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‘A moral imperative’: how southern ministers are trying to change minds about the climate crisis [theguardian.com]

 

By Emily Cataneo, Photo: Jessie Wardarski/AP, The Guardian, July 26, 2022

Robin Blakeman, an eighth-generation West Virginian, has been a practicing minister since 2004. This May, the city where she lives flooded for the second time in nine months. Several inches of rain left roads in disarray, with cars washed out and first responders rushing to evacuate families. The rising flood also damaged one of the city’s churches.

Before that point, local congregations in Huntington, West Virginia, had talked about how the climate crisis was causing flooding. One church had hosted film screenings about global heating; Blakeman herself gave a sermon on Earth Day at another in 2020. But since the flood, they’re talking about it a lot more, said Blakeman.

According to Blakeman, who is Presbyterian, there’s “often some disjunction” in the faith community between natural disasters and the underlying climatic issues that cause them. “But I think it’s becoming more and more of a conversation,” she says, “as floods happen more frequently.”

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A lifelong resident of southwestern B.C., I was left feeling I could never again complain about the weather being too cold after having suffered the unprecedented heatwave here in June 2021, described by meteorologists as a ‘stalling dome’ of high heat.

Then complain I somewhat did, however, when most of the province, including my region, suffered an unprecedently cold bunch of days in January, which was described by meteorologists as a ‘stalling dome’ of freezing cold.

Meantime, if the universal availability of green-energy alternatives will come at the profit-margin expense of traditional 'energy' production companies, one can expect formidable obstacles, including the political and regulatory sort. If something notably conflicts with corporate big-profit interests, even very progressive motions are greatly resisted, often enough successfully.

We know that global mass-addiction to fossil fuel products undoubtedly helps keep the average consumer quiet about the planet’s greatest polluter, lest they feel and/or be publicly deemed hypocritical. And that relatively trivial politics diverts attention away from some of the planet's greatest polluters, where it should and needs to be sharply focused.

How can one not feel for today's children facing so many bleak decades of extreme weather and its consequences? ... How do we sleep while our beds are burnin'?!
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