Environment

The Entire World Would Be Better Off If Donald Trump Just Watched This Video

All you need to know about climate change in 12 minutes.

The World Would Be Better Off if Donald Trump Watched This Video

An ice floe slides down the starboard side of the Coast Guard Cutter Healy on Aug. 19, 2009. (Photo by (Patrick Kelley, US Coast Guard)/ flickr Public Domain)

This post originally appeared at Mother Jones.

In a yearlong series of short films for Undark, the digital publication of the Knight Science Journalism Fellowship Program at MIT, Peabody Award-winning filmmaker Ian Cheney, whose works include documentaries like King Corn, The Search for General Tso and The City Dark, turned his lens on climate change. In just over 12 minutes, he explores the scale of the challenge facing humanity: scientific and technical, the emotional, psychological and political. Cheney doesn’t pretend to offer answers or specific solutions; he only seeks to shine a light into the fog, to look for shapes and patterns and ultimately to explore the many reasons why the problem of climate change is so difficult for humanity to even fathom, much less come together to solve.

Take a look at the film here:

Above is a 12-minute compilation of Cheney’s six short films in his series for Undark, Measure of a Fog. We also encourage visitors to explore each of the six installments, which are individually titled Distance, Carbon, Energy, Geoengineering, Politics and Ethics.

“The very concept of ‘climate’ challenges the human mind,” Cheney noted at the outset of the series. “Its epochal timescales are difficult to fathom, its inner mechanics, rhythms and contours — they’re sometimes hard to discern, and even scientists are still trying to understand it all.

“Meanwhile,” he continued, “the changes we’re making to this immense, complex machinery — changes arising from a colorless, odorless gas tied to positive-sounding things like progress and growth and prosperity — it can all seem placeless and everywhere at the same time, both invisible and plain as day.”

Exploring and admitting to those tensions and ambiguities, Cheney suggests, is an important part of any conversation on where we go from here — perhaps the most important part. We hope you will find them useful as you continue your own discussions on this most crucial topic.

Tom Zeller Jr.

Tom Zeller Jr. is an award-winning American reporter and writer who has spent nearly two decades covering technology, energy policy, poverty and the environment for a variety of national publications, including 12 years as a staff writer and editor for The New York Times. He joined the Knight Science Journalism Program at MIT as executive editor of Undark in 2015. Follow him on Twitter: @tomzellerjr.

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