Much of the East Coast is shut down today as residents prepare for
Hurricane Sandy, a massive storm that could impact up to 50 million
people from the Carolinas to Boston. The storm has already killed 66
people in the Caribbean, where it battered Haiti and Cuba. "This thing
is stitched together from elements natural and unnatural, and it seems
poised to cause real havoc," says Bill McKibben, founder of 350.org. New
York and other cities have shut down schools and transit systems.
Hundreds of thousands of people have already been evacuated. Millions
could lose power over the next day. Meteorologists say Sandy could be
the largest storm ever to hit the U.S. mainland. The megastorm comes at a
time when President Obama and Republican challenger Mitt Romney have
refused to make climate change an issue on the campaign trail. For the
first time since 1984, climate change was never addressed during a
presidential debate. "It’s really important that everybody, even those
who aren’t in the kind of path of this storm, reflect about what it
means that in the warmest year in U.S. history, ... in a year when we
saw, essentially, summer sea ice in the Arctic just vanish before our
eyes, what it means that we’re now seeing storms of this unprecedented
magnitude," McKibben says. "If there was ever a wake-up call, this is
it." We’re also joined by climate scientist Greg Jones from Southern
Oregon University.
Video
Source: Democracy Now!
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Video
Source: Democracy Now!
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