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An Inconvenient Truth is a documentary, an instrument of public
education and a clarion call. The former presidential candidate and life-long
environmentalist Al Gore has been taking his slide show on the science of global warming
on the road for a long time. With Guggenheims film, Gores presentation goes
from garage band to Live Aid. Or, a better comparison might be to the soccer World Cup,
though a universal topic with global appeal, recognized and sought out everywhere,
except in the U.S., where too many people are still debating whether it even exists, let
alone is worthy of serious attention.
For decades Al Gore has been passionately committed to the issue of
global warming. Instead of the stiff, awkward politician he became known as, Gore
certainly appears more relaxed and in his element as public lecturer; he comes across as a
favorite professor. He appears to be precisely the sort of person right-wing media
watchdog groups have been enlisting students to spy and report on in college classrooms
over the past few decades, to "document" the "vast liberal conspiracy"
to brainwash Americas youth. Here he is, out in the open, smiling, joking,
presenting an undeniable wealth, or burden, of scientific fact. All of his evidence
points, overwhelmingly and incontrovertibly, to the fact of global warming, the science of
it, and to some obvious and inescapable conclusions of where this trajectory, unimpeded,
will lead.
Gore has also learned and grown a great deal since his early days, and
especially in light of his experience in the famously "stolen presidential
election" of 2000. Now he is free to speak the truth, as he sees it, opening the door
of the documentary to the moral dimension in which it seeks to function. The personal
experiences that contributed to Gores involvement and commitment to environmentalism
are spelled out, as are his experiences in the partisan political arena. Gores
populism appears to be real--he knows the obstacles that he, and the people of the U.S.
and the world, are up against in the political arena. And he pulls no punches in
identifying them or documenting how they work. An Inconvenient Truth becomes
his instrumental response, how he counters and surmounts such snares.
Gores multimedia presentation is like a rock concert:
ever-changing visuals and on-stage mini-shticks that draw the audience into a mountain of
scientific data, anecdotes that connect the dots and make the larger picture clear,
decades worth of data compiled into basic, recognizable patterns. Gore recognizes
and explains the current dilemma, the gap that lies between the scientific community and
mass-mediated popular culture. Not one single scientist disputes any of the facts Gore
presents. There is no doubt that cataclysmic global warming is happening. However, roughly
half of the U.S. mass medias "coverage" has towed the right-wing political
line that there is serious questioning about the science, that it is
"pseudoscience," that global warming is mere opinion. This would suggest that
many, while denying indisputable scientific fact, still cling tenaciously to the
right-wing "spin" (a kinder, gentler word for propaganda) that global warming is
a left-wing political scare tactic. Gore addresses head on this propaganda machinery.
These are scary times we live in. If nothing is done, the world will
change profoundly. It already has, and symptoms of that change are now occurring with
regularity, all over the world. In a time when more than half of all college students in
the U.S. cannot distinguish between a rational argument and mere opinion, the times may be
even tougher than suspected. When the Vatican exiled Galileo for daring to utter the
heresy that the earth moves around the sun, it could do nothing to alter the scientific
fact; life went on without Galileo and eventually the truth became accepted. However,
attempts to discredit the messenger (Gore) or his "heresy" (the fact of global
warming) will lead to far more catastrophic consequences. As Al Gore repeatedly stresses,
this time the sky really is falling and we need to start dealing with reality while we
still can.
- Les Wright