https://www.compactmag.com/article/the-rise-of-green-maga/

*Author*
Holly Jean Buck

*21 November 2024*

Geoengineering is “probably as dangerous to us as climate change itself,”
Robert F. Kennedy Jr. stated on his *podcast*
<https://podcasts.apple.com/be/podcast/are-chemtrails-real-with-dane-wigington/id1552000243?i=1000602210082&ref=compactmag.com>
last
year. His guest was Dane Wigington, creator of *The Dimming*, a documentary
that purports to show that governments have been covertly conducting toxic
climate engineering operations to dim the sun for years, as a last-ditch
effort to keep business as usual running in the face of ecological
collapse. RFK’s openness to theories about chemical atmospheric
manipulation is probably not the weirdest of the beliefs he might bring to
public service, if he is confirmed as Donald Trump’s secretary of health
and human services. Indeed, many mainstream environmentalists share his and
Wigington’s worries about geoengineering, although they start from somewhat
different premises. It’s perhaps the clearest illustration of where he
converges with and diverges from the green movement, in which he was a
leading figure until recently.

Kennedy’s rightward trajectory and new position within the MAGA movement
are the latest indication that ideas that were once a core part of
environmentalism are veering in a strange direction. Call it
*para-environmentalism*. Like other para-phenomena, such as paramilitaries
or the paranormal, para-environmentalism exists outside of the realm of
official institutions and structures—at least for now. It may end up eating
the environmental movement. Simply dismissing the ideas that comprise it as
“misinformation,” as the media have been doing and will continue to do,
fails to offer any insight into why they have gained traction—perhaps
enough traction to elevate RFK to one of the most important scientific
roles in the nation.

Para-environmentalism has many strands. Some feel quite benign. There’s the
hope that “the soil will save us,” that regenerative agriculture is capable
of taking up all carbon emissions since the industrial revolution—an idea
RFK alluded to during his appearance on Tucker Carlson’s show earlier this
year. There are also exaggerations of things environmentalists are
rightfully concerned about, such as the plight of the bees or poisoning by
Monsanto.

Others are more sinister. Take the theories that circulated in September in
the wake of Hurricane Helene’s devastation of North Carolina, where some
weather stations measured more than two feet of rain within a few days.
Many accounts online claimed the storm had been deliberately engineered by
the government. The most prominent figure endorsing this idea was Rep.
Marjorie Taylor Greene, a prominent MAGA figure, who stated: “Yes, they can
control the weather. It’s ridiculous for anyone to lie and say it can’t be
done.”

The anxieties about vaccine safety that RFK has long promoted also fall
under the para-environmental heading. They are closely related to concerns
that propelled the environmental movement since its origins: a fear of what
chemistry and industrial technology have wrought, under the auspices of big
pharmaceutical, agricultural, and tech corporations. I saw this firsthand
when I talked with moms at my kid’s crunchy alternative preschool in Santa
Monica, Calif. The other moms were above all concerned about wellness and
not manipulating nature, a worldview that informed their choice not to
vaccinate their kids.

“Geoengineering is sometimes a point of convergence between the mainstream
and the fringes.”

Worries about ongoing, covert geoengineering—which Greene was tapping into
with her claim that “they” control the weather—are perhaps the most
revealing example of para-environmentalism. This is because of its strange
resemblance—think of Naomi Klein’s “mirror world”—to mainstream
environmentalism’s driving concern at present: anthropogenic climate
change. Like climate activists, para-environmentalists see human agency
behind extreme weather events. Moreover, geoengineering is sometimes a
point of convergence between the mainstream and the fringes.
Environmentalists worry about it, too, arguing it will be used to avoid
taking action on carbon emissions and warning about its unintended
consequences. Para-environmental discussions of geoengineering draw on
environmentalist ones, and vice versa.

‘Chemtrails” used to be the core conspiracy theory about weather
modification. In this telling, the government or other shadowy elite actors
were spraying undetermined chemicals using airplanes, with jet contrails
taken as visual evidence of this. The idea emerged in the late 1990s and
spread on late-night radio but was dismissed as a “hoax” or “urban legend.”
Nevertheless, the chemtrails theory got enough traction that the
Environmental Protection Agency in 2000 was motivated to put out an
“Aircraft Contrails Factsheet.”

Chemtrails were initially not a right-coded idea, but one associated with
the fringes of the green movement. The Space Preservation Act of 2001,
introduced by then-Rep. Dennis Kucinich (D-Ohio), attempted to ban
space-based “exotic weapons” like “chemtrails” as well as psychotronic,
plasma, and climate weapons. In 2002, the environmentalist *Earth Island
Journal* published an article headlined “Stolen Skies: The Chemtrail
Mystery,” with the subheading: “Jet Trails in the Sky Used to Disappear.
Now they Linger.” But even through the 2010s, as the idea grew in
popularity, it stayed mostly on the internet, as a curiosity or a belief
rather than a social movement. It was only during the pandemic, when
anti-lockdown and anti-vaccine social networks formed in many areas, that
weather modification became another galvanizing concern for many involved
in these groups.

“In recent years, anxiety about geoengineering has evolved away from
chemtrails.”

In recent years, anxiety about geoengineering has evolved away from
chemtrails in important ways. First, the imputed motivation behind the
aerial manipulation is now less about mind control or population culling.
Instead, it is often claimed, its purpose is to mask the horrors of climate
change. As explained in a statement signed by the “Concerned Citizens of
Saskatchewan,” one of many random emails I and other academics regularly
receive on the topic, the idea is that that we’ve “long exceeded Earth’s
carrying capacity,” “the Controllers” “know that we are about to hit the
wall at full velocity, and they aim to be the last ones standing”;
geoengineering is “a last ditch effort to keep the masses from panicking by
sowing doubt as to the true extent of the damage already done to the
planet.”

The geoengineering narrative has also merged with the “Great Reset”
narrative, according to which the World Economic Forum and other elite
actors used the pandemic as a pretext to take authoritarian control.
Climate lockdowns, it is argued, will be the next justification for
imposing restrictions on the masses. This might not seem at first glance to
have much to do with geoengineering, but the throughline is the loss of
national and individual sovereignty.

Part of what propels all of this forward is the fact geoengineering isn’t
just a conspiracy theory: It is a real area of research debated by
scientists and policymakers. There have been people speculating about
planetary-scale interventions to cool the Earth for decades, but the field
started to get more serious about 15 years ago, when Britain’s main
scientific body, the Royal Society, published the landmark report
*Geoengineering
the Climate: Science, Governance, and Uncertainty*. Since then, both the UK
and German governments modestly funded research aimed at better
understanding the risks, and hundreds of modeling studies have been done,
as well as reports by scientific and governance bodies like the UN
Environment Program and the *US National Academies of Sciences*
<https://nap.nationalacademies.org/catalog/25762/reflecting-sunlight-recommendations-for-solar-geoengineering-research-and-research-governance?ref=compactmag.com>.
Britain’s Advanced Research and Invention Agency (a new funding agency
similar to America’s DARPA) and a host of private philanthropies are
devoting funds to outdoor experiments and to supercharging the volume of
research. All of this potentially paves the way for even more backlash.

Anti-geoengineering activists keep up with developments in this space and
often cite scientific literature and policy documents. Last year, I went to
a crowded town hall in rural Northern California, where geoengineering, 5G,
sovereignty, and the potential reopening of a gold mine were the agenda
items. In an impassioned talk, the White House’s congressionally mandated
report on geoengineering was referenced, as well as the application a
company called Make Sunsets had cheekily filed with the National Oceanic
and Atmospheric Administration, in which “all of Earth” was scrawled as the
location and the year 2223 listed as the “expected termination date of
weather-modification activities.” (The founder of Make Sunsets, a startup
that has released several weather balloons into the atmosphere more as a
stunt than as a systematic geoengineering enterprise, jokingly *describes*
<https://www.technologyreview.com/2022/12/24/1066041/a-startup-says-its-begun-releasing-particles-into-the-atmosphere-in-an-effort-to-tweak-the-climate/?ref=compactmag.com>
it
as “partly a company and partly a cult.”) These sorts of details get folded
into the storyline, making it more believable.

Anti-geoengineering activism also often gets close to the arguments being
made by mainstream academics and environmentalists. One flier I received at
the town hall advertised the “Solar Geoengineering Non-Use Agreement,” a
proposition put forth by a group of academics; I was a peer reviewer on
their academic journal article. On the other side of the paper was an
advertisement for “Save Our Skies,” a group raising funds to mount legal
challenges against geoengineering, which contends that “these aerosol
spraying programs are underway without the knowledge or consent of citizens
worldwide.” You could forgive someone who picked up this flier for not
being able to tell that one side is inspired by an organization of
professors, and the other from a grassroots network that suggests, among
other things, that Hurricane Helene was deliberately engineered.

All this is undeniably awkward for the mainstream environmentalists who
have been trying to raise awareness about the dangers of geoengineering for
decades, who now have to *append*
<https://nam12.safelinks.protection.outlook.com/?url=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.geoengineeringmonitor.org%2Fchemtrails-climate-denialism&data=05%7C02%7Chbuck2%40buffalo.edu%7C473cf6f8da7843674c6308dd05b755e7%7C96464a8af8ed40b199e25f6b50a20250%7C0%7C0%7C638673007230902840%7CUnknown%7CTWFpbGZsb3d8eyJFbXB0eU1hcGkiOnRydWUsIlYiOiIwLjAuMDAwMCIsIlAiOiJXaW4zMiIsIkFOIjoiTWFpbCIsIldUIjoyfQ%3D%3D%7C0%7C%7C%7C&sdata=TY7jWpDPScZ8RcgOuoj%2B4gfoIXmPHrX15ayrmhEwTcA%3D&reserved=0&ref=compactmag.com>
notes
to their advocacy explaining that anti-chemtrails advocates aren’t aligned
with their views. Still, there may be some mutual benefit in the
arrangement. The conspiracy-minded folks get the legitimacy that comes from
citing academic sources, while the academics and activists can share
articles* with stock images of anti-geoengineering crowds*
<https://nam12.safelinks.protection.outlook.com/?url=https%3A%2F%2Finsideclimatenews.org%2Fnews%2F21072023%2Fnew-federal-report-on-research-into-sun-dimming-technologies-delivers-more-questions-than-answers%2F&data=05%7C02%7Chbuck2%40buffalo.edu%7C1e3b8fee27aa41d7df4608dd098454f1%7C96464a8af8ed40b199e25f6b50a20250%7C0%7C0%7C638677186202004406%7CUnknown%7CTWFpbGZsb3d8eyJFbXB0eU1hcGkiOnRydWUsIlYiOiIwLjAuMDAwMCIsIlAiOiJXaW4zMiIsIkFOIjoiTWFpbCIsIldUIjoyfQ%3D%3D%7C0%7C%7C%7C&sdata=vgBN7Ybqy5L9DiI6K61bhqVf2stYIbIC%2FuVSb5li5eE%3D&reserved=0&ref=compactmag.com>
to
conjure images of mass public opinion being against geoengineering.

There is also some overlap between these circles. Consider the trajectory
of writer Charles Eisenstein, who ended up being a senior campaign adviser
to RFK Jr. In 2015, he published a commentary in *The Guardian* headlined
“We Need Regenerative Farming, Not Geoengineering.” It was very normal
*Guardian* content: “Geoengineering is a technological fix that leaves the
economic and industrial system causing climate change untouched … a global
solution that feeds the logic of centralization and the economics of
globalism.” But as the years went by, Eisenstein moved from an
environmental to a para-environmental perspective. In a *video*
<https://nam12.safelinks.protection.outlook.com/?url=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.youtube.com%2Fwatch%3Fv%3DRyZa4_Vzfmk&data=05%7C02%7Chbuck2%40buffalo.edu%7C473cf6f8da7843674c6308dd05b755e7%7C96464a8af8ed40b199e25f6b50a20250%7C0%7C0%7C638673007230941855%7CUnknown%7CTWFpbGZsb3d8eyJFbXB0eU1hcGkiOnRydWUsIlYiOiIwLjAuMDAwMCIsIlAiOiJXaW4zMiIsIkFOIjoiTWFpbCIsIldUIjoyfQ%3D%3D%7C0%7C%7C%7C&sdata=h5sT8XIMCN7%2BqlkO2c4Aw4HtWUcucKY1vv5vYXdkGAU%3D&reserved=0&ref=compactmag.com>
from
November 2022, for instance, he reported: “I saw one time, and this is what
really tripped me over the edge, I saw like a plane whose like chemtrail
generator was malfunctioning, and it was going on and off, making like a
perfect line with dashed regularity.… I am agnostic on it, leaning toward I
think there’s something really going on.”

There are plenty of plausible arguments for opposing actual geoengineering
*deployment*. But our ability to have a substantive discussion about the
prospect of geoengineering is eroded by the growing prevalence of the idea
that it is ongoing right now. Such epistemic erosion is likely to happen on
other fronts, as well.

Understanding the appeal of para-environmentalism can help us grasp what
has gone awry with climate politics. The standard progressive assumption is
that on one side of the debate around climate change and its mitigation,
there’s a group of science-believers who care about the planet and want
rapid climate action, and on the other, ignorant people who spread and
consume climate misinformation and don’t care about climate action. This is
incorrect.

Most people care about the environment, support clean energy, and have a
moderate position on climate policy. When I’ve done focus groups and
interviews, most people like wind and solar and think a move to cleaner
energy is good. But they worry about how the cost of upending the energy
system will affect them and wonder if it is realistic to do it quickly.
This concern arises among moderates of both parties. Only *a third of
Americans*
<https://www.pewresearch.org/science/2023/06/28/what-americans-think-about-an-energy-transition-from-fossil-fuels-to-renewables/?ref=compactmag.com>
support
phasing out fossil fuels altogether, and that includes the half of
Democrats who oppose phasing out fossil fuels completely.

But these moderate positions don’t get engagement on digital platforms that
drive the discourse around climate. What draws eyeballs and advertising
revenues are caricatures of extreme positions. This discursive vortex ends
up feeding para-environmentalism.

Climate influencers put forth anti-fossil rhetoric meant to rally the
troops, embodied by name-calling tribal leaders such as Michael Mann: “Like
vampires and cockroaches, climate deniers and fossil-fuel apologists don’t
like it when someone shines a bright light on them.” There’s also the
support in green circles for degrowth, which models scenarios where global
energy consumption is reduced to 1960s levels. This results in discursive
online meltdowns over things like the future of washing machines in
energy-constrained futures, as when a graduate student in Europe tweeted
that washing clothes by hand would build community and help people keep
fit, and the entire internet came together in a rare moment of unity to say
that actually, washing machines are pretty great.

This dynamic generates content that para-environmentalists point to as
evidence of the plots underway. Most degrowth scholars are not pushing
scenarios without washing machines, but they do model a reality where, for
instance, your pants have a lifetime of 300 years and are worn 15 days
before a wash, and where underwear lasts 125 years and is washed every
other day. So when people post memes about how global elites want us to eat
bugs and live in pods, it isn’t a total leap from some of the modeling in
the peer-reviewed literature. The more strident statements from degrowth
researchers, the more opportunities for anti-woke influencers to call
degrowth a “gnostic death cult.” The point is that environmentalist
academics and intellectuals have played a role in feeding
para-environmental beliefs. And some of the scholarship on the influence of
fossil-fuel companies has conspiratorial overtones of its own.

But isn’t this all just talk on the internet? Who cares about the small
subset of climate influencers or the fraction of the US population that is
open to para-environmental rhetoric, if the remaining 80 percent just want
more solar power and less pollution? Unfortunately, para-environmentalists
and the influencers they are responding to are important for several
reasons. National and state-level politics are still shaped by extremely
online journalists and NGOs. It’s going to be harder for people to stake
out and build a common-sense climate consensus when the space is already
taken up by these political positions.

Using algorithms to deplatform “climate denial” or “misinformation” is a
misguided response. People aren’t empty vessels infected by misinformation.
They may entertain para-environmental beliefs in response to real concerns
and legitimate criticisms of elites—some of them quite similar to those of
environmentalists. Para-environmentalists are not “anti-science.” On the
contrary, they often attempt to draw upon science to support their claims,
but they are also wary when scientists act in ways that appear religious or
ideologically partisan. This was a core critique of public health during
the pandemic: that rather than being rigorous with data, scientists were
being manipulative for political and ideological reasons.

These concerns shouldn’t be dismissed. When big companies are taking
advantage of you and despoiling your environment, and the government is
letting them, of course you’re going to distrust elites. When a pandemic
strikes, and there’s not a full accounting of failures in government,
public health, science, or journalism to follow evidence-based policy and
conduct analyses of tradeoffs, people are also going to be skeptical of how
those institutions manage other crises like climate change. These concerns
can’t be resolved by algorithmic manipulation and deplatforming, which look
like to people like the very censorship and manipulation that stoked their
suspicion in the first place, and so make things worse.

“An effective strategy for climate politics would address
para-environmental concerns.”

An effective strategy for climate politics would address para-environmental
concerns, recognizing the valid reasons people have for distrusting elites
and experts. It would avoid using science to score partisan points. This
isn’t what the prominent voices in the climate movement are doing—and to an
unfortunate extent, they *can’t*. The climate movement can’t stop following
these counterproductive messengers and put forth more broadly appealing
leaders because of the perverse incentives described previously. If Mann
didn’t exist, digital platforms would elevate someone else to play his
role.

The media aren’t the only sensemaking institution failing us. Our
universities are stumbling on the education and science-producing fronts,
too. Recently, I was at an academic workshop where one of the suggested
readings was the article “Cloud Seeding, Wildfire Smoke Emissions, and
Solar Geoengineering: Why Is Climate Modification Unregulated?” by Karen
Bradshaw and Monika Ehrman, published in the *Georgetown Environmental Law
Review*. The abstract begins: “This article is the first to identify that
companies and agencies systemically modify climatic airspaces through
wildfire smoke emissions, weather modification (cloud seeding to cause
rain), and solar geoengineering.” While no one is doing solar
geoengineering in a way that would modify the climate, the aforementioned
Make Sunsets does release occasional balloons in what I would call
performance art, so the sentence might be technically accurate even though
it is also very misleading. The next sentence reads, “Climate modification
is not a conspiracy theory or a hypothetical: It is happening, and it is
changing weather patterns.” If you read this sentence in a prestigious law
journal, what would you think?

Bradshaw has also been quoted in the *New York Post* stating that “there’s
no doubt [weather manipulation] exists. Normal people are just unaware.”
She is also in *Salon* explaining that she grew up near Mt. Shasta, Calif.,
which attempted to pass a local ordinance to prevent an electrical utility
from cloud seeding. “When I began to dig into that story,” she says, “I was
so surprised to learn about the history and prevalence of cloud seeding. …
How was it possible that even environmental law professors did not
understand how widespread it was? When I began mentioning the topic, people
brushed it off as a conspiracy akin to chemtrails; very few people were
aware that weather and climate modification are real and happening.” This
reads as the archetypal journey down the rabbit hole that people take when
they learn about chemtrails.

“The conditions of academic production make this extraordinary text
possible.”

The conditions of academic production make this extraordinary text
possible. One academic who is dedicated to radically reimagining the human
relationship with nature, and another who is a former petroleum engineer
who has written defenses of fracking and on the board of an oil and gas
company, together argue that agencies must do better to regulate the
atmosphere, that wildfire is an environmental-justice disaster, that there
has been a dramatic incidence of wildfire since Congress began “fixing” it
in 2013, and that “efforts to attribute changes in precipitation levels to
climate change without considering the effects of intentional weather
modification paint an inaccurate picture of anthropocentric climate
change.”

Para-environmentalism is no longer fringe; it’s inside the walls of the
academy. Something has gone wrong with the ability of paid experts to
think, and the corrective systems, like peer review, are under strain.
There is a version of this critique from conservatives about how
universities are a left-wing monoculture that stifles open, substantive
debate. But the problem isn’t merely ideological. The problem is that
universities began running their operations like private-equity and
real-estate empires with education as a side hustle, and there are too many
administrators and not enough tenured teachers. The non-tenured professors
and aspiring professors are incentivized to convert social capital into a
job by becoming scholar-influencer-activists.

That’s the knowledge-production side of the disaster in the academy. On the
instruction side, not only are students not comfortable sharing different
opinions, the system is turning out graduates who aren’t adept at
synthesizing knowledge from different fields, identifying weaknesses in
evidence, or perhaps most importantly, having a constructive disagreement. *The
government is modifying the weather? Well, that’s your personal belief, I
might quietly think it’s weird, but you do you. *In response to declining
enrollment, colleges create larger classes with more popular subjects, and
so there is less room for pedagogies with critical thinking, setting up a
doom loop.

The stakes go far beyond the politics of geoengineering, or even climate
politics. They implicate our ability to form a consensus about what is
real. But the stakes for geoengineering matter, too. Reflecting incoming
sunlight by putting aerosols into the stratosphere may be a way to save
millions of lives, keep species from going extinct, or preserve the global
economy’s capacity to deliver food and water while we remake the energy
system. But the current state of the discourse on the topic, in which the
line between legitimate scholarship and conspiratorial fever dream has
become impossibly blurred, suggests it may be impossible to have a
meaningful debate in which research informs democratic deliberation. This
is just an extreme example of a problem affecting public perceptions of
science more broadly.

Most of the people I know in the academy are in despair about Trump’s
re-election, about the prominence of figures like RFK Jr. in his future
cabinet, and about the rejection of empirical reality that they believe all
this portends. A colleague told me he was setting up to watch rom-coms for
the next four years. Settling onto the couch feeling powerless is an
understandable initial response. But these events should be a wake-up call
for environmentalists. We need a more democratic approach to environmental
politics, one that starts by taking seriously the worries about corporate
control and technocratic governance that feed para-environmentalism.

Seeing environmental politics through the lens of para-environmentalism
actually offers a way of reinitiating the conversation. Because
para-environmentalists are constantly reading, paying attention to, and
responding to discourses in mainstream climate science and environmental
politics, those of us participating in those conversations all have agency
in how we speak with each other and the public. The challenges of remaking
our sensemaking institutions in higher education and the media are
daunting. But listening to people and thinking about how different
audiences will hear what we are saying are things that we can do on a daily
basis, starting now.
*Source: Compact*

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