Thomas Friedman
It is 32degC on an autumn day, 89% humidity. One-hundred
thousand refugees are stranded in Texas, courtesy of Hurricane
Ike. Could just be a bad day. Then again, it could be something
worse.
The headline of Thomas Friedman's column in the days New
York Times reads, "How to Make America Stupid".
Friedman is reacting to Rudy Giuliani's rallying cry at the
Republican National Convention: "Drill, baby, drill!".
"Why would Republicans," he writes in what we might call
classic Friedman-ese, a tone best accompanied by beating the
forehead with one's open palm, "the party of business, want
to focus our country on breathing life into a
19th-century-technology - fossil fuels - rather than giving
birth to a 21st-century technology - renewable energy?"
This is also the tone of Friedman's Hot, Flat, and
Crowded: Why We Need a Green Revolution and How It Can Renew
America (Allan Lane HB, hbk, $55) $27.95), a book so
combustible it makes a reader want to skip the palm of the
hand altogether and bang the offending forehead against the
nearest power line.
In other words, it is Friedman's column times 438 (the number
of pages in the book).
Here's the gist - Americans are facing five critical issues
created by their dependence on fossil fuels: increased demand
for energy, biodiversity loss, climate change, energy poverty
and the transfer of wealth to oil-rich nations whose politics
(human rights, distribution of wealth, treatment of females)
are often less than commendable.
Dependence on oil, Friedman contends, has negative effects on
both the freedoms associated with democracy and on
innovation.
What we need is a Green Revolution. This is our chance to
show the rest of the world how to create a sustainable
future.
And we are blowing it.
We have the knowledge, Friedman believes, but we lack the
political will. We need leaders who are willing to make
ending dependence on fossil fuels a priority.
We need leaders who are willing to use tax incentives and
other mechanisms to encourage innovation and help shape the
market, leaders who are willing to invest government money in
clean-energy research.
Recycling and buying green products is all well and good, but
what we have now, he believes, is a flimsy excuse for a Green
Movement - we have a Green Party.
"We need leaders," Friedman writes, "not lightbulbs."
Of course, Friedman travels so much he must have the biggest
carbon footprint in the country.
When asked about this, he says, "Hey, I'm a work in
progress."
A few hours before he is due to speak at the 92nd St Y on
Manhattan's Upper East Side, he visits an exhibit on the life
and work of legendary innovator Buckminster Fuller at the
Whitney Museum on Madison Ave.
Friedman takes his exercise wherever he can get it, which is
why he is game to go.
Along the way, he talks about what first set him on fire.
For Friedman, it all began in 1968, when he was in 10th
grade, with two separate experiences: He took a journalism
class and his parents took him to Israel.
"It was my first time on an airplane," he recalls.
"It was my first time out of the country. I was blown away.
Remember, this was post-1967 - an incredibly heroic phase in
Israel's history."
Friedman spent the next three summers living on a kibbutz. He
took Arabic in college and majored in Mediterranean studies
at Brandeis.
When he was 19, his father died.
"Losing my father," he says, "made me focus. It made me a
more serious person."
Friedman is nothing if not serious. He received a master of
philosophy degree in modern Middle Eastern studies from
Oxford. He then went to work for UPI, reporting on OPEC as a
global force.
In 1981, he landed at the New York Times, where he
became Beirut bureau chief in 1982 and Jerusalem bureau chief
in 1984.
He has won three Pulitzer Prizes and knows more about the oil
business than just about any living writer, inside or outside
academia.
According to Friedman, his new book is a perfect storm of
ideas that have been brewing in his mind for several years.
His 2005 book, The World Is Flat, about the rising
international middle class and the environmental effects of
increased consumption, was an enormous success.
US News & World Report named him one of America's Best
Leaders, an unusual honour for a journalist.
He worked on several documentaries about oil for the
Discovery Channel.
The work of Al Gore, the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina and
his wife's involvement as a board member of Conservation
International brought issues of global warming into focus.
"I had this pregnant moment a year ago in May at a conference
in Aspen [Colorado]," Friedman recalls.
"I realised that the IT revolution would inevitably be
replaced by the ET (energy technology) revolution."
It was then that he began to understand that America faced a
momentous opportunity. He decided to write Hot, Flat, and
Crowded.
Friedman works by his own idiosyncratic process: speeches,
followed by columns and articles, usually written on
aeroplanes, followed by books.
"I am a verbal person," he admits.
"I talk my ideas out."
He gestures as he walks through the Fuller exhibit, looking
at the dymaxion car and the models for domes and dymaxion
houses.
Hot, Flat, and Crowded contains a chapter envisioning
a day in the life of an American in 20 ECE, the Energy
Climate Era.
It's a Jetsons-type scenario, complete with a smart grid as a
source of energy, a net cloud for data retrieval and various
other life-supporting/enhancing technologies.
Standing on Fuller's great dymaxion map of the world, the
author is extremely conscious of other people, careful not to
interrupt their concentration.
"I'm a good listener," he says.
"Listening is a sign of respect."
It might seem odd for someone like Friedman - who initially
supported the Iraq war and is something of a political
centrist - to write a book about the necessity of going
green.
But he bristles at the idea that readers expect a columnist
to be all left or all right all the time.
"I wrestled long and hard with the Iraq War," he says.
"I am not a political animal. I describe my political
position as Americanism. Buffettism. Everything I've gotten
I've gotten because I was born in the United States at this
time in history.
"My whole focus is on preserving that America."
His voice rises as he talks about what drives him as a
thinker.
"I don't start with `what is the liberal position'. I start
with `what's right for America'," he continues.
"I'm a real free-trader. I believe in high taxes. I saw what
happened in Beirut. I saw panic in the streets and people
dying - cars going 80 miles an hour backwards.
"This is not just about the environment. If we lose this
opportunity, it's going to be a different world for your kids
and mine. We have exactly enough time starting now."
Later that night, at the 92nd St Y, people are scalping
tickets to Friedman's talk.
It's an older, predominantly white crowd, and he opens with a
compliment: "If it wasn't the 92nd St Y, it wouldn't be a
book."
But where he really hits his stride is when he begins
describing his ideas about the green movement: "It's not a
real revolution unless someone gets hurt".
Friedman tells the audience that his ideal presidential
ticket would be former Secretary of State George P. Shultz
and Warren Buffett.
He outlines his wish list: 30% of America's energy from
American-made solar power by 2050, tax credits for companies
making renewable energy products and for consumers buying
them, a smart electron grid, nuclear power and leaders who
believe in innovative technologies rather than voting against
them in Congress.
On stage, he paces back and forth, answering questions from
one side of the hall and then the other.
He's probably already planning his next book as he talks
about America's future. - Susan Salter Reynolds
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