Posted on 01/31/2007 4:45:17 PM PST by ventanax5
Some of you know I have written a book that many people find controversial. It is called State of Fear, and I want to tell you how I came to write it. Because up until five years ago, I had very conventional ideas about the environment and the success of the environmental movement.
The book really began in 1998, when I set out to write a novel about a global disaster. In the course of my preparation, I rather casually reviewed what had happened in Chernobyl, since that was the worst manmade disaster in recent times that I knew about.
What I discovered stunned me. Chernobyl was a tragic event, but nothing remotely close to the global catastrophe I imagined. About 50 people had died in Chernobyl, roughly the number of Americans that die every day in traffic accidents. I dont mean to be gruesome, but it was a setback for me. You cant write a novel about a global disaster in which only 50 people die.
Undaunted, I began to research other kinds of disasters that might fulfill my novelistic requirements. Thats when I began to realize how big our planet really is, and how resilient its systems seem to be. Even though I wanted to create a fictional catastrophe of global proportions, I found it hard to come up with a credible example. In the end, I set the book aside, and wrote Prey instead.
But the shock that I had experienced reverberated within me for a while. Because what I had been led to believe about Chernobyl was not merely wrongit was astonishingly wrong. Lets review the data.
(Excerpt) Read more at crichton-official.com ...
Thanks - excellent article. I read State of Fear, and was surprised at how well he characterized a lot of the environmentalists - at least in terms of the environmentalists I know.
Another great Chrichton presentation!
"at least in terms of the environmentalists I know."
You know environmentalists?
My condolences.
Too bad apparently so few have read it. But then, when environmental extremism is your religion, one is slow to give it up.
A University grew up around my home town - I can't help but know environmentalists. I've also been to some of their conferences (opposition research), so I know what they're like when they have a friendly audience...
It may be religion for some but it is socialism from the leaders. I have a theory, that the big push to do something about global warming going on right now (while the Midwest has been it the deep freeze for almost a month) is that Sun activity could change at any time. If it were to do so and the earth enters a cooling phase before they were able to claim that their legislation was responsible, they would lose their moral high ground.
Of course, the same complexity theories apply to politics, and they will certainly reap unintended and unforeseen consequences if they succeed, but that's probably well beyond the reasoning abilities of most of them...
Bookmarking. Thanks for posting this. My youngest daughter's bf is a lib. Nice guy, really, and very hard working. But he is having an effect on her. They watched "Inconvenient Truth" last night and she got all apocalyptical on me this morning. I gave her this and will be sending it to her bf as well.
"I've also been to some of their conferences"
What self-control you must have.
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