Greta Thunberg's prosperous future

The activist is going to live on a prosperous, high-energy planet. And it's going to be fantastic.

Greta Thunberg.
(Image credit: Illustrated | panimoni/iStock, TIZIANA FABI/AFP/Getty Images)

Greta Thunberg, the teenage climate activist from Sweden, is right to be passionate about climate change, maybe even petrified. Right-wing populists mock her angry tears, but she's a lot closer to the truth than those who dismiss climate change as a hoax cooked up by big-government loving progressives or the Chinese Communist Party — or maybe both.

Humanity is doing something new to the atmosphere, and the results could be pretty bad. Trying to quantify just how bad was the life's work of Harvard University economist Marvin Weitzman, who died last month. Climate change, Weitzman wrote in a 2009 paper, is characterized by "deep structural uncertainty in the science" and thus the "probability of a disastrous collapse of planetary welfare from too much CO2" is both ''non-negligible" and ''not objectively knowable."

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James Pethokoukis

James Pethokoukis is the DeWitt Wallace Fellow at the American Enterprise Institute where he runs the AEIdeas blog. He has also written for The New York Times, National Review, Commentary, The Weekly Standard, and other places.