
Heat
"Some
say the world will end in fire...."
–Robert
Frost |
"What's 37 Celsius?" Hortense's instant message
asked.
I
Googled the word "Celsius" and found a conversion table. "It's
98.6," I told her.
"Help," she
wrote back. "I'm melting."
" Tu
es fondue ?" I inquired. I had just learned the word "fondue" in
ballet class, where I was told that it means "melting," though
I had always thought it was merely a Swiss dinner-party
dish from the 1970s.
Hortense
did not respond. My daughter does not encourage my pitiable
efforts to parle français . She remarked
that there is no air conditioning in Paris. "Not even in
grocery stores," she added.
"Poor
pumpkin," I said, secretly finding it hard to feel sorry
for someone who is fondue in Paris.
The
fact was, I was melting too. It was the hottest day of the
year so far, maybe of the century, and the heat showed no
signs of breaking. A little thunderstorm had passed through
but stayed only long enough to tantalize us, then moved on.
When
I lived in England, my body constantly craved heat. Our damp
stone cottage had very limited heating, and even at the height
of summer, the temperature rarely went over 80 degrees Fahrenheit,
which most people seemed to find unbearably warm, maybe because
the only cold drinks you could buy in England at that time
were in fact hot. Though there were many things I loved about
living there-- The Guardian ; the BBC; the quiet
green of my village--I was happy to get back to the weather
of Maryland, where one never had to wear wool in July.
But
had I known that global warming was going to turn all of
Europe into a tropical paradise, I would have opted to stay
there. When I visited England the summer before last, the
air felt balmy and delicious. Paris may be oppressive in
the heat, but for the British Isles, global warming looks
like great news.
At
least, until we all die.
During
a heat wave, the best place to be is in a movie theater.
I was probably the last liberal in America to see Al Gore's
film, An Inconvenient Truth , the perfect cinematic
choice under the circumstances. I was expecting to find it
incredibly depressing, and I did, for the first 98 minutes--but
for that final two minutes, it was uplifting. Al seems to
think that if we all cut our carbon dioxide emissions by
driving hybrid cars and planting deciduous trees, we
can solve the problem of potential catastrophic climate change
as handily as we took care of that hole in the ozone layer
(which, I confess, I had not known we'd repaired). The idea
that there is something we can do as individuals to offset
this problem is a heady one--and the movie's unspoken inconvenient
truth is that if Al had become president in 2000, he, though
merely one person, would have cleared all this up in his
first term.
But
the fact is, Al is merely a movie star at this point, and
what is also inconvenient about the film's truth is that
battling global warming is antithetical to the business interests
that dominate our current government. The oil companies with
whom Bush and Cheney have been in bed since early in their
careers are not anxious for Americans to go out and buy themselves
hybrid cars, even those manufactured by failing American
auto manufacturers. They probably wouldn't mind our planting
deciduous trees, as long as we didn't burn them for fuel.
This is why it was so important to them to defeat Al Gore--so
important that it was necessary to have Bush declared winner
by the Supreme Court, hushing up the recount results that
clearly indicate that even after all the chads had been hung
and the voters hornswaggled by butterfly ballots, stricken
from voter rolls, and intimidated, Gore still won
Florida. The man in the movie is, inconveniently, the real
winner of the 2000 election.
Is Gore right about global warming? As he points
out in the movie, defenders of the corporations whose interests
lie in continuing to emit carbon dioxide have polluted the
discussion with pseudo-scientific disinformation. As with
most subjects since the Bush administration's rhetorical
paradigm began to dominate our discourse, it's difficult
for the layperson to make any sense of the barrage of alleged
facts. For the Bush administration, the phrase "inconvenient
truth" appears to be a redundancy, as it devotes all its
efforts to controlling the information flow through the news
media, an all-encompassing and very successful project marred
only by the occasional live microphone.
But Al's computer models in the film are very persuasive,
and scientists seem to agree with him. And to the casual
observer, sweltering in a Parisian fourth-floor walk-up or
here in Maryland, where the heat index today is 105 degrees,
things are feeling kind of toasty. As I idle my car in the
big parking lot that is I-95 at rush hour, all I know is
that it didn't use to be so damn hot here.
When I was in fourth grade, I read a short story from The
Twilight Zone in which everyone on earth was dying
from either excessive heat or cold--I forget which. Luckily,
however, it turned out that this was all a dream--but when
everyone woke up, it turned out that in reality, they were dying
from excessive heat (or cold--I forget which). All the kids
in my school who had read this story debated the relative
merits of dying by freezing or boiling, and we argued heatedly,
as it were, until we got bored and moved on to discuss
whether we'd prefer to be blind or deaf.
For me, it was no contest: I was firmly allied with the
forces of boiling to death. I always hated being cold--and
growing up in Chicago, I was cold a lot--and freezing to death
sounded like the worst fate imaginable, whereas heat--something
I associated with summer, and being out of school, and splashing
in the filthy waters of Lake Michigan--even excessive heat,
seemed relatively appealing.
But lately, as record-high temperatures spread across America
and across the ocean into my daughter's tiny Paris apartment,
where her rescue-cat Chachi sprawls on the floor, unable
to move for fear of working up a sweat, boiling has begun
to seem like a terrible way to go, too.
Meanwhile, the Middle East, home to fossil fuels, is heating
up. Would that have happened under President Gore? We'll
never know. But it seems likely that if things don't improve,
one way or another, we will all be fondue .
See http://an-inconvenient-truth.com/whatyoucando.html
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