
Michael Shellenberger's bestseller challenges environmental alarmism with science-backed counterpoints. Endorsed by Pulitzer winner Richard Rhodes, it sparked fierce debate by arguing that panic hurts progress. What if our apocalyptic fears are actually preventing real solutions?
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Picture angry London commuters in October 2019, kicking and punching climate protesters who'd climbed atop electric-powered Tube trains during rush hour. The irony was thick - activists disrupting zero-emission transport to "save the planet." When interviewed afterward, a spokesperson claimed their disruption merely previewed climate change's inevitable chaos: empty supermarkets, blackouts, transport collapse. But what if the preview itself revealed something more troubling than climate change - our inability to distinguish real environmental problems from manufactured apocalypse? For three decades as an environmental activist, watching this movement transform from practical conservation into doomsday prophecy has been unsettling. We've reached a peculiar moment where celebrities share decades-old photos claiming the Amazon is burning, where plastic straws become public enemy number one while commercial fishing nets kill millions of sea turtles, and where we shut down our cleanest energy source - nuclear power - in the name of saving the climate. When Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez declared "the world is going to end in twelve years," headlines amplified the alarm. Leonardo DiCaprio echoed similar warnings. Greta Thunberg urged us to "panic" rather than hope. Yet when NASA scientist Gavin Schmidt heard the twelve-year claim, he called such time-limited frames "bullshit." MIT's Kerry Emanuel expressed frustration with "apocalypse criers," while Stanford's Ken Caldeira stated flatly: "climate change does not threaten human extinction." The environmental conversation hasn't just gone off the rails - it's blocking the trains.
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