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The end of radical environmentalism?(Book Review: Michael Crichton's State of Fear)
www.lp.org ^ | 1 10 05 | Joseph L. Bast

Posted on 01/10/2005 1:32:33 AM PST by freepatriot32

[State of Fear, by Michael Crichton. 603 pages. Published December 7, 2004, by HarperCollins Publishers. Hardcover, $27.95. Available at www.Amazon.com.]

Michael Crichton, the author of The Andromeda Strain, Rising Sun, Jurassic Park and other block-buster thrillers, has penned a novel that could profoundly change the national and even international debate over global warming.

It's long overdue.

Crichton's State of Fear, with a reported first print run of 1.7 million copies, is an action thriller that doubles as a scientific primer on global warming and other environmental topics. Crichton's protagonists -- a scientist, a lawyer, a philanthropist and two remarkably athletic women -- race around the world foiling the plots of environmental extremists who seek to frighten the world into embracing their radical agenda. Along the way, they take time to explain to their adversaries, often in surprising detail, the flawed science behind global warming and other imagined environmental crises.

Books that combine social commentary and science with fiction are not new or even rare. A socialist classic in this genre is Upton Sinclair's The Jungle and two libertarian classics are Ayn Rand's Atlas Shrugged and Robert Heinlein's The Moon is a Harsh Mistress. In each case, characters who grapple with shadowy foes suddenly launch into speeches about economics, political science and history.

State of Fear is no exception: One of Crichton's characters whips out a laptop computer and portable printer to produce lists of scientific journal articles saying global climate models are fatally flawed, while another holds up a series of foam-board posters showing graphs of falling temperatures around the world. Readers are told temperatures in the Antarctic are falling and the ice cap is growing thicker, extreme weather events are becoming less frequent, and changes in land use (e.g., more roads and concrete buildings) cause more surface warming than man-made emissions of carbon dioxide and other gases.

To persuade readers to take him seriously, Crichton offers footnotes, an appendix with sources for the data appearing in the graphs, and an annotated bibliography. In an "Author's Message" at the end the book, Crichton summarizes his own views on the science of global warming and other environmental subjects such as resource depletion, the precautionary principle, and wildlife preservation. His stated beliefs include:

* "Nobody knows how much of the present warming trend might be man-made."

* "Nobody knows how much warming will occur in the next century."

* "The current near-hysterical preoccupation with safety is at best a waste of resources and a crimp on the human spirit, and at worst an invitation to totalitarianism."

* "[T]he thinking of environmental activists ... seems oddly fixed in the concepts and rhetoric of the 1970s."

* "We need a new environmental movement, with new goals and new organizations."

No doubt, leaders of the nation's big environmental advocacy organizations will attempt to discredit Crichton, just as they have S. Fred Singer, Richard Lindzen, Sallie Balliunas, Patrick Michaels, Robert Balling, Tom Wigley and the late Dixy Lee Ray.

The difference this time, however, is that all those dissenters are or were prominent scientists respected by their peers but relatively unknown to the general public. Crichton is not a scientist, but he has accurately summarized their findings in a book that will reach millions of readers in the coming months, and tens of millions in the coming years.

Crichton anticipates the coming assault and puts his finger on the motivation of his critics: Environmentalism today is a multi-billion-dollar industry funded by government research grants and leftist philanthropists and dependent on fear-mongering to keep the money coming in. By exposing this scam, State of Fear could cost environmental groups millions, even billions, of dollars in the coming years.

State of Fear does not mark the beginning of the end of radical environmentalism. Public support for the movement was already shrinking as its Chicken Little predictions failed to come true and its obsolete big-government ideology put it far outside the political mainstream.

But Crichton's remarkable book may mark the end of the beginning, and the start of a "new environmental movement" that puts science ahead of ideology -- and considers the legitimate interests of everyone rather than the careers of a few.


TOPICS: Books/Literature
KEYWORDS: academialist; aynrandlist; biofraud; blackshirts; book; bookreview; crichton; crichtons; end; enviralists; environment; environmentalism; envirowackos; fear; fundingtheleft; geopolitics; globalwarminghoax; govwatch; green; hollywoodpinglist; kyotolist; libertarians; michael; of; radical; review; state; stateoffear; the
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To: Casloy

"Well, one thing for sure, this book will never be made into a movie. It doesn't comply with the 'agenda.'"

Heard that. They totally buggered up Clancy's "The Sum of All Fears", and Clancy had it right way back then, too!

Crichton has no idea the hornet's nest he has stepped on, though. Very reminiscent of John Lott and his first political book.

His observation of the ecos' preocupation with Malthusian thought is by far the most cutting. To my mind, it is even sharper than the 1970s barb.


21 posted on 01/11/2005 6:47:45 PM PST by AZ_Cowboy ("Be ever vigilant, for you know not when the master is coming")
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To: freepatriot32
I saw his interview on 20/20.

He was good and stated that those in Hollywood really don't have a clue about the environment and pointed out that many are hypocrites while being "activists" for the environment they charter private jets to travel. It was also brought out that in a previous interview, he called them: DUMB.
22 posted on 03/03/2005 5:13:35 PM PST by Coleus (I support ethical, effective and safe stem cell research and use: adult, umbilical cord, bone marrow)
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