In the Pacific this spring, the enemy staged a daring
breakout across thousands of miles of ocean, waging a full-scale assault on the
region’s coral reefs. In a matter of months, long stretches of formations like
the Great Barrier Reef—dating back past the start of human civilization and
visible from space—were reduced to white bone-yards.
Day after day, week after week, saboteurs behind our lines
are unleashing a series of brilliant and overwhelming attacks. In the past few
months alone, our foes have used a firestorm to force the total evacuation of a
city of 90,000 in Canada, drought to ravage crops to the point where southern
Africans are literally eating their seed corn, and floods to threaten the
priceless repository of art in the Louvre. The enemy is even deploying
biological weapons to spread psychological terror: The Zika virus, loaded like
a bomb into a growing army of mosquitoes, has shrunk the heads of newborn
babies across an entire continent; panicked health ministers in seven countries
are now urging women not to get pregnant. And as in all conflicts, millions of
refugees are fleeing the horrors of war, their numbers swelling daily as
they’re forced to abandon their homes to escape famine and desolation and
disease.
World War III is well and truly underway. And we are losing.
Bill McKibben says: “We’re under attack from climate change—and our only hope is to mobilize like we did in WWII.”
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