My, how things have changed.
My intention was to write a follow-up to last week’s post about Canada’s Bill C-18 and Meta’s banning of news on Facebook.
I suppose this is a follow-up of sorts. But thanks to Mother Nature -- that ofttimes bully -- that story was pushed right out of the queue to be replaced with something far more tragic and
immediate.
To me, anyway.
I live in Kelowna, British Columbia. Chances are you’ve heard about my home in the last few days. If you haven’t, I can tell you that when I look
out my window, all I can see is thick smoke. Which might be a good thing. Last Friday, when I had more visibility, I spent the entire evening watching West Kelowna, across Okanagan Lake from my home,
burn in the path of the oncoming McDougall Creek Wildfire. When the flames would suddenly leap toward the sky, you knew that was someone’s home being ignited.
advertisement
advertisement
We don’t know how
many homes have been lost. The fire has been too active for authorities to have the time to count. We have firefighters and first responders pouring in from around our province to help. Our Air
Quality Index is 11 on a scale of 10, as bad as it can get. Thousands have been forced out of their homes. More thousands have their things packed by the door, ready to leave at a moment’s
notice. We’re one of those.
But that’s enough about the fire. This post is about our weird relationship with the news.
When something like this happens, you have a very
real, very visceral need to know what’s going on. For those of us who live here in British Columbia, the news has hit home in a way we could never imagine.
A few posts ago, I said it might be healthier for me to ignore the news, because it’s always alarming and very seldom
relevant to me. Well, those words are now coming back to haunt me.
This disaster has thrown our reliance on Facebook for news into stark relief. Last Friday, Canada’s Transportation
Minster, Pablo Rodriguez, asked Meta to reverse its current ban on news, saying, “We’ve seen that, throughout this emergency, Canadians have not had access to the crucial information they
need. So, I ask Meta to reverse its decision, allow Canadians to have access to news on their platforms.”
But there’s another dimension to this that’s a bit more subtle, yet
even more frightening. It goes to the heart of how we handle crisis. I think you necessarily must “zoom in,” performing some type of terrible triage in your mind to be able to imagine the
unimaginable. As the winds shift the fire away from your home, there’s relief. But other homes now lie in the path of the fire. In your head, you know that, but emotionally you can’t help
but feel a lift. It’s not noble, but it’s human.
So let’s “zoom out” -- a lot. We’re not the only ones this is happening to. This is a global crisis.
Twenty-six thousand people are evacuated on the Spanish island of Tenerife. A friend of mine, who’s an airline pilot, one week ago was volunteering to fly people out of Maui who had lost their
homes in the tragic Lahaina fire.
Take a look at Nasa’s FIRMS (Fire Information for Resource Management)
website, which gives a global map of all hotspots from wildfires burning. I’ve set this link to wildfire activity in the last 7 days.
Scary as hell, right?
But can we
actually process the news in a way that lets us move forward and start coping with this massive issue? Is it enough to change our behaviors in the way we must, to finally start addressing climate
change?
In a recent article on BBC.com, Richard Fisher talks
about “Construal level theory,” which says that the greater the psychological distance there is between the news and your life, the less likely it is to make you change your behavior. For
me, the psychological distance between myself and climate change is roughly 1 kilometer (just over half a mile) as the crow flies. That’s how far it is from my house to the nearest evacuation
alert area.
It doesn’t get much closer than that. But will we change? Will anything change?
I’m not so sure. We’ve been through this before. Exactly 20 years
ago, the Okanagan Mountain wildfire raged through Kelowna, displacing over 30,000 people and destroying 239 homes. It was a
summer much like this, at the time the driest summer on record. This year, we have smashed that record, as we have many times since that fire. Back in 2003, once we picked up, rebuilt our homes and
got back to life, nothing really changed.
And now, here we are again. Let’s hope this time is different.