Disaster Climate change is fueling extremism, raising tempers along with temperatures - LA Times reporters leave the bughive, write about how I am confused when we are not in bughive

GREENVILLE, Calif. —
It’s hard to explain just how much some people in rural California dislike and distrust the rest of us, especially Gov. Gavin Newsom.
It’s not something hidden under the surface, and it’s not just the radical fringe. Drive up past Sacramento, and there’s a real sense among many that urban California has betrayed them, ravaged their resources and simply doesn’t respect or value their way of life.

It can even be found in the politically mixed town of Greenville, which burned to the ground during last year’s Dixie fire.

The Stars and Stripes flew at its recent Gold Diggers Day celebration, held in a decimated downtown ringed by the skeletons of fire-blackened trees. But just below it was a State of Jefferson flag, the symbol of the anti-government separatist movement with racist undertones that would like to see everything north of Sacramento become its own territory, free of “King Newsom,” as some around here call him. Not far away, a Confederate flag caught the evening breeze.

Ken Donnell, a musician and inventor originally from Los Angeles, lost a business and a home to the Dixie fire and is in the process of rebuilding. He’s a hippie with the heart of a dreamer. But he’s not blind to the problems that plagued his beloved little town before the flames — faults that are growing back, perhaps even faster than the homes and trees.

“There were a lot of divisions within our community pre-fire,” Donnell told us, standing by a portable bar at the festival, wearing a flamboyant red cowboy hat that set off his blue eyes and black fanny pack. “It’s the drama and beauty of life in a small community. We all know each other way too well, and so we learn to live with those things.”

There’s no denying that the extremist turn of MAGA Republicanism is flourishing throughout the state’s pastoral parts. As climate change worsens, water gets more scarce and the land becomes hotter, drier and harder to live upon, this discontent could very well metastasize into violence. That’s especially true if California uses financial leverage to discourage rebuilding fire-destroyed towns and encourages rural denizens to move to more defensible places.

Experts who track domestic unrest are raising these concerns. It’s not just the two of us. Ignoring that growing fury is just as dangerous and foolish as ignoring the rising temperatures themselves. In both cases, there’s a tipping point where it becomes impossible to turn the heat back down.

Brian Hughes, a founder of the Polarization and Extremism Research and Innovation Lab at American University, warns that “an awful lot of radicalization and extremist propaganda works because it finds a reasonable hook.”

It’s natural to be livid when you lose something dear, he points out. Extremists are already targeting these vulnerable communities with paranoid answers about how to save a sacrosanct way of life, Hughes said.

Donnell has heard conspiracy theories about Jewish-controlled space lasers and tales of government officials who want to burn people off their land as part of a socialist plot.

Alexander Reid Ross, an extremism expert at Portland State University, points out that, in the American West, antisemitism has long married itself to an anti-governmental cowboy ethos — a combination that has become supercharged and mainstreamed as MAGA Republicanism has mined the discontent for converts.

“They all believe that the U.S. government has been captured by Jews,” said Ross, referring to the West’s extremists, who say they have an obligation “to restore America by destroying the federal government.”

Even those without extremist goals are fed up enough to defy authorities and regulators.

Many blame their woes on liberal policies — such as bans on extensive logging or maintaining stream flows for endangered fish.
This summer, some ranchers and farmers in nearby Siskiyou County went rogue, ignoring state orders to stop taking water from rivers to irrigate their fields. They claimed they had legal rights to the flow and were mad at what they perceived as a “rules for thee, not for me” attitude from authorities, especially Newsom.

This rebellion was cheered on by Rep. Doug LaMalfa (R-Richvale), a Trump Republican who represents a large chunk of Northern California. He issued a statement lambasting the “dictatorial whims of the State Water Board” and a “systemic attempt to destroy farming and ranching in order to run the people off their own land.”

He encouraged “anyone to stop ‘voluntarily complying’ with government looters.” His spokesman later clarified that the congressman was not advocating rejecting laws, just an end to negotiating and turning off the taps without a court ruling.

Wildfires have also brought out that mutinous streak, with the far right posing as alternative protectors and a substitute authority.
During a recent fire in the Pacific Northwest, militia members set up armed roadblocks, claiming they were working to prevent so-called anti-fascists from “looting” businesses and homes. Another militia turned up at a fire near Yosemite National Park, ostensibly to offer aid.

At the Bear fire near Oroville, a Times reporter ran into members of the Three Percenters — an extreme-right group whose leaders allegedly collaborated in the Jan. 6 attack on the U.S. Capitol — passing out hot dogs, water and their business cards.
Reid Ross expects that more and more communities in the rural West will embrace a go-it-alone attitude and gravitate toward those selling the message that “it’s us against them.”






In a not-so-distant future ravaged by climate change, many of Northern California’s rural towns wiped out by wildfires might not get rebuilt at all.

Adolf Hitler made “blood and soil” the slogan of German Nazism, romanticizing an agrarian life fueled by white Christianity under attack from outsiders.

Not so long ago, in 2017, marchers wielding Tiki torches shouted the ugly phrase in Charlottesville, Va. The mass shooter in El Paso who targeted Latinos in 2019 spouted eco-fascist propaganda, as did the Buffalo, N.Y., shooter who targeted Black people in a supermarket this year.

Eco-fascism is on the rise in the United States — seizing upon the misery of rural communities and harnessing their pain to further a dark narrative.

At the same time, climate change is triggering waves of global migration, adding to religious and racial intolerance. Our new eco-fascists hate dark-skinned immigrants, especially the imaginary hordes seeking to overrun the country with illegal Democratic Party votes.

A White House report on climate migration said that extreme weather displaced more than 21 million people between 2008 and 2016. Just this summer, floods displaced 33 million Pakistanis, even as China sees unimaginable drought and Iraqis flee their parched farmlands.

The United States and California are not immune to that upheaval, though we seldom think of climate refugees within our borders. But floods, fires and hurricanes cause tens of thousands of temporary evacuations every year, displacing people from homes, jobs and schools and making them more susceptible to — or victims of — extremist propaganda.



Despite resentment toward Newsom, Democrats and government in general, all those fire victims rightfully feel entitled to our help, and they deserve it. They’re Californians in trouble. But we need to rethink what that “help” looks like.

Any hint that the state may change the ground rules — refusing to pay to rebuild burned towns or encouraging people to move out of dangerous areas — will surely be met with outrage, though. Keep your money and keep your rules is a popular sentiment in rural California, even as local politicians seek emergency declarations from Newsom and President Biden to ensure that government funding will flow to their communities.

It’s that mix of hypocrisy and rage that leaves politicians including Newsom hesitant to push too hard on the unpopular truths of climate change. This is, after all, a place where some believe human-caused global warming is another lie created to steal what is rightfully theirs.

But the difficult truth is some grievances aren’t conspiracies, or extremism. Though many will deny it, California politicians have too often given short shrift to poor places that are largely agrarian — favoring the needs of more diverse, urban places where votes and money reside.

That makes even Donnell feel that the future of Greenville may be a “bitter pill to swallow.”

Towns like his will largely need to fend for themselves as environmental disasters reach “biblical scales,” he says. He envisions self-contained communities that he calls “arks,” bobbing in a sea of dystopian catastrophe, abandoned by government.

But the answer to a brutally warming planet can’t be merciless anarchy — a “Mad Max” world of takers and losers.

As climate change forces hard choices, we must decide how to treat neighbors who don’t particularly like us — and whose views we may not particularly like — but who until now have been easy to ignore because they are largely powerless to stop our majority rule.
The big question, says Donnell, is “are we going to work together and cooperate, or are we going to fight over these dwindling resources?”

Extremists have an answer.

What will ours be?

 
>Use predictive models that cannot predict next week, to predict fifty years in the future.
>Keep changing the model because the predictions never come true.
>Use it to justify massive wealth transfer, the destruction of the middle class and importing infinity sub 80 IQ shitskinned retards to keep the middle class destroyed.
>"Why does no one trust the climate science?"


Because it's not real science, it's about two steps removed from fucking astrology.
Remember fifty years ago when it was "Next Ice Age?" It's literally cult like behavior, no matter how often "ten years from now..." is wrong, they just shift the date and the cultists go on believing. I'm pretty sure the Decarbonizationists are actually a death cult, they don't seem to actually care about the enviroment, what with all the paving and clear cutting you'd have to do for solar farms and birds their boondoggle wind farms kill.
 
Are you telling me the fags who tell me that the weather forecast for next week can be subject to changes are the same ones who are dead-set that the models for decades beyond are 1000% accurate and that i should eat the bugs and vote dem to stop it
 
Remember fifty years ago when it was "Next Ice Age?" It's literally cult like behavior, no matter how often "ten years from now..." is wrong, they just shift the date and the cultists go on believing. I'm pretty sure the Decarbonizationists are actually a death cult, they don't seem to actually care about the enviroment, what with all the paving and clear cutting you'd have to do for solar farms and birds their boondoggle wind farms kill.
The worst part is that it should be a no-brainer that we need to take care of the environment, that we're doing damage to it, and that it affects us negatively.

Air pollution is certainly a thing, as is water and soil pollution. Microplastics are embedded in our ecosystem to the point that it's a borderline inevitability that we're swallowing them in notable quantities, with no clarity on the long term and generational effects of such. These are concrete issues that should be at the forefront, but instead, climate activists are mostly preoccupied with some vague concept they've already had to rename into something even more vague and all-encompassing-- worse, the term's literal meaning is something that has never not happened in the history of the earth.

I mean, with how slowly changes occur in the climate, if we had ten years to fix our behavior, it'd already be too late.

They point to houses built on sand predicatably collapsing into the sea, and they blame climate change as if they've never picked up a Bible or heard the word "erosion". They talk about how we need to shift our reliance to tech that involves storing energy in a device that's made with minerals whose extraction involves a great deal of ground pollution, but they never mention it. They talk about how we need to switch to electric energy when we mainly derive our electric energy from coal, another fossil fuel.

Without considering that these people are likely just shills for greater dependence on China (we get nearly all our rare earths from there, and much of our recyclables go there for processing), hardly anything about them makes sense.
 
Última edición:
But just below it was a State of Jefferson flag, the symbol of the anti-government separatist movement with racist undertones that would like to see everything north of Sacramento become its own territory, free of “King Newsom,” as some around here call him.

KF LEHTO.png
Noted Far-Right Lawsplainer and Car Brain Steve Lehto wearing alt-right dog whistle clothing.
 
Drilling your own well will be the new "poaching the King's deer" for Jackson. I fully support Jackson's independence. They have suffered under the tyranny of LA long enough.
Please tell me you mean Jefferson...
Noted Far-Right Lawsplainer and Car Brain Steve Lehto wearing alt-right dog whistle clothing.
Anything that wants to get people out from under the tyranny of such enlightened places as LA and SanFran can only be vile, far-right extremist hate thought and wrongthink.
"Quit fucking us over!"
"Its for your our own good, bigots!"
 
The worst part is that it should be a no-brainer that we need to take care of the environment, that we're doing damage to it, and that it affects us negatively.

Air pollution is certainly a thing, as is water and soil pollution. Microplastics are embedded in our ecosystem to the point that it's a borderline inevitability that we're swallowing them in notable quantities, with no clarity on the long term and generational effects of such. These are concrete issues that should be at the forefront, but instead, climate activists are mostly preoccupied with some vague concept they've already had to rename into something even more vague and all-encompassing-- worse, the term's literal meaning is something that has never not happened in the history of the earth.

I mean, with how slowly changes occur in the climate, if we had ten years to fix our behavior, it'd already be too late.

They point to houses built on sand predicatably collapsing into the sea, and they blame climate change as if they've never picked up a Bible or heard the word "erosion". They talk about how we need to shift our reliance to tech that involves storing energy in a device that's made with minerals whose extraction involves a great deal of ground pollution, but they never mention it. They talk about how we need to switch to electric energy when we mainly derive our electric energy from coal, another fossil fuel.

Without considering that these people are likely just shills for greater dependence on China, hardly anything about them makes sense.
It's pretty telling that all of the current climate initiatives seems to involve massively increasing our reliance on technology, as if batteries just spring from the ground fully formed and electricity can be filtered out of the air. If the people spearheading these movements from the highest levels really cared about the planet, they should be encouraging people to live plainly and avoid the consumption of mass produced goods that create large amounts of plastic and mineral waste, but instead all of these climate policies seem designed to create the opposite effect. Sustainable homesteading is discouraged by creating economic choke points that divert resources to large urban areas, and rural communities are demonized as prejudiced, undereducated hicks who are dragging society down despite them having the least significant impact on the climate. As a result, people are being pushed out of their communities and towards densely populated cities, all to the benefit of the same massive corporations who are currently responsible for the most environmental harm.

The climate mogul's ideal society, then, seems to resemble Megacity One from 2000AD. To save our dying planet, you must live in a tiny rented apartment surrounded by plastic devices all powered by the minerals and fossil fuels our corporate benefactors have graciously raped the Earth to provide us with. You must work in the cage, buy more plastic products to sustain our green energy initiatives, and spend your free time engaging in online content which constitutes your community since human interaction that does not enrich Twitter's stock value is irresponsible. You may never actually see the natural environment that our brave CEOs and venture capitalists have worked so hard to prevent your clumsy human behaviors from ruining, but rest assured that your continued serfdom is necessary to prevent the whole planet from catching on fire yesterday.
 
Remember fifty years ago when it was "Next Ice Age?" It's literally cult like behavior, no matter how often "ten years from now..." is wrong, they just shift the date and the cultists go on believing. I'm pretty sure the Decarbonizationists are actually a death cult, they don't seem to actually care about the enviroment, what with all the paving and clear cutting you'd have to do for solar farms and birds their boondoggle wind farms kill.
It's literally just tech worshipping retardation and 'wow science!'. I hate to sound reddit here; but it's literally the 'machine mind' thinking from Dune. People have become so used to, and reliant on, technology that they can only think about problem solving in terms of 'we'll just get more advanced tech lol.'

We see it with everything from climate change to medicine. I have sat through dozens of lectures from recent PhDs talking breathlessly about how AI, and machine learning will revolutionise the field of medicine/genetics/biotech. When the reality is that all the 'advanced AI' and 'Revolutionary personalised tech!' will do is let Amazon try and sell you custom named buttplugs. I don't think tech is evil, I am after all, an actual scientist. However, in modernity, societies relationship with technology has become parasocial; and maladaptive. I've seen people say that science worship is just a replacement for the religion we lack in modern times, but I disagree. Religion in the past was pro-adaptive; it turned basic biological reality into the word of god: Be good to your brothers, be fruitful, be mindful, don't be lazy. Whereas societies relationship with modern tech has become - pardon the Peterson here lol - demonic. The internet today essentially just acts for the most part as a vessel for the message of 'Cut off your cock, be a bugman, take it up the ass'.

Care for the environment has to come from care for where you are. I don't litter because I like where I live, I like the neat little parks and forests, and horse paddies, and hedgerows, and streams, and moors. I like them because they look nice, I like them because they feel like a part of who I am (lol gay). Bugmen in bug hives don't care about the environment, they care about some abstract concept that people have called the environment. None of them actually like the outdoors, they just like the idea of the outdoors. If the UK had enough land for it, I could happily fuck off into a shale cottage in the woods, burn peat and logs for my heat, grow vegetables, winter wheat and rear chickens, ducks and pigs for food, and have my only contact with the rest of the world be buying a book every few weeks. If you put a bugman there they'd lose their minds and feed themselves to the pig inside a month.
 
I don't think anybody who believes it's appropriate for a public teacher to lead a kid down a path of chemical and physical lifelong damage without the knowledge of the parents, and a crime against humanity to not allow that to happen, has any right to call another person an "extremist".
 
Atrás
Top Abajo