat assessment that a rogue nation (Iran, North Korea, China, etc) will detonate a device over Omaha by the year 12015.
2 the report commissioned by Congress was to model the effects of the event against the critical national infrastructure
3 the heavy reliance on technology, especially micro electronics that aren't protected from EMP will create a devastating consequence for the complete electrical grid and the fossil fuel and LNG distribution systems, rendering the Country back to the 19 Th century
4 sanitation systems, fuel distribution, refrigeration for foods and medicine, the list goes on....
The point is that the appeasement strategy with Iran, and not constraining nuclear development and deployment with the rogue nations gives them an opportunity to strike the US without consequences.
This administration is a danger to the Country.
Damages from air detonated nuclear weapons
Submitted by American.Patriot on Sat, 06/09/2012 - 9:17am.
Have a larger impact on the infrastructure that a ground detonation. Ground detonation destroyes buildings and kills millions.
Air detonation destroyes infrastructure and the impact is that the citizens wil destroy each other as they try to survive - Katrina is a good example, all the people sitting around waiting to be rescued by the government.
Air detonation over Omaha
Submitted by American.Patriot on Sat, 06/09/2012 - 9:38am.
Wipes out all of North America electrical grid, crippling the continent.
Conversely, a ground detonation on a city (Wash DC) only takes out the city and anything down wind from fallout.
If you won't to drive the USA back to the stone age, which do you do?
Starfish Prime
Submitted by Kingfish17 on Sat, 06/09/2012 - 10:13am.
I took a little time to try and figure out what you are saying. If you had taken a little time to summarize your point instead of just linking two voluminous articles, maybe you would get more interest. I never knew about the Starfish Prime explosion tests from the 1960s and it was pretty interesting stuff. I learned a little and that's always a good thing.
I don't however, agree with your "taking us back to the stone age" prediction. And thank goodness for Reagan's STAR WARS defense plan. Maybe if Iran launches a single rogue missile in an effort to create and EMP, we now have a chance to take it out.
"You can’t go take a trip to Las Vegas...on the taxpayer’s dime." Barack Obama
If you trawl through the
Submitted by Slyrr on Fri, 06/08/2012 - 10:54pm.
If you trawl through the writing and articles of many 'environmentalist' wackos, you'll find them actually CALLING for mass human extinction as a means of solving 'global warming'.
So I'm not sure what this guy is complaining about. By the twisted logic of the enviro-nazis, this is their version of the gas chambers - eliminating 'undesirable' percentages of the population. He should be delighted at the prospect of billions of humans dying.
In fact, he should show us how it's done and set a good example. Since the enviro-nazis are so eager for humans to die, why doesn't he commit seppaku on camera and show his little acolyte friends how it's done?
He sounds like one of those
Submitted by mattm on Sat, 06/09/2012 - 1:36am.
He sounds like one of those who would like to see 7/8 of humanity destroyed so the remaining 1/8 can live in harmony with Gaia (under the rulership of people like himself, of course)
He should look closer to home when worrying about extinctions
Submitted by 4Deuce on Sat, 06/09/2012 - 8:06am.
Justin Gillis should look closer to home when worrying about extinctions. Has he seen The NY Times subscription numbers lately?