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May 23, 2013
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Ending the Silence on Climate ChangePosted on Jan 7, 2013
“What should really be scaring the daylights out of us—the crisis which could make all the others irrelevant—is global warming,” Bill Moyers says on the latest edition of “Moyers & Company.” “Get this one wrong and it’s over—not just for the USA, but for planet Earth. That’s the message delivered by Hurricane Sandy, and by almost all the extreme weather of the past two years.” But delivering the message is easier said than done. With little attention paid to the important and pressing issue during the presidential campaign, bringing climate change into the national conversation has proven to be a major challenge. That’s something Anthony Leiserowitz, director of the Yale Project on Climate Change Communication, knows all too well. Leiserowitz joined Moyers over the weekend to discuss the challenges of getting the word out. News publications and TV programs are partially to blame, he says. “The media plays an enormously important agenda setting role in this. Because, again this is an invisible problem to most of us. The only way we know about this is because of what we’ve learned through the media,” Leiserowitz says. “And so when the media doesn’t report it it’s literally out of sight and out of mind. And we’ve seen that this issue gets just a tiny proportion of the news haul. Of all the stories that the media focuses on every year climate change is miniscule. And in fact, even the environment as a category never gets above say 1 or at most 2 percent of total news coverage.” But the media’s attention—or lack thereof—to the matter isn’t the only impediment to a public conversation on climate change; there’s also a vigorous effort to distort the issue. Advertisement —Posted by Tracy Bloom. Previous item: Can You Drive in the Carpool Lane If You’re Sitting Next to a Corporation? Next item: Chris Hedges on the Fiscal Cliff ‘Ruse’ New and Improved CommentsIf you have trouble leaving a comment, review this help page. Still having problems? Let us know. If you find yourself moderated, take a moment to review our comment policy. |