Democracy in America | Climate change

Why don't Americans believe in global warming?

We posit a handful of explanations

By E.G. | AUSTIN

FIRST of all, I apologise for the slightly inflammatory headline of this post. The fact is that a majority of Americans (58%) do think climate change is a serious problem, according to the January 2011 Rasmussen Energy Update, and fully one-third, 33%, "see it as a Very Serious problem." Still, the United States is less exercised about climate change than a lot of countries, and it's one of the few places where you can turn on the television and catch a debate between mainstream figures about whether climate change is even real. Over the weekend, for example, Charles Krauthammer suggested that a belief in global warming has the same epistemological status as a religious belief.

I've been wanting to take a step back and think about why America is a laggard in the fight against climate change. I would posit a handful of explanations:

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