Could ‘climate delayer’ become the political epithet of our times?

Already we argue over whether to call them climate deniers, skeptics or doubters. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez might have hit on a more devastating attack

Its a fantastic time for verbal abuse in American politics. Donald Trump loves a schoolyard nickname, insulting everyone from Crazy Bernie Sanders to Little Marco Rubio. In turn, the presidents opponents, and sometimes his allies, have called him a moron, a motherfucker and mocked his tiny hands.

But is there a way of using name-calling, not just to insult, but to introduce a new political idea. It seemed like Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez was doing that this week when she used the term climate delayer to call out those dragging their feet on climate change.

Ocasio-Cortez used the term to describe Senator Dianne Feinstein, who was filmed telling a bunch of children that when it comes to the looming apocalypse, she knows better than they do, because she has spent a long time in the Senate not fixing the problem. While they called for immediate action on the Green New Deal, she argued that change wasnt going to come anytime soon. After all, when it comes to averting a global catastrophe on an unprecedented scale, endangering hundreds of millions and fundamentally altering the human experience, you dont want to rush into things.

Play Video
3:18

Dianne Feinstein rebuffs young climate activists’ calls for Green New Deal video

The clip went viral. In the ensuing days, Ocasio-Cortez warned on Instagram and Twitter of the threat of climate delayers: people who appear to accept that something needs to be done about climate change, but dont seem to grasp its urgency. These people, she pointed out, arent much better than people who deny climate change exists.

Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (@AOC)

Climate delayers arent much better than climate deniers.

With either one if they get their way, were toast. https://t.co/Do0WJRfG56

February 25, 2019

The term isnt entirely new. Global warming delayer appeared on sites like ThinkProgress more than a decade ago; it appeared in the Guardian at least as far back as 2011. And out of context, it sounds like a badge of honor. A climate denier denies climate change, so a climate delayer delays it? Like by buying a Prius?

But thats getting into the weeds: we should celebrate the phrases emergence in mainstream political debate. Trumps political success has proven that a label can be as effective as a thousand nuanced arguments. Sure, Delayin Feinstein might not have quite the same ring as Lyin Ted, but its getting there. And given the scale of the issue, we badly need an arsenal of labels for people standing in the way of climate progress.

Labels for people who reject the scientific evidence of climate change have a tortured history. A debate has raged as to whether climate denier or climate skeptic should be used to describe such people, the latter term aiming to soothe the egos of officials who just arent quite sure they can believe basically every scientist.

Scientists who consider themselves genuine skeptics in the sense of seeking scientific inquiry, critical investigation and the use of reason in examining controversial and extraordinary claims didnt like the term skeptics for people who rejected expertise; they wanted to call them deniers, according to the Associated Press, purveyors of one of journalisms leading style guides.

But those deniers, understandably, didnt like the languages resemblance to Holocaust denial. So in 2015, the AP put forward another option, climate doubters, advising writers to ditch deniers and skeptics entirely.

The Guardians own style guide takes a different view: The OED defines a sceptic as a seeker of the truth; an inquirer who has not yet arrived at definite conclusions. Most so-called climate change sceptics, in the face of overwhelming scientific evidence, deny that climate change is happening, or is caused by human activity, so denier is a more accurate term.

On top of all that, there are climate contrarians, who make it their business to fight the scientific consensus often with substantial financial support from fossil fuels industry organizations and conservative thinktanks, as summarized in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

And yet none of these labels have managed to target a fundamental obstacle to climate change action: powerful people who profess to understand climate change, yet are curiously immobile on the issue. Perhaps the popularization of delayer will finally put the pressure on. When it comes to politically productive name-calling, its a lot snappier to dismiss someone as a climate delayer than to chastise them as a person who apparently believes the science but is unwilling to acknowledge the urgency of the situation.

Its worth noting in all this that the very phrase climate change is mired in labelling warfare. As anyone who has seen the movie Vice knows, the Republican pollster Frank Luntz encouraged the George W Bush administration to use the phrase climate change rather than global warming. Yale researchers recount a secret memo in which he pointed out that a focus group participant felt climate change sounds like youre going from Pittsburgh to Fort Lauderdale, whereas global warming has catastrophic connotations. Perhaps if wed all stuck with global warming or even tried global heating concern would have grown faster.

Luntz knows messaging: he turned the estate tax into the death tax and health reform into a government takeover of healthcare. Fortunately in Ocasio-Cortez, it seems the left has a messaging expert of its own. And whether denier or delayer, she points out, if they get their way, were toast.

Read more: https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2019/mar/01/could-climate-delayer-become-the-political-epithet-of-our-times


Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *