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Urban Harvest

Confronting climate change and poverty, a new crop of city farmers comes of age in Africa.
Guardian Environmental Network

Half-Baked Alaska! It's still funny and I've read it five times by now. How I laughed.

It's really interesting to read an article whose central theme, as you say, is climate change and yet which fails to mention it at all. On a positive note, this could be read as a tacit acknowledgement that it's no longer credible to debate the consensus view of climate science.

The pedant in me was irritated by her assertion that 'Westerners literally sit on mountains of oil and gas' - for, surely, they do not. And my political brain was troubled by her use of Obama's campaign slogan to start her closing paragraph - has even Sarah Palin caught 'Yes we can' fever?

Her case seems to be built on the economic impcats of an Energy and Climate Act on ordinary American families, so presumably how much political traction this type of argument gains in the long term depends not on the success of US Climate Policy but on the speed and extent of America's economic recovery over the coming years.

In the words of another Democrat President's campaign slogan what will matter in the near future is not really climate change at all, but the economy, stupid.

Hi Ben. It’s true that a lot of self-proclaimed prophets are preaching lofty messages on environmental issues. Many of them are hardly qualified to be making any statement at all in this front. The general public would have a tough time separating the facts from the fancy. Especially when even experts don’t see eye to eye on a lot of issues, it becomes difficult to know what is true.

Thanks for the update.
Joost Hoogstrate