Literary Hub

Dear New York Times: Climate Denial Has No Place in the Paper of Record

head in the sand

To the Editors:
We note with disappointment and shock the New York Times‘ decision to hire Bret Stephens as an op-ed columnist. In columns for the Wall Street Journal, Mr. Stephens has baselessly claimed that the abundance of evidence for global warming has been “debunked”; that climate change is an “imaginary problem;” and that those who accept the scientific evidence of climate change are akin to totalitarians, anti-Semites, and Communists.

These claims, and the intellectual dishonesty that underpins them, contradict the central mission of the New York Times, a media outlet that carefully sources its facts and information. Stephens is not just a “conservative voice.” An honest conservative voice may argue about what policies ought or ought not to be implemented in response to climate change. He is in fundamental respects an opponent of truth. It is disturbing that the Times would lend its credence to claims that find no real support in the scientific community and indeed are contradicted by the Times‘ own coverage of these issues. To normalize Stephens’ science denialism is to normalize the willful negation and distortion of facts that the Times supposedly resists.

Signed:
Katheleen Alcott · Hannah Lillith Assadi· Ramona Ausubel · Michael Barron · Julie Buntin · Anelise Chen · Ingrid Rojas Contreras · Karim Dimechkie · Liz Dosta · Kathleen Edison · Rivka Galchen · Sarah Gerard · Alex Gilvarry · Julia Elizabeth Guez · Hermione Hoby · Perrin Ireland · Porochista Khakpour · Alexandra Kleeman · John Knight · Marie Myung-Ok Lee · Ariel Lewiton · Cal Morgan · Joseph O’Neill · Tracy O’Neill · Téa Obreht · David Leo Rice · Sam Ross · Jonathan Schienberg  · Dan Sheehan · Jessica Soffer · Marya Spence · Graham Webster · Erin White · Leonora Zoninsein

Originally published in Literary Hub.

More from Literary Hub

Literary Hub13 min readPsychology
On Struggling With Drug Addiction And The System Of Incarceration
There is a lie, thin as paper, folded between every layer of the criminal justice system, that says you deserve whatever happens to you in the system, because you belong there. Every human at the helm of every station needs to believe it—judge, attor
Literary Hub13 min read
Real Talk: On Claudia Rankine’s Painful Conversations with Whiteness
Three quarters of the way through Just Us: An American Conversation, Claudia Rankine considers three different understandings of the word “conversation.” The first, from a Latinx artist (unnamed) discussing her reluctance to play oppression Olympics
Literary Hub8 min read
On Cairns, Hoodoos, and Monoliths: What Happens in the Desert Shouldn’t Always Stay in the Desert
You cannot walk straight through the Utah desert. “Start across the country in southeastern Utah almost anywhere and you are confronted by a chasm too steep and too deep to climb down through, and just too wide to jump,” Wallace Stegner wrote in Morm

Related Books & Audiobooks