John Thompson, retired teacher in Oklahoma, writes here about the environmental crisis in his state, propelled by greed.
He writes:
Oklahoma City is again in the national news. On one hand, it was ranked 16th in the nation in the U.S. News & World Report’s “Best Places to Live” in 2024-2025. On the other hand, The International Classification of Functioning, Disability and Health’s, (ICF) Climate Center just projected how Oklahoma City’s “temperature will change by mid-century under a moderate warming scenario.”
From 1981 to 2010, the average annual days in Oklahoma City where heat put a strain on electric transformers was 10. This was due to “blistering daytime highs along with sultry nighttime lows, depriving electrical equipment of a chance to cool down.” By the midcentury (2036 to 2065) it is projected to reach 45 days. Also, Tulsa is expected to reach 44 days and Altus 65 days of heat waves.
It also estimated that Phoenix, which is in the news for its current heat wave, “will endure an estimated 126 days each year with heat that reduces transformers’ performance, the analysis found. A power outage during a heat wave would kill thousands of people in the city, according to a peer-reviewed study published last year.”
Of course, the stress that heat waves dump on transformers is just an indicator of the predicted effects of a 350% increase in heat waves in Oklahoma City, and worse increases across the world. The distress imposed on infrastructure should be seen as a symptom of the devastation that humans, and other living beings will face.
The national press has also reported on possible ways that Oklahoma (and other places) could respond to global warming. In an editorial in the Tulsa World, Philip-Michael Weiner explained, “If we want to have a more stable climate in the future, we need to remove a lot of the carbon already in the air.” He adds, “Our elected representatives must not miss the chance to help Oklahoma become a global leader in carbon removal.”
Weiner explains that Oklahoma is “well-situated to become a global leader in carbon removal and reap meaningful economic benefits for our state.” He cites “Oklahoma’s geo-workers, technology, and resources, [and] vast geologic capacity, subsurface geology, needed for carbon storage.” And Weiner adds that, “Exxon Mobil Corp. estimates there will be a $4 trillion market by 2050 for capturing carbon dioxide and storing it underground.”
But that leads to another concern. Yes, given our failure to adequately tackle the proven threat of climate change, we must invest heavily in a range of efforts to decarbonize our atmosphere. And that will require major commitments from corporations, especially oil and gas companies, as well as government programs. But, we wouldn’t be facing such an existential threat if oil and gas companies, especially Exxon, had not hid their research which confirmed the findings of scientists who nearly convinced the H.W. Bush administration that carbon dioxide emissions needed to be quickly and massively cut. As the Guardian noted, their study:
Made clear that Exxon’s scientists were uncannily accurate in their projections from the 1970s onwards, predicting an upward curve of global temperatures and carbon dioxide emissions that is close to matching what actually occurred as the world heated up at a pace not seen in millions of years.
But they borrowed the tactics of the tobacco industry, which knowingly lied about the deadly dangers of their product. And then Exxon “continued its disinformation campaign for another half century.”
Yes, there has been reporting on Oklahomans seeking to apply technologies developed for fracking in order to cut greenhouses gases. But the bigger stories have focused on Oklahoma oil billionaire Harold Hamm, who pledges, “We’re going to be on oil and gas for the next hundred years,” It was Hamm who organized the “energy round table” at former President Trump’s private club where he promised “to eliminate Mr. Biden’s new climate rules intended to accelerate the nation’s transition to electric vehicles, and to push a ‘drill, baby, drill’ agenda aimed at opening up more public lands to oil and gas exploration.”
The New York Times reported that sources:
Asked not to be identified in order to discuss the private event. Attendees included executives from ExxonMobil, EQT Corporation and the American Petroleum Institute, which lobbies for the oil industry.
One would think that the new predictions regarding global warming in Oklahoma City, and elsewhere, would convince the Chamber of Commerce and political leaders to immediately make de-carbonization a #1 priority. And it should be clear that the Hamm/Trump agenda – pushed by oil industry lobbyists – would devastate our planet. Somehow, we have to come together and hope businessmen will value stakeholders as well a shareholders, and place mankind over short-term corporate profits for a very few.
By the way, as I was about to complete this post, United Nation’s World Meteorological Organization (WMO) said:
There is now an 80% chance that at least one of the next five years will mark the first calendar year with an average temperature that temporarily exceeds 1.5C above pre-industrial levels – up from a 66% chance last year.
As Reuters reports, “scientists warn of more extreme and irreversible impacts” if the 1.5C threshold is passed. So, “U.N. Secretary-General António Guterres called for urgent action to avert ‘climate hell.”” And I would add, Oklahomans and other Americans must double down on our abilities to fight global warming. But it is too late to make a difference in saving our planet if we don’t resist Exxon, Harold Hamm, Donald Trump, and others who are promoting the economics of destruction.

I have been to Oklahoma twice. Each time I couldn’t get out of there fast enough.
And no, they will not change their ways about climate change. They are as resistant to change as the Rock of Gibraltar. If they cannot recognize what is happening to the climate, they cannot, WILL not do a damned thing about it.
I remember April, 1995. I was recovering from surgery, and was more or less immobilized in my apartment. The news came on talking about a horrible explosion in OK City, and whether it was a gas explosion, or whether those A-rabs in the Middle East were the villains.
I had no such illusions. Having researched the extreme Right, and the militia movement, I knew it was homegrown terrorists. The thought that Arab terrorists would choose OK City as a place to wreak their havoc was laughable. We had, and have, more than enough “patriot” thugs to ensure a reign of terror without outsourcing.
And this is why I’ve never lived in an insurrectionist state.
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“And this is why I’ve never lived in an insurrectionist state”
What are the insurrectionist states? Please define what that term means. Thanks!
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Terrifying. Even scarier: The post I read prior to this one was the one about a Texas district voting to remove chapters from their science textbooks that have to do with climate (and vaccines and cultural diversity). Arggh! Ignorance isn’t bliss! Let me rephrase… Stupidity isn’t bliss!
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All RED cities in RED states like this one have to start doing is what Australia’s Coober Pedy did from the start to survive blistering heat. Rebuilt underground. Living underground in those RED states will also keep many safe from the increase in tornadoes.
Still, since Republicans won’t tax the wealthy class that can easily afford to give up half (or more) of what they are worth and still be wealthy, the working class better get digging with shovels during the winters. Also, they shouldn’t rebuild underground in low areas that easily flood, which greedy people will do if it adds to their wealth, even if warned.
And, since most of the RED states are east of the Rocky Mountains, not dealing with what’s causing global warming will make summers and winters worse on that side of the country.
“A pair of researchers studied the Atlantic portion of this worldwide conveyor belt called the Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation, or AMOC, and found that winter weather in the United States critically depends on this conveyor belt-like system. As the AMOC slows because of climate change, the U.S. will experience more extreme cold winter weather.”
Changing Ocean Currents Are Driving Extreme Winter Weather | University of Arizona News
Blistering summers
Freezing, stormy winters
More hurricanes hitting the east coast hammering Florida and Texas
More twisters scouring the mostly RED Bible belt states like Oklahoma.
In a warmer world, tornado behaviour is changing – this is how we can prepare (bbc.com)
This is not a prediction. it’s already happening and getting worse annually.
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Oklahoma is a beautiful state with great roadside rocks. I saw my first (and last) tarantula crossing the road near dusk outside Witcha Mountains NWR. The expanse of prairie between Great Salt Plains and Black Mesa is one of the drives everyone needs to take so they can see the lark bunting rise from the grasses as a cloud approaches.
I once embarrassed myself in a subway in a very small Oklahoma town by spilling an entire drink and loudly saying something about John Brown, a swear I got from my uncle Ed.
Conservative takeovers of these beautiful places is made more painful by the beauty and charm of them.
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I first heard that from Mac Rebennack
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that refers to ?
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“I’ll be John Brown”
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my uncle Ed upon discovering the failure of an agricultural implement: Wel I will be John Brown!
To Southerners, Brown was portrayed as a terrorist, a designation he deserved upon the ax murder of families in the bleeding Kansas affair. Unfortunately, they were not able to perceive their own sun quite as clearly.
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My take: Oklahoma is a hellscape. It is. It was. It will be.
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If you are fond of heat and dirt and snakes and creche collections and horrific-looking breaded steaks smothered in gravy, well, it’s just the place for you. But the spider VW in Lexington, OK, is something to see.
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Chicken fried steak. . . uummm good!
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A heart attack on a plate
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another suggestion in the Pioneer Women’s museum in Ponca City. There I was introduced to women who were pioneers, not just in the settlement of the Great Plains, but in the te-settlement of indigenous populations and the pioneering women have continued to do in fields closed to them.
Located on the edge of the Osage Hills region, the Ponca Museum taught me about the Osage Murders (recently publicized by a great book, Killers of the Flower Moon), the black population of the state (a third of the state in 1912 were black cowboys), and, at nearby Osage Hills State Park, a unique ecosystem on the edge of that region where gulf winds meet artic air to produce a ten mile strip of vegetation.
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“I saw my first (and last) tarantula crossing the road near dusk outside Witcha Mountains NWR.”
I saw my first and last “wild” scorpion while sitting and doing my morning duties, thinking “I hope it doesn’t come at me” in the Red Rock State Park (western OK) on my trip out to the Oakland NPE. I was surprised at just how fast they can move.
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Wow. Small towns in Oklahoma have subways?
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Melissa recalls camping in Mexican Hat, Utah and discovering, upon rolling up the ground cloth, in excess of a dozen of these scorpions had spent the night with them.
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!!!!!
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Whoa Nelly!!!
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