Current:Home > FinanceOPINION: Robert Redford: Climate change threatens our way of life. Harris knows this. -Elevate Capital Network
OPINION: Robert Redford: Climate change threatens our way of life. Harris knows this.
View
Date:2025-04-16 04:05:24
With summer winding down and the presidential election season heating up, Vice President Kamala Harris has put the fight to secure threatened freedoms at the heart of her campaign.
The Democratic presidential nominee has made clear that the future of American democracy, a woman’s right to choose and the freedoms to love whom you want and live safe from gun violence are all on the November ballot.
Harris broke important new ground in her convention speech, calling out the need to protect yet another essential freedom: our right to “live free from the pollution that fuels the climate crisis.”
Climate change, to Harris, is more than an environmental issue. It’s a threat to the foundational freedom at the core of our way of life, a threat we must confront, as a nation.
She’s right.
Freedom requires a livable environment
Freedom, to most of us, means pursuing our values, interests and dreams, and letting others do the same. The climate crisis threatens the most basic freedom of all ‒ to build a life, support a family and leave our kids a livable world.
It’s hard for a farmer or rancher to experience that kind of freedom in the face of blistering heat and withering drought that can endanger workers and turn once-rich pastures and fertile fields into barren wastelands; hard to preserve a coastal way of life when rising seas and increasingly devastating hurricanes threaten to sweep it away; hard to protect or even afford a home with climate change driving property insurance premiums out of sight, if they are available at all.
OPINION:Farmworkers need better protections from climate crisis
We’re not talking here about remote hazards or occasional harm. This impacts our daily lives in every corner of the country. Given these challenges, how can anyone achieve economic prosperity?
Just since May, 100% of people living in the United States have suffered warnings from dangerous heat waves, wildfires, floods or storms.
Last year alone, these kinds of climate-related disasters killed nearly 500 Americans, leaving $95 billion in damages that threaten to overwhelm our capacity, as a nation, to cope.
If that kind of ongoing and increasing devastation isn’t a threat to the freedoms that underpin our way of life, I’d like to know what is.
Kamala Harris will fight climate change as a real threat to Americans
We have a history, in this nation, of confronting threats to our freedom head-on, not denying they exist until it’s too late to act.
Getting that right takes leadership. Harris has been standing up to Big Oil and other polluters for two decades.
I worked in the California oil fields as a young man. I know the grip the industry can exert on the state. None of that stopped Harris from doing her job.
As California’s attorney general, she won a $24.5 million settlement with Chevron and a $14 million settlement with BP, over hazardous waste leaks from gasoline storage tanks.
Harris fought for communities on the front lines of refinery pollution. And she investigated the oil industry’s repeated lies about the climate crisis, the findings of which supported a pending state lawsuit against the industry for damages.
As vice president, she helped drive the strongest climate action in history, casting the tie-breaking vote to secure Senate passage of the clean energy incentives in the Inflation Reduction Act.
And she’s been instrumental in putting in place new standards to cut dangerous greenhouse gas emissions from oil and gas operations, cars, trucks and dirty power plants.
Now clean energy manufacturing is booming and we’re set to cut climate pollution up to 56% below 2005 levels by 2035.
In naming the climate crisis as a threat to American freedom, Harris showed she’s ready to build on those gains and press for even more climate progress from day one as president.
Donald Trump will set us back on climate action
Her opponent, Donald Trump, calls people who grasp the climate threat “fools.” As part of his failed presidency, he pulled the United States out of the Paris climate agreement and rolled back emissions curbs, teeing up the worst White House attack ever on the environment and public health.
Trump has said that he’ll do even worse in a second term, surrendering the climate agenda to wealthy oil and gas donors and other big polluters, guided by the MAGA manifesto Project 2025.
It calls for gutting the federal civil service, replacing tens of thousands of seasoned experts with Trump loyalists, politicizing science and weakening or repealing the climate and clean energy incentives and standards Harris has worked to put in place.
OPINION:Extreme heat is causing patients to suffer – and die. Trump Republicans don't care.
I don’t know about you, but I don’t hear anyone asking to hobble our government, toss science out the window and slam the brakes on climate action. Nobody, that is, except Trump and his billionaire buddies, who want to take us back to the days of a political spoils system that served corporate robber barons and left our kids to pay the price.
No thanks.
In his iconic series "Four Freedoms," the artist Norman Rockwell brought big ideas to canvas in the form of ordinary Americans, depicting in powerful images the meaningful ways that freedom of speech and religion, and freedom from want and fear, play out in our daily lives.
It’s inspiring to imagine how Rockwell might have illustrated the billowing storm of climate crises gathering just outside our kitchen windows, reminding us of the very real threat to our freedoms we face.
Kamala Harris has named that threat. She’s driven historic climate action. She’s ready to press those gains forward from day one as president. She’s the leader we need to confront the existential challenge of our time and keep us free from climate hazards and harm.
Robert Redford is an actor, director and environmental advocate.
veryGood! (4556)
Related
- Federal court filings allege official committed perjury in lawsuit tied to Louisiana grain terminal
- Virginia Senate Democrats postpone work on constitutional amendments and kill GOP voting bills
- The Integration of EIF Tokens in the Financial Sector
- New Mexico Supreme Court rules tribal courts have jurisdiction over casino injury and damage cases
- Justice Department, Louisville reach deal after probe prompted by Breonna Taylor killing
- An Ohio official was arrested for speaking at her own meeting. Her rights were violated, judge says
- Matthew Stafford's wife Kelly says her children cried when Lions fans booed her and husband
- The Leap from Quantitative Trading to Artificial Intelligence
- Questlove charts 50 years of SNL musical hits (and misses)
- Wisconsin Republicans fire utility regulator in latest strike at Evers
Ranking
- Bill Belichick's salary at North Carolina: School releases football coach's contract details
- US election commission loses another executive director as critical election year begins
- Politician among at least 3 transgender people killed in Mexico already this month as wave of slayings spur protests
- Sorry, retirees: These 12 states still tax Social Security. Is yours one of them?
- Are Instagram, Facebook and WhatsApp down? Meta says most issues resolved after outages
- The integration of EIF tokens with AI has become the core driving force behind the creation of the 'AI Robotics Profit 4.0' investment system
- Cocaine residue was found on Hunter Biden’s gun pouch in 2018 case, prosecutors say
- Politician among at least 3 transgender people killed in Mexico already this month as wave of slayings spur protests
Recommendation
Paula Abdul settles lawsuit with former 'So You Think You Can Dance' co
Politician among at least 3 transgender people killed in Mexico already this month as wave of slayings spur protests
Linton Quadros - Founder of EIF Business School
Mississippi court affirms conviction in the killing of a man whose body was found in a freezer
The 401(k) millionaires club keeps growing. We'll tell you how to join.
Police search for 6 people tied to online cult who vanished in Missouri last year
U.S. says Houthi missiles fired at cargo ship, U.S. warship in Red Sea amid strikes against Iran-backed rebels
The JetBlue-Spirit Airlines merger was blocked by a federal judge. Here’s what you need to know