What natural disasters should teach us (Steven Lyazi) Uganda

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What natural disasters should teach us Hurricanes, landslides and other disasters show Africans why we need fossil fuels Steven Lyazi, Uganda September 26, 2017 I express my deepest sympathies to the people in the Caribbean and America who have been impacted by Hurricanes Harvey, Irma and Maria. The loss of life was tragic but has thankfully been far lower than in many previous storms, because buildings are stronger, people get warned in time to get out, and they have vehicles to get to safer places until the storms pass. I also send my sincere sympathies to my fellow Ugandans who have been affected by terrible landslides in eastern Uganda, near Kenya. Natural disasters often strike us hard. Sometimes it is long droughts that dry up our crops and kill many cattle. This year it is torrential rains and landslides. This time we were lucky. The collapsing hillsides destroyed three villages, but thankfully it was daytime and people were outside. They lost their homes, cattle and ripened crops, but not their families. A horrendous mudslide in the same mountainous area in 2010 buried 350 parents and children under 40 feet of mud and rock. People there have been cutting down trees for decades – for fuel, lumber and to grow crops. Now no roots hold the hills together when it rains. More cracks have appeared in the hills, so more slides are likely. But people don’t want to leave their lands, and they’re not planting new trees either. Some people are ignoring all this history and all these human causes for these “natural” disasters. They are blaming the rains and mudslides on global warming, climate change and the fossil fuels that modern industrialized countries burn to provide modern homes, travels and living standards. These false claims are intended to create diversions from the real problems. They are intended to justify demands and campaigns that Ugandans and other Africans should rely on a few wind turbines and solar panels and should never use oil, natural gas or coal to provide cheap, reliable and plentiful energy so that we can live more like Americans or Europeans. These people want to become our Jesus, and save us from “global warming disasters,” by keeping us poor and at the mercy of Mother Nature. Former vice president Mr. Gore said manmade global warming has increased the number and strength of tornadoes and hurricanes, Mount Kilimanjaro’s glacier would disappear by 2016, and Arctic summers would be ice-free as soon as 2014. None of this happened. So he just changed the year when the disasters will hit. Mr. Gore declares in his film that “it is right to save humanity.” Yes, it is and I support that with no argument Sir. But I would suggest he and his friends begin by injecting their billions of dollars into fossil fuels and nuclear energy to create jobs around the world, help in build modern 1


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