Cambridge University is Pushing for Tyranny in the Name of Climate Change

A recent paper published by Cambridge University Press titled Political Legitimacy, Authoritarianism, and Climate Change is raising serious and worrisome questions about the role of academia in our national political debate on climate change.

The paper was written by Ross Mittiga, who self-describes as an “assistant professor of political theory at Pontificia Universidad Católica de Chile, specializing in climate ethics.” He also labels himself an “environmentalist, vegan, and occasional gadfly.”

Mittiga’s paper explicitly argues society must prioritize climate action over democratic principles and adopt an authoritarian government if society fails to politically act on climate change. Or, in the words of the political left: “my way or the highway.”

This is disturbing because it completely ignores the will of the people to self-govern, favoring a totalitarian approach in order to tackle what Mittiag deems a “climate crisis.”

Key points of the paper in the abstract:

Is authoritarian power ever legitimate? The contemporary political theory literature—which largely conceptualizes legitimacy in terms of democracy or basic rights—would seem to suggest not. I argue, however, that there exists another, overlooked aspect of legitimacy concerning a government’s ability to ensure safety and security. While, under normal conditions, maintaining democracy and rights is typically compatible with guaranteeing safety, in emergency situations, conflicts between these two aspects of legitimacy can and often do arise. A salient example of this is the COVID-19 pandemic, during which severe limitations on free movement and association have become legitimate techniques of government. Climate change poses an even graver threat to public safety. Consequently, I argue, legitimacy may require a similarly authoritarian approach. While unsettling, this suggests the political importance of climate action. For if we wish to avoid legitimating authoritarian power, we must act to prevent crises from arising that can only be resolved by such means.

The problem with Mittiga’s paper is that he doesn’t offer up a single reference or shred of evidence that a “climate crisis” actually exists. It appears he simply assumes it to be fact-based on the frequency of political discussions that have embraced the term for several years.

If a “climate crisis” actually existed, there would be human impact data to support the claim. Yet, Mittiga cites no such evidence.

However, this lack of evidence did not stop him from making this bold claim:

“A salient example of this is the COVID-19 pandemic, during which severe limitations on free movement and association have become legitimate techniques of government. Climate change poses an even graver threat to public safety.”

We should be able to test the “graver threat to public safety” that the “climate crisis” supposedly creates.

If the global “climate crisis” was causing public safety to suffer, we’d surely see an increase in global deaths related to supposed climate driven events. To determine if this is true, we turn to data collected by the most trusted global database on events that create mortality, the International Disaster Database.

This database covers all types of natural disasters, including meteorological, hydrological, geologic, and volcanic.

Dr. Bjorn Lomborg has been tracking climate-related disasters from the database since 1920. This includes floods, droughts, storms, wildfires, and extreme temperatures. His conclusion from the data is clear and simple: fewer and fewer people are dying today from supposedly climate-related natural disasters.

As seen in the figure, the trend is clear.

Figure: This graph by Dr. Bjorn Lomborg shows us that our increased wealth and increased adaptive capacity has vastly overshadowed any potential negative impact from climate. Updated from Lomborg’s 2020 peer-reviewed article.

Lomborg writes:

Over the past hundred years, annual climate-related deaths have declined by more than 96%. In the 1920s, the death count from climate-related disasters was 485,000 on average every year. In the last full decade, 2010-2019, the average was 18,362 dead per year, or 96.2% lower.

This is even true of 2021 — despite breathless climate reporting, almost 99% fewer people died that year than a hundred years ago.

Why is this consistently not reported?

In the first year of the new decade, 2020, the number of dead was even lower at 14,885 — 97% lower than the 1920s average.

For 2021, which is now complete, we see an even lower total of 6,134 dead or a reduction since the 1920s of 98.7%.

The media reported on many deadly weather and climate-related catastrophes in 2021 — the deadly US/Canadian heat dome and heat wavehuge wildfires in the Western United States, the December 2021 tornado outbreak in the United Stateslarge-scale flooding in Europe, and the Valentine’s Day winter storm. All of these events and related deaths are included in the disaster database and the graph.

And there are other disasters. Many people in the West never saw media reports of the disastrous floods in India during the monsoon, which killed more than a thousand people.  Or the flash floods in Afghanistan, which killed dozens. Or the typhoons that hit ChinaVietnamIndonesia and India, killing a total of 776 people. The database also has more than 200 other catastrophes in 2021.

There is a known bias in the database where there is much more reporting on heat deaths, but recent science from the prestigious medical journal The Lancet reports that globally, cold deaths outweigh heat deaths 9:1, suggesting that “global warming” isn’t as big a problem for human mortality as we’ve been told.

The number of reported weather disaster events is increasing, but that is mainly due to better reporting, and better accessibility, i.e., the 24/7/365 CNN effect. Just because such events are reported more today doesn’t translate directly to more events resulting in more deaths. In fact, the opposite is observed in the data.

Illustrated by the mortality data portrayed in the figure, it is simply incontrovertible that disaster-related deaths have declined, and have done so dramatically. This is because our wealthier, technologically advanced, and more resilient societies are much better able to warn for such events, protect their citizens, and mitigate damage and deaths. In fact, recent peer-reviewed science demonstrates a “decreasing trend in both human and economic vulnerability is evident.”

So, I ask, where is the so-called “climate crisis” that is portrayed as a certainty by Mittiga in the Cambridge University Press?

According to the disaster database, there isn’t any “climate crisis” at all. In fact, during the 40 plus years of modest warming during which we have been told that global warming aka “climate change” will worsen the human condition, mortality has improved dramatically.

Sadly, and frighteningly, as illustrated by Mittiga in the Cambridge University Press the green socialist left is increasingly embracing tyranny in the form of authoritarian power to act on their viewpoint on climate change. But clearly, real-world data don’t support their viewpoint let alone their call to action.

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January 6, 2022 11:31 am

Majoring in Climate ethics? And I thought the basket-weaving major was absurd….

Rory Forbes
Reply to  beng135
January 6, 2022 5:47 pm

He couldn’t pass the qualification for basket-weaving, women’s studies was oversubscribed so he opted for the only other program which would take him.

David S
January 6, 2022 11:56 am

So now the left wing dingbats want to go from socialism to communism and they’re open about it.

whatlanguageisthis
January 6, 2022 12:06 pm

This is the second article this week with some academic communist wanting to run an authoritarian government to control us. Are they really so comfortable that they are coming out of the shadow with their true goals?

Additionally, I disagree that COVID has provided legitimate authority for the government to force these limitations on freedom. Want to recommend reduced contact and movement, fine. Want to force limited movement, that is not in your power (or at least shouldn’t be).

Finally, one last thought:

In the first year of the new decade, 2020, the number of dead was even lower at 14,885 — 97% lower than the 1920s average.

Good news! Once something reaches 97% we all know that you are no longer allowed to question it. It is done, settled, and grounds for being banned for life to argue with it! Severe weather no longer exists by the rules set forth by the IPCC!

Zig Zag Wanderer
Reply to  whatlanguageisthis
January 6, 2022 4:57 pm

Are they really so comfortable that they are coming out of the shadow with their true goals?

It certainly appears so. The silent majority needs to speak up.

fretslider
January 6, 2022 12:08 pm

The climate crisis is, as Hermann Hesse wrote…

For madmen only

rxc
January 6, 2022 12:18 pm

I have seen several other comments like this (not “peer-reviewed published papers”), so it seems like it has become time for the gloves to come off and for the people pushing the climate change meme to be clear what they want, and have always wanted. No more obfuscating. They can’t claim that the “deniers” have been wrong about the real motives of the climate change proponents..

It is all about control. Nothing more, and nothing less.

January 6, 2022 12:31 pm

Marxism is the tyranny of the intellectuals, that, once democracy is overthrown, is replaced by the tyranny of a dictorship, while the intellectuals are posted to the gulags.

It’s a pity we cant cut out the middle part.

Reply to  Leo Smith
January 6, 2022 3:51 pm

That’s the endpoint. Initially, the relatively small minority that constitutes the State needs the intellectuals to keep a much larger productive majority pulling on the oars. However, while ‘democracy’ exists, this is an unstable condition that evolves towards totalitarianism, at which time the unproductive and unnecessary intellectuals are liquidated.

Jim Veenbaas
January 6, 2022 12:39 pm

It’s the cognitive dissonance that blows me away every time I hear this garbage. Look around for two seconds. Which govts are taking climate change seriously – democracies or authoritarian states? Guys like this have no voice in authoritarian states.

aussiecol
January 6, 2022 1:15 pm

specializing in climate ethics.”

Could someone explain to me what that even is supposed to mean??
I mean, could it mean that you are not allowed to swear at alarmists? Or you attire must be correct?
This guy knows nothing about climate, but he sure knows how communism works.

January 6, 2022 1:54 pm

Socialists will be Socialists. Always the language of fear. Always forcing others. Always threats of violence. Always driven by imaginary enemies.
Socialism fills about half of all publications on mental illnesses.
Socialists agree by the way
https://www.researchgate.net/publication/339541044_Mental_illness_and_the_left

The only thing left for normal people to do is to make sure the Socialists get the care they need in well guarded and closed-off hospitals.

Remember what Lenin said: the goal of Socialism is Communism .
Act now while you still can.

January 6, 2022 2:31 pm

Tyranny in the name of “CAGW”?
Hmmm …. one aspect of tyranny is to silence all opposition.

One aspect of real science is to test all hypothesis or theories and oppositions to an hypothesis or theory to see if they hold up.
If they hold up, science has gained.
If they don’t hold up, science has gained.

It would seem that “Climate Science” has been promoting tyranny all along.
(“The Cause”?)

January 6, 2022 2:52 pm

Cambridge University was a hotbed of useful idiot spies for the Soviet Union in the height of the Cold War. I guess the ideological tradition persists with Cambridge U Press accepting this juicy bit.

January 6, 2022 2:57 pm

The cat is out of the bag.
He writes what others think too.

January 6, 2022 3:38 pm

Here is more insanity but perhaps worse:
Extract from New Scientists 26 Sept 2015
‘When right is wrong’
“In June, a new voice backed up what many scientists have been saying for a while – that climate change is caused by human activity and we have a moral responsibility to tackle it. In a historic edict, Pope Francis warned that failing to act would have “grave consequences”, the thrust of which would fall on the world’s poorest people. His words came as a stark reminder that global climate change is among the most pressing moral dilemmas of the 21st century.”…
…”Take BankTrack, a global network of NGOs that exposes banks involved with projects that threaten the environment and human rights. BankTrack has looked at banks lending to the coal industry, a major source of global carbon dioxide emissions and compiled a list of the top “climate killers”.
It’s manifesto is simple: “By naming and shaming these banks, we hope to set the stage for a race to the top, where banks compete with each other to clean up their portfolios and stop financing investments which are pushing our climate over the brink.
However, harnessing the power of rational reflection, collective identity and shame may not be the only options for the would be moral revolutionaries. In their book Unfit for the future, philosophers Ingmar Persson of the University of Gothenburg in Sweden and Julian Savulescu of the University of Oxford argue that our moral brains are so compromised that the only way we can avoid catastrophe is to enhance them through biomedical means..
In the past few years, researchers have shown it might actually be possible to alter moral thinking with drugs and brain stimulation.”

Zig Zag Wanderer
Reply to  Stephen Skinner
January 6, 2022 5:02 pm

philosophers Ingmar Persson of the University of Gothenburg in Sweden and Julian Savulescu of the University of Oxford argue that our moral brains are so compromised that the only way we can avoid catastrophe is to enhance them through biomedical means.

In the past few years, researchers have shown it might actually be possible to alter moral thinking with drugs…

There’s no way that they could achieve that. They’d have to firstly get people used to being forced to accept regular injections of unknown drugs.

Oh, wait…

Tom in Florida
January 6, 2022 3:53 pm

“severe limitations on free movement and association have become legitimate techniques of government.”

Take that and compare it to the words written in the Declaration of Independence on the reason for governments:
“…that to secure these rights, governments are instituted among Men, deriving their just powers from the consent of the governed..”

Limitations on free movement and associations may be techniques used by governents but they are certainly NOT legitimate in a free society.

January 6, 2022 4:34 pm

This is what happens when belief in nonsense like the “greenhouse effect” actually having something to do with the energy balance on earth.

Earths energy balance is regulated by two dominant ocean temperature regulating processes with limits of -2C and 30C – end of story.

Joel Snider
January 6, 2022 5:40 pm

Wherever there are progressives there is totalitarian hate-mongering fascism.
It’s like the stench of feces and it gets worse every hour of the day.

January 6, 2022 7:33 pm

For if we wish to avoid legitimating authoritarian power, we must act to prevent crises from arising that can only be resolved by such means.

Which implies that authoritarian power is sometimes preferable to a “crisis”. Can you name any crisis in the last few centuries that was worse than authoritarian governments? Any crisis that was fixed by authoritarian government? For bonus points, list the numerous crises that were created by government, authoritarian or otherwise. Hint: skyrocketing energy costs in Germany.

If no one can actually measure any suffering caused by your “crisis”, maybe it’s all in your head. Like mental illness.

Nick Graves
January 7, 2022 12:15 am

The penultimate sentence is perhaps bass-ackwards;

It’s more a case of the left embracing climate change to act on their viewpoint on tyranny in the form of authoritarian power….

January 7, 2022 12:52 am

Fortunately there are some sane people in the UK like L-Sumption

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=amDv2gk8aa0

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5lXAA7ZOROc

The only reason why Britain never became a dictatorship in the past was because of the total blinding incompetence of the bureaucracy

It also held true mostly in the days of the empire..

michel
January 7, 2022 1:03 am

I think this is the second posting of a piece about this paper, and I commented on the first one, but my comment seemed to vanish.

You can see immediately that the paper’s argument is fallacious by looking at it as a 2 x 2 matrix. We have authoritarian countries that are or are not reducing emissions, and similarly we have democratic countries that are or are not reducing.

If you just fill in the names, you find that there is no correlation between authoritarian administration and emission reduction.

For instance, India (democracy) is not reducing. China (authoritarian) is also not reducing. The US and UK (democracies) are reducing, or at least committing to it.

If all the Western countries adopted some authoritarian and non-democratic form of government, there is no reason to think that those governments would be any more disposed to emission reductions than the present ones. There is also no reason to think that an authoritarian India or a democratic China would change their approach from their present ones.

Governments, whether authoritarian or democratic, face a simple problem: they cannot make the case that emission reduction is in the national interest. The problem is, paradoxically, worse for authoritarian regimes, because they have a limited amount of goodwill in the first place. Authoritarian regimes generally succeed only because restrictions on freedom are tolerated in exchange for prosperity.

China’s problem, even if they believed in climate alarmism, which the evidence is they do not, is that to reduce emissions would stop economic growth in its tracks, and the regime’s bargain with the population is that they will always deliver economic growth. Break that bargain and they will end up with large scale unrest and no way to regime change other than large scale disorder.

This problem will remain even if China were to democratize. The same exact problem faces India, even if it were to become a regime run by a self-perpetuating authoritarian oligarchy or a dictatorship. The regime would be unable to put a stop to rising emissions because of the economic consequences, which would very soon turn to popular unrest.

Paradoxically, because in democracies people elected their governments, they have greater trust in them, and so the governments can get away for a while with more craziness. So we see the Green New Deal proposals in the US or the crazed Net Zero proposals in the UK which are more or less passively tolerated by most of the population.

But as the costs and the futility of these proposals starts to dawn on the electorate, either the governments will change direction or they will get voted out of office. So in the end I don’t believe any of the Western countries will actually manage to implement their net-zero plans.

But its not a problem with the form of the regime. The problem is that the proposals are mostly impossible to implement, and if implemented do not do what they are claimed to do locally, and even if they did, would not have any material effect on climate. No government can make any convincing case for the reduction proposals. This in the end means that whether its a democratic or authoritarian regime, in the end it just isn’t going to happen.

The author of the paper doesn’t seem to have any idea how policy and government work in modern societies. What sunk the Soviet regime was in the end the loss of belief in Marxism-Leninism. It became apparent to both population and regime that it didn’t work. Exactly the same thing will happen to everyone who tries to implement emission reduction by any of the measures currently being proposed. It will not not work, and if they persist beyond a certain point, there will be regime change.

And both democratic and authoritarian regimes will see that coming, and will back off. Want an early example in democracies? Look at the EU latest change on gas and nuclear. Expect the UK to back off from net-zero sometime in the next year, too. And Biden has already had the emission aspects of his plans shot down. And the proposals on Government green electricity will end up withering on the vine, too.

Kevin Stall
January 7, 2022 2:56 am

I can see revolts against any authority based moves. Protest like you haven’t seen before. Violence as in the old red underground violence except done efficiently. As it is even Germany is turning against the green movement. Coal is already showing its head. And there will be deaths from the cold. The EU has already had to back track on natural gas, thank goodness. Electric heating is expensive and in efficient.

Alba
January 7, 2022 3:40 am

But just don’t make Cambridge University Press destroy all remaining copies of this book.
From Wikipedia:

In 2007, controversy arose over the Press’s decision to destroy all remaining copies of its 2006 book Alms for Jihad: Charity and Terrorism in the Islamic World, by Burr and Collins, as part of the settlement of a lawsuit brought by Saudi billionaire Khalid bin Mahfouz. Within hours, Alms for Jihad became one of the 100 most sought after titles on Amazon.com and eBay in the United States. The Press sent a letter to libraries asking them to remove copies from circulation. The Press subsequently sent out copies of an “errata” sheet for the book.
The American Library Association issued a recommendation to libraries still holding Alms for Jihad: “Given the intense interest in the book, and the desire of readers to learn about the controversy first hand, we recommend that U.S. libraries keep the book available for their users.” The publisher’s decision did not have the support of the book’s authors and was criticized by some who claimed it was incompatible with freedom of speech and with freedom of the press and that it indicated that English libel laws were excessively strict. In a New York Times Book Review (7 October 2007), United States Congressman Frank R. Wolf described Cambridge’s settlement as “basically a book burning”. The Press pointed out that, at that time, it had already sold most of its copies of the book.
The Press defended its actions, saying it had acted responsibly and that it is a global publisher with a duty to observe the laws of many different countries. 

Gerry, England
January 7, 2022 4:59 am

Surely the biggest reason to cut the people out of the loop is that when push comes to shove – ie the bills start to come in – the people rapidly lose their enthusiasm for supporting global warming and for the measures that would allegedly stop it.

David Cage
January 7, 2022 6:34 am

If a “climate crisis” actually existed, there would be human impact data to support the claim. Yet, Mittiga cites no such evidence. …….
I have tried for over a decade now to get any explanation of how hot spots in the file earthobservatory.nasa.gov/global-maps/AMSRE_SSTAn_M can be caused by either poorly insulated homes or road vehicle. The answer I get from both from the BBC and my MP is the same that the science its beyond question according to their advisers and I must get past my climate change denial or the world is doomed.

Jerry Harben
January 7, 2022 9:40 am

Should we assume Mittiga would approve of Pinochet?
Probably not.