Progress Pond

Doesn’t Anybody Get It? Why Obama’s Nobel

It’s been days and days, and the reaction continues, but while some folks I’ve read seem to imply it, most don’t get the message of President Obama’s Nobel Prize, at least the one that came through loud and clear to me.

While it shocked the Right, it surprised everyone else (including the President), as the Nobel committee knew it would.  So why did the Nobel Committee take this surprising step? Why did they choose to single out the American President after only nine months in office? Because surprise was part of the point.

And the point is urgency. The Nobel Committee didn’t just hand out an award—it stood up and screamed, pay attention before it’s too late! This award is the diplomatic, international community equivalent of standing on the table, jumping up and down and shouting: this is our last best hope! This is the fierce urgency of now!

Many European leaders in politics, sciences, professions, etc. and many leaders around the world, all understand that the future survival of civilization more or less as it is hangs by a thin thread. That progress must be made quickly on controlling and ending nuclear weapons, negotiating agreements that are just to all sides in areas of the world where conflict could be imminent and would be catastrophic, and especially that the world’s great nations must band together to lead a rapid response to the Climate Crisis before it is too late for the future of human civilization.

They know what American leadership still can mean. They know what President Obama is up against in this country. Political leaders told him at the G20 in Pittsburgh that they couldn’t understand the attacks on him as one kind of radical or another, when he would be comfortably centrist in any other western democracy.

They don’t understand that the wealthiest nation on earth is undermining its own economy while failing to meet its responsibilities, when it remains alone in not supporting universal health care.

They are afraid of a nation with such a powerful military machine and yet so careless about violence that citizens wear guns to a political rally, and that children gun down other children in the streets, while apparent adults oppose the most rudimentary controls on deadly firearms. They saw the same gunslinger attitude rend the world for eight dangerous years. They saw the world slip back towards barbarism, thanks in part to the shocking sponsorship of torture by a nation that aspires to moral leadership.

The Prize is an official anguished cry on the Climate Crisis. They awarded the Nobel Peace Prize to Al Gore, and America still didn’t get the point. In the UK, our closest cultural and political ally in Europe, conservatives don’t engage in Climate Crisis denial–they compete with liberals and Labourites on devising and implementing the most effective and most urgent measures to address the Climate Crisis.

Now China is beginning to move its massive state machinery to address it–and to corner the market on the renewable energy technology of the near future. Now India seems to see the light.

But even if leaders and political dialogue in other nations are more focused on these problems, it doesn’t mean they can act effectively without the U.S.  They need and want America to be part of this, and they see President Obama as the key to American leadership and American cooperation, and the return to American responsibility in the world. They know these problems are urgent, most of them made far worse by American actions in the past eight years, and that as the Climate Crisis gets worse, they will intersect and mushroom–and that image is deliberate. They are telling us how important it is that President Obama be successful.

They look at this country and our media-fueled self-renewing cyclones of distraction, our 24/7 locust plagues of pettiness, our twittering fits of trivial obsessions, our instant acting out and the dead slogans nailed to our identities and shouting matches, and they’re crying out: on the really big stuff, we value this man, the world desperately needs him as your leader, we hear him, why can’t you listen to what he’s saying? Can’t we please focus?

Since the Nobel, there are signs from China and India, and Brazil, that the rest of the world may be ready to get really serious about the Climate Crisis.  The U.S. is the critical player.

The Nobel Peace Prize was exactly as President Obama said: a call to action. And what we’re missing is that it was a decorously desperate, very loud, very urgent call.

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