In celebration, read Birthday-Boy Thomas Jefferson writing
about climate change and, specifically, global warming, in a
remarkably sane and sober way, lacking the idiotic ‘at this
rate!’ editorialism that has caused so much harm to date, and
threatens so much more:
A change in our climate however is taking place very sensibly.
Both heats and colds are become much more moderate within the
memory even of the middle-aged. Snows are less frequent and
less deep. They do not often lie, below the mountains, more than
one, two, or three days, and very rarely a week. They are
remembered to have been formerly frequent, deep, and of long
continuance. The elderly inform me the earth used to be
covered with snow about three months in every year. The
rivers, which then seldom failed to freeze over in the course of
the winter, scarcely ever do so now. This change has produced
an unfortunate fluctuation between heat and cold, in the spring of
the year, which is very fatal to fruits. From the year 1741
to 1769, an interval of twenty-eight years, there was no instance
of fruit killed by the frost in the neighbourhood of
Monticello. An intense cold, produced by constant snows, kept
the buds locked up till the sun could obtain, in the spring of the
year, so fixed an ascendency as to dissolve those snows, and
protect the buds, during their developement, from every danger of
returning cold. The accumulated snows of the winter remaining to be
dissolved all together in the spring, produced those overflowings
of our rivers, so frequent then, and so rare now.
Imagine the shabby way Jefferson would be treated today, for not
trying to use it as an excuse to advance a policy agenda.
Oh, and imagine his reaction to that whole UVA/Michael ‘Hockey
Stick’ Mann unpleasantness. What might he say upon learning of a
half a million dollars of Foundation money being used to keep
University records from the public?
We’ll get around that, I’m confident, if not without further
legal wrangling and delay, but food for thought.