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Fan of Da Bearse

(75 posts)
Tue Sep 17, 2019, 04:01 AM Sep 2019

Grist: Extreme weather may be pushing Texans to care about climate change

By Zoya Teirstein on Sep 16, 2019

Does Texas, the metaphorical oil tank of the American petroleum operation, care about climate change? About two-thirds of it does, says a new poll of Texas voters — and we’re not just talkin’ Democrats. Sixty-five percent of Lone Star State voters of all political persuasions are in favor of government action to combat the climate crisis, and a third are strongly in favor of it. That’s not the only good news.

Of the 1,660 voters polled by Climate Nexus, 74 percent said they’re more likely to vote for a candidate who supports boosting federal funding for renewable energy. Among Democrats, climate change ranks right up there with the economy and jobs when it comes to issues voters care about in the 2020 election — only health care and gun policy ranked higher. The poll was conducted in conjunction with Yale and George Mason universities.

Texas is still very much a red state. Though Beto O’Rourke came close last year, no Democrat has won a general election in a Texas statewide race since 1994. And last time I checked, the GOP is still firmly in the “don’t take away our straws and burgers” phase of climate denial. So why is Texas suddenly inclined to climate action?

It could have something to do with all of the extreme weather that has walloped the state in recent years. A little more than half of the voters surveyed in the poll think their state government is ill-equipped to handle a big hurricane in 2019. Four in 10 voters voiced concern over having to relocate if there is a major weather event. Most tellingly, close to nine out of 10 Texans say they have been touched by extreme heat within the past year, and nearly half of those surveyed said they have experienced flooding or drought.

https://grist.org/article/extreme-weather-may-be-pushing-texans-to-care-about-climate-change/

Daaaaaaaaaaamn, they're not even blaming it on sin!

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Grist: Extreme weather may be pushing Texans to care about climate change (Original Post) Fan of Da Bearse Sep 2019 OP
Like so many "red staters" ... Martin Eden Sep 2019 #1
Longer droughts, more extreme rainstorms, 120-degree temps within 25 years dalton99a Sep 2019 #2

Martin Eden

(12,930 posts)
1. Like so many "red staters" ...
Tue Sep 17, 2019, 06:16 AM
Sep 2019

They don't care until it impacts them personally.

No need to change course when speeding towards a cliff -- until you start going over the edge.

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