Bob Muzelle was ecstatic at the rumors circulating in Washington - the President and Putin of Russia were to hold a mini-telephone summit on the state of the planet, its health and well-being, the preservation of forest land, biodiversity, and clean air.
Bob had been an environmentalist for decades and a climate change activist for many years. He was on the board of directors of the Environmental Defense Fund, the Sierra Club, and the Wilderness Society. He had been an associate of Partners in Parks, the movement to save the snail darter and the woodland feather-tailed grouse, and in the phalanx against the expansion of AI data centers.
He had been encouraged by the policies and programs of the Biden Administration, but was angered at Donald Trump's rollback of most of the former president's reforms. Under Trump it was an energy free-for-all - oil pipelines now back in operation, new refineries being built, oil shale and gas fracking well underway, coal fired power plants reopened, and more.
It was a catastrophe, bemoaned Bob, commiserating with his colleagues in a small conference room in his non-profit organization, Americans For Social Responsibility, a catch-all place for climate activism, gender equality, and civil rights; but he had gathered his associates to discuss what would be a historic meeting between two adversaries who agreed on almost nothing. Ever since the Cold War days America and Russia had never seen eye to eye, but here in the offing was a meeting of the minds of historical significance.
Repeated calls to the White House press office, direct lines to the Press Secretary, and attempts to reach high-placed officials in the Administration proved futile. No one was available to take Bob's calls, and confirmation of the historic mini-summit would have to wait.
Just think of it, Bob mused. First Russia, then China without whose support hope for climate sanity would always be a chimera. Was it time to let the foot of the gas and pause Trump hatred? To give the President space to formulate his agenda and prepare for the conversation with the Russian?
This, however, would mean dismantling the entire machinery of the Left where Trump hatred was an industry. The inertia of anger, spite, and poisonous attacks was such that slowing it would be like trying to turn the full speed ahead Titanic away from the iceberg; and to claim that the President was actually doing something right would be tantamount to political treason and reason for expulsion from the party.
Now, of course the last thing this president who had closed down EPA, opened the country to energy exploration, granted generous easements to logging companies to operate on federal land, and dismissed climate concerns out of hand, would ever do was to put environmental concerns on the geopolitical agenda let alone to discuss them with the enemy.
Calls to the Russian Embassy were summarily dismissed. 'America is one crazy place', said Anatoly Karpov, Kremlin Deputy Assistant Secretary in Washington, amazed that amidst the initiative for tsarist revival, the patriotic war in Ukraine, and the progressive modernization of the country's nuclear arsenal, the idea of an 'environmental summit' as the caller had called it could even have been suggested.
'Like mosquitos in Novosibirsk', Karpov added. 'Nobody pays attention'.
Hope springs eternal, the old adage too Christian to be put in an embroidered sampler on Bob's office wall, was exactly the right notion for Americans for Social Justice. Yes, such a bi-presidential discussion was indeed far-fetched, but if only the rumors were true, all Bob's hopes and dreams would be realized.
The fact that Bob actually gave credence to the idea - as impossibly fanciful as it was to anyone living outside the hermetic progressive world in which Bob lived - was no surprise to many on the inside, for Bob had been on the front lines of environmentalism forever, and his willingness to believe in supposition was part of his advocacy.
Al Gore, former Vice President in his book An Inconvenient Truth predicted the end of the world because of human indifference to climate change. Sea levels would rise and swamp New York and Miami, soy bean crops would sizzle and die in Iowa, choking heat would kill millions of the poor trapped in non-airconditioned tenements and tarpaper shacks. In short Armageddon.
Bob took every word as gospel truth and renewed and energized his environmental advocacy. He became a man possessed, a whirling dervish, an Old Testament prophet, a streetcorner preacher, a televangelist, a political firebrand all rolled up into one. He was on fire.
Every suggestion that the climate was not behaving as Al Gore said - that the geological record was more suggestive of natural cyclical changes in temperature than any human intervention - was tantamount to heresy and would not be tolerated. Bob became not only an advocate for climate sensibility, he became a j'accuse vigilante.
Any and all discrediting remarks were to be called out and the speakers cancelled. 'There can be no opposition to the truth', Bob said, 'when the truth is existential', a line that came back to haunt him once reliable data showed an increase in polar ice, not a decrease; that sea levels were remaining steady, and that catastrophic storms predicted had not materialized.
He was increasingly being seen as a wild-eyed Cassandra, a bitch with an agenda, a crazed weirdo, and an intellectual degenerate. Of course not by his inner circle or those close to the epicenter of the climate change movement; but still his solid reputation was being questioned. All of which only fired up his boiler to high heat, and gave him a St. Vitus' dance persona - a man jumping and bouncing with demented energy - or a Tourette's Syndrome sufferer barking out obscenities at random.
This cockamamie rumor about the presidential environmental summit pushed him over the edge. For a while he stood firm, hopeful that that the international high-profile conversation would take place; but once he realized that belief in such specious, unbelievable rumor was tantamount to dementia, over he went.
And so it is in Washington, climate activists toppling over the cliff left and right along with Bob. Journal after journal called out the climate hype for what it was, and if the so-called 'crisis' got any ink, it was to laugh at it and its true believers.
Bob was no longer fit to work after the rumor was outed and dispelled. The wind had been taken out of his sails, the fire in his heart dampened and doused, and his moral compass sent spinning. He was a shell of a man, an empty suit, and a deranged soul simply trying to regain his balance.
He couldn't of course. There was return from such depths. 'A fool and his money are soon parted' said English poet Thomas Tusser, and so it was with a fool and his beliefs. Without the foundational belief of an imminent climate Armageddon, this particular fool was left with nothing.









