How important is it that the United Nations just issued an apocalyptic report on global warning?
Serious stories on global warming have been rare in my local paper, the St. Louis Post-Dispatch. I was thus happy to see that the Post-Dispatch placed a punchy graphic about global warming on the front page of yesterday’s paper—2,500 scientists say it’s going to happen and it’s going to ruin the planet. To get the story, though, one had to turn to page 25A. There, one learns about
more than a billion people in need of water, extreme food shortages in Africa, a planetary landscape ravaged by floods and millions of species sentenced to extinction.
This report was so incredibly important that the Post-Dispatch dedicated 21 column-inches of text to the story. It’s about the same amount of space the PD gave to yesterday’s front page story about “bratzels” (bratwurst wrapped in pretzels) a new food featured at Cardinal baseball games. Who would have thought that “bratzels” were almost as important as global warming?
That this story on global warming appeared in a local paper at all is important. Most people get most of their news from local TV and newspapers. If global warming hadn’t appeared in the P-D, many people in my city might have assumed that it was all a hoax or that someone figured out what to do about it.
Setting aside the graphics of the global warming story, the PD provided three thin columns of 7-inches each to describe …