Of
course democracy was already 'hacked' (his words) when he was VP; and
he was largely responsible for torpedoing the Kyoto talks when there
was still hope of acting on climate change.
Gore:
Current weather 'like a nature hike through Book of Revelation'
Hurricane
Sandy and other recent weather-related disasters, like this week’s
intense flooding and monstrous sea foam levels in Australia, are a
direct result of climate change, former vice president Al Gore said
Tuesday.
NBC,
29
January, 2013
“These
storms – it’s like a nature hike through the Book of Revelation
on the news every day now,” he told TODAY’s Matt Lauer. “People
are connecting the dots.”
Gore
also spoke publicly for the first time about his separation from his
wife, Tipper. The couple announced their surprise split in 2010 but
have not filed for divorce.
“We
made a mutual agreement after 40 years of marriage. We’re doing
great by the way,” he said, describing their current relationship
as "warm.”
“We
had the children and grandchildren for Christmas, and we have regular
family gatherings. Life is good,” he said.
"We
have a good relationship and our family is strong and that’s what
matters.”
Since
his term as VP ended, Gore has elevated climate change to an
international stage. He placed a lot of the blame for the public’s
confusion and “falsehoods” surrounding global warming on
corporations and the way they have influenced politics.
The
former vice president talks about the challenges of tackling climate
change amid the "antagonism" in the political world today.
“Large
carbon polluters have business plans that depend upon them being able
to use the Earth’s atmosphere as an open sewer,” he said. “It’s
the same thing that tobacco companies did years ago in trying to
convince people that the science linking cigarette smoking to lung
cancer was not believable.”
Although
Gore has been critical of President Obama’s action to date on
global warming, he said he was pleased the president tackled the
issue in his second inaugural address last week.
"Making
the kind of commitment he did is comparable. He’s put his
presidency behind this issue now,” he said.
“In
his first term, even though, yes, he fell short, he ended up doing
more than any other previous president.”
Gore,
who is pushing his environmental agenda in his newest book, “The
Future: Six Drivers of Global Change,” acknowledged “there are
some things I miss about” politics. But he said his current
platform allows him to continue to speak out about current political
issues.
“One
of the themes of this books, Matt, is that our democracy has been
hacked,” he said. “That’s a computer term, of course, that
implies control of the way our political system works has been taken
over, in this case, by big money, corporations designated as persons,
anonymous donors. Big money is having a corrupting influence and it’s
degrading the quality of our democracy.”
Yet,
Gore defended selling his cable television channel, Current TV, to
the foreign company Al Jazeera. The government of Qatar, which gets
most of its money from oil and natural gas reserves, contributes much
of the funding for Al Jazeera.
Gore
said he understands concern over the perceived conflict of philosophy
and critics who called the sale hypocritical.
“I
certainly understand that criticism. I disagree with it, because I
think Al Jazeera has obviously long established itself as a really
distinguished and effective news gathering organization,” he said.
“And by the way, its climate coverage has been far more extensive
and of high quality than any of the networks there.”
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