C+C Terror Factory
What are the parallels between climate and COVID? They鈥檙e numerous I think, but here are three biggies.
Awakenings
When I had my climate awakening, the world crumbled like an apple crisp. How was this horrible stuff happening without anyone doing anything or even talking about it? Over the years, many have had their climate awakenings, whether through Greta, or from noticing the changes in their own backyards, or from the occasional that would creep into a mainstream lad magazine (this one remains vivid in my mind because of the beautiful title: The Ballad of the Sad Climatologists).
With COVID, it鈥檚 similar. See the family member on the group chat go from 鈥渋t鈥檚 NBD鈥 to checking the case stats hourly.
Why does any of it matter? Because we have to remember to welcome everyone to the band. I think my No. 1 takeaway from years of trying to bring people over to climate is that everyone can like the band, and it鈥檚 never too late to start. COVID is a stadium band (are there such things any more?) and not an indie darling. The band doesn鈥檛 become uncool because more people like them, and it doesn鈥檛 matter that it took your aunt 4 years to understand the genius of the music. What matters is that your aunt is here, bopping her head arrhythmically to the music.
We need everyone fighting the climate crisis and everyone practicing physical distancing. As soon as someone has their awakening, you can welcome them with open arms (from 6 feet away).
Discounts!!!
I talk about discounting way too much, but it鈥檚 because discounting is why we eff up so many things. The less science-y term for hyperbolic discounting is present bias, but you might as well just call it Human Impatience. It just means that we prioritize the immediate. It鈥檚 literally in our DNA.
We discount everything. Even though a few dollars a few decades ago could have stopped climate change. Even though a few more dollars at the CDC a few years ago could have drastically improved American preparedness for this shitstorm.
I tried really hard to get one of my clients to let me do a campaign about discounting a few years ago. The government wanted to sell off a huge chunk of our hydro utility for what sounded like a large sum of money. But in 9 (measly!) years we would have made back the amount of money they鈥檇 sold it for. We would have had that revenue FOREVER. Needless to say, the campaign was a little too eggheady for public consumption, but if we could make salient the idea that we need to think about our long-term selves (and children鈥檚 selves) whenever possible, we could stop a lot of folly.
Amazing behavioral science initiatives play with this idea. is a resoundingly successful campaign that helps people commit to, you guessed it, saving more tomorrow. Researchers have to get people to care about their future selves, not to mention to stop smoking, drinking, and eating garbage.
But with climate and COVID, we鈥檝e lost our early-mover advantage. Unsurprisingly, the discounting curve and our case curve look remarkably similar.
We鈥檙e seeing what not taking early COVID precautions means in high speed. Maybe this will illuminate why we need to act as quickly as possibly to prevent the worst of climate catastrophe? (Not holding breath). In , Ed Yong ponders all the places we could go from here. He writes that America has been trapped in a cycle of 鈥減anic and neglect,鈥 but that perhaps a pandemic that touches all will stir the realization that everything needs to be very different.
Politicians are incentivized to think short-term. We need long-term thinking, at every level of life. Also, more dancing:
Inequality Exacerbators
C + C both exacerbate inequality. The world was already growing epically unequal. Now, in an instant, COVID has bowled us snake eyes. People with stable jobs, security, and social capital will ride out the horror watching Netflix. People with no safety net will die. Climate crisis wreaks the same havoc; we just see it less.
The positive take (that I gently nudged at last week) is that we鈥檒l realize that we are, all of us, on this planet together. That we鈥檒l disrupt the worst of capitalism to reconstruct a better world for everyone. But given that humans are actually pitching the expendability of our elders in the name of the stock market, I鈥檓 60/40 on this prospect. You?
I鈥檝e taken comfort in seeing the amazing ways that people rally to remediate the deep inequality all around us. From baking bread for neighbors to giving up their ventilators.
I worked on a kibbutz for a year. Everyone was a little bit nuts, but everyone was also wonderful. I would not say our neighborhood has gone full kibbutz, but I do love the pot-banging camaraderie of our already friendly street. Will we finally begin to know that, by working together, we can take care of everyone? The next months will be grim, but let鈥檚 hope for the best.
Onward
I heard Dr. Michael Gardam, a very thoughtful physician who is often called to opine on the radio here, say something helpful last week. He mentioned that every morning he wakes up optimistic because he knows we will get a little bit closer to figuring things out. It鈥檚 the most positive frame to have, and it gives me comfort when I wake up in the morning and flick on the radio.
I know everyone has been having their Zoom moments of companionship but a particularly favourite of mine came on Monday. I usually go to Dark Dancing, a communal DJ set at our local Owls Club, where we all dance in the dark. Of course, Dark Dancing, like everything else, has gone online. My little family tuned in to the livestream, and danced away our Monday night. I felt the anxiety dissipate for a few minutes.
Over the past few days people have begun to write the way forward, offering up ideas as to how we must use this moment in time to create a better future. Bill McKibben likens it to (divesting is like cutting off a flow). Economists and policy advisers have begun to make suggestions about . Masha Gessen writes of contextualizing the things we鈥檙e doing so they have a more positive impact. Will we think of basic income as just an easier way to pay people, or ? As I said, I鈥檓 60/40.
This Week
How do climate and COVID paint the future for you? LMK.
Last Week
How are doing/what are you doing?
Writes Haley:
What am I doing? I told myself that if I can鈥檛 go to work I am going to turn my 鈥渄abbling鈥 of healing myself (meditation, eating better, improved posture, a little exercise and walks) into my full-time focus. So in between taking care of my toddler twins and grading college student papers and writing posts about fashion sustainability, I eat dark chocolate almonds and throw my shoulders back while cleaning the dishes. And trying to remember to stop holding my breath. Literally, not figuratively, though there鈥檚 that, too.
Writes Mary:
I鈥檓 working on a tapestry/fabric collage series of Rudyard Kipling Just So Stories. How the Leopard got his Spots is in progress. And yes I鈥檓 anxious. 75 didn鈥檛 seem so old a few months ago.
Writes Mich猫le:
As far as how I am coping, I am making a corona virus 鈥渢oy鈥 that I can kick around when it all gets too much for me.
So beautiful!
As always, stay cozy and safe.
Thanks for reading,
Sarah
P.S. I鈥檓 always curious to know what you think. This is my newsletter for the week of March 26, 2020, published in partnership with YES! 麻豆社事件 You can sign up to get Minimum Viable Planet newsletter emailed directly to you at .
Sarah Lazarovic
is an award-winning artist, creative director, freelance animator and filmmaker, and journalist, covering news and cultural events in comic form. She is the author of A Bunch of Pretty Things I Did Not Buy.
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