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  • 00:00

    At the dawn of the 16th century, the Earth was cooling down.

  • 00:04

    This period of global cooling was most likely caused by volcanic eruptions, shifts in oceanic

  • 00:09

    currents, and orbital fluctuations.

  • 00:12

    European rivers froze and famines struck all over Asia.

  • 00:16

    But in the 1600s global temperatures dropped even further, and this time it was caused

  • 00:22

    by humans.

  • 00:23

    Specifically, it was driven by the settler-colonial violence that tore through the lives of millions

  • 00:28

    of people indigenous to what we now call North America.

  • 00:32

    The Great Dying.

  • 00:33

    A genocide that killed 90% of the estimated 60.5 million indigenous peoples on the continent.

  • 00:40

    The land-grabbing pursuits of American colonists killed 56 million people, with numbers possibly

  • 00:47

    even higher.

  • 00:48

    This genocide was so massive that it led to a decrease of global atomospheric carbon levels

  • 00:53

    by 3.5 parts per million, enough to lower temperatures across the world.

  • 00:59

    But this is just the start of the United States’ role in changing the climate.

  • 01:04

    The country has a long and dark legacy tied to climate change that continues to this day.

  • 01:11

    This is the story of how the United States caused and is still causing climate change.

  • 01:16

    This video was made possible by the people who support me on Patreon.

  • 01:20

    Get early access to all my videos by becoming an OCC Patron

  • 01:24

    Polluting Within Its Borders When it comes to emissions, the United States

  • 01:30

    is the undisputed champ.

  • 01:32

    America is the largest historical emitter.

  • 01:35

    Its cumulative emissions are almost double the that of China’s, a fact which often

  • 01:40

    gets lost in comparisons of the two country’s current emissions rates.

  • 01:44

    Yes, China is emitting more right now, but keep in mind that a lot of Chinese industrial

  • 01:50

    pollution is driven by demand from the United States.

  • 01:53

    There are also more than 4 times as many people using energy in China than in the United States.

  • 01:59

    And because CO2 lingers in the atmosphere for up to 200 years, cumulative emissions

  • 02:05

    are a much more effective tool to understand who is driving climate change, and it’s

  • 02:10

    undeniably the United States.

  • 02:13

    Not only did the U.S. nurture the oil industry into existence with tax credits, technological

  • 02:18

    advancements, and ravenous capitalist consumption, but it’s done so again with the natural

  • 02:23

    gas industry in the early 2000s--helping lock-in a new form of fossil fuels for decades to

  • 02:30

    come with extensive pipeline construction and government subsidies.

  • 02:35

    In part this was to quench America’s insatiable thirst for fossil fuels and material goods.

  • 02:41

    The U.S. has one of the highest CO2 emissions rates per capita in the world.

  • 02:47

    A rate that is almost three times the global average.

  • 02:51

    The United States is the biggest producer and consumer of natural gas and oil, as well

  • 02:56

    as home to the second largest fleet of coal factories.

  • 02:58

    In short, the United States is responsible for an overwhelming share of cumulative emissions,

  • 03:04

    and is still sheltering fossil fuel industries that are at the root of the climate crisis.

  • 03:11

    Yes, the United States has now committed to a 50-52% reduction of carbon emissions by

  • 03:19

    2030, which is certainly ambitious, but according to Climate Action Tracker, this reduction

  • 03:24

    still falls almost 11 percentage points short of the emissions cuts needed to stay below

  • 03:30

    1.5 C of warming.

  • 03:33

    U.S. electricity consumption and overall emissions levels are dropping, but slowly.

  • 03:38

    It’s also the second biggest country in terms of renewable capacity, and infrastructure

  • 03:43

    for clean energy does seem to be growing, but again, it’s still too slow.

  • 03:49

    Considering the 40 plus years of relative inaction since expert climate scientists warned

  • 03:55

    of the threat of global warming, it’s hard to imagine the United States cutting their

  • 03:59

    emissions in half over the next 9 years.

  • 04:02

    Politicians like Democrat Joe Manchin, who are firmly in the pocket of Big Oil companies,

  • 04:13

    and the 130 members of congress who deny or doubt that the climate crisis even exists,

  • 04:19

    continue to resist any of the actions necessary to reverse course, especially any climate

  • 04:24

    action that might hinder a giant corporation’s ability to make money by exploiting workers

  • 04:30

    and natural resources.

  • 04:32

    In short, before it even reaches its tentacles across the world, the American empire is responsible

  • 04:38

    for far more than its fair share of emissions, and, like its refusal to recognize its violent

  • 04:44

    exploitation abroad as we will see shortly, the ruling class of the United States refuses

  • 04:50

    to recognize the harm caused by our use of fossil fuels as long as burning them is “good

  • 04:56

    for the economy,” as in, “good for shareholders and executives at major fossil fuel corporations.”

  • 05:02

    Military Imperialism: In order to fuel its excessive capitalist

  • 05:08

    need to produce and accumulate goods, the United States has built an empire.

  • 05:14

    One that stretches across the world in the form of nearly 800 military bases in 80 countries.

  • 05:20

    Every year, the federal government sets aside nearly half of its discretionary budget, some

  • 05:25

    $778 billion in 2020, for military spending.

  • 05:31

    Some in the U.S. view this gargantuan fighting force as a spreader “democracy” and as

  • 05:36

    the world’s police force.

  • 05:38

    In a way they’re right.

  • 05:39

    The U.S. military does act as the police of the world.

  • 05:44

    Because like the police, the U.S. military ruthlessly safeguards the interests of U.S.

  • 05:49

    capitalist multinationals and the state at the expense of the poor and people of color.

  • 05:54

    This is best exemplified in the slew of coups, wars, and military interventions that have

  • 06:00

    carved out American control of foreign oil fields.

  • 06:04

    From the U.S. backed Iranian coup, to the Carter Doctrine in the 1980s that explicitly

  • 06:09

    committed the United States to defend the oil fields of the Persian Gulf against external

  • 06:14

    threats, to the Gulf War, to the Iraq War, and to the two failed Venezuelan coups trying

  • 06:19

    to topple presidents nationalizing oil reserves, the list goes on.

  • 06:24

    Not only do these imperialist attacks secure and subsidize the future of oil use in a time

  • 06:30

    we need to be doing the exact opposite, but they also destabilize regions so that they

  • 06:35

    are even more vulnerable to the catastrophes made more extreme by the climate crisis.

  • 06:41

    Iraq has been experiencing this reality firsthand.

  • 06:44

    After almost 40 years of U.S.-fueled conflicts, the people and landscapes of Iraq are bruised.

  • 06:52

    Wetlands along the Tigris and Euphrates were purposely drained in the 1990s as a method

  • 06:57

    of retaliation against communities reliant on their biodiverse ecosystems.

  • 07:02

    So, by 2001, 90% of Iraqi marshlands disappeared.

  • 07:07

    Provisional governments that have failed to provide robust support to the Iraqi people,

  • 07:12

    decimated infrastructure and schools have all made recovering from a multi-decade war

  • 07:17

    much harder, but the climate crisis has just added more fuel to the fire.

  • 07:22

    Increased heat in Iraq means increased dust storms and less arable land.

  • 07:27

    “In Fao, arable land has decreased from 7.5 sq km to 3.75 sq km, while in Thi Qar

  • 07:35

    it has dropped from 100 sq km to just 12.5 sq km.”

  • 07:40

    Which means that Iraqi farmers who’ve tended to the land for generations are now being

  • 07:45

    forced to find some other means of subsistence.

  • 07:57

    In short, adapting to climate chaos is already difficult for those frontlines, but the U.S.

  • 08:03

    has made it even harder by selfishly scorching the region in fire and fury to protect their

  • 08:09

    oil interests.

  • 08:10

    So, in a cruel twist of the knife, the U.S. not only makes adapting to climate change

  • 08:15

    more difficult in the regions they exploit, but they are the very ones fueling the fires

  • 08:20

    of the climate crisis.

  • 08:21

    Indeed, the Department of Defense is the single largest consumer of oil in the world.

  • 08:27

    It has a bigger footprint than 140 countries.

  • 08:31

    But military violence isn’t the only tool the United States has used in its efforts

  • 08:36

    to control global markets.

  • 08:38

    Economic Imperialism Alongside the United States’ military exploits,

  • 08:44

    US-backed sanctions are wreaking havoc across the globe.

  • 08:48

    War and sanctions are the one-two punch of U.S. imperialism.

  • 08:52

    Together they work to bully any dissident or leftist governments from straying far from

  • 08:57

    the United States’ neoliberal agenda of material and labor exploitation of the Global

  • 09:02

    South to fuel the luxuries of the Global North.

  • 09:06

    “U.S.-backed economic sanctions impact nearly one-third of humanity in some 30 countries,”

  • 09:12

    and essentially work to starve countries into submission.

  • 09:15

    In a world now experiencing an increasing number of crises, this is unethical and unjust.

  • 09:22

    Guns and missiles might not be present, but sanctions still kill.

  • 09:27

    In Cuba, COVID-19 has been exacerbated by tightening of economic sanctions under the

  • 09:32

    Trump regimes, while in Yemen, under a U.S.-backed Saudi blockade, over 20 million people are

  • 09:38

    suffering from food insecurity, with 50,000 children dying of starvation in 2017.

  • 09:44

    This, in a country expected to experience more climate-change-driven droughts and heat-waves.

  • 09:50

    To compound the harm, the U.S. is reluctant to shelter refugees or migrants.

  • 09:55

    So, while the U.S. continues to pour carbon dioxide into the atmosphere and heat up the

  • 10:00

    planet, it’s simultaneously tearing away the ability of countries on the frontlines

  • 10:05

    of climate chaos to deal with catastrophes and then closing its eyes to the consequences.

  • 10:12

    In order to truly face the climate crisis then, we must forge an anti-imperialist agenda.

  • 10:17

    Repair and Reparations At the 2009 Conference of Parties in Copenhagen,

  • 10:24

    otherwise known as COP 15, the world was on the brink of a preliminary form of a climate

  • 10:29

    agreement when Bolivia, Venezuela, Tuvalu, Sudan, and a few other countries refused to

  • 10:35

    sign on.

  • 10:36

    Their reason?

  • 10:37

    Imperialist powers like the U.S. and the European Union rejected the notion that they should

  • 10:42

    own up to their climate debt.

  • 10:44

    A term that calls for reparations for the hundreds of years of emissions and colonial

  • 10:49

    violence doled out by the Global North onto the Global South.

  • 10:53

    Despite backlash, Bolivia and its comrades were right.

  • 10:56

    Any effective climate agenda must incorporate the repair that comes with paying off the

  • 11:01

    climate debt.

  • 11:02

    The U.S. not only must end its imperialist interventions, but do the opposite and aid

  • 11:08

    countries in no-strings-attached funding of renewable and technological revolutions led

  • 11:13

    by the Global South as a means to escape reliance on fossil fuels.

  • 11:18

    But repairing the harm of centuries of American imperialism doesn’t stop there.

  • 11:23

    It also means significant demilitarization of the U.S. war machine, while simultaneously

  • 11:28

    sheltering the growing population of refugees fleeing the climate crisis.

  • 11:33

    Ultimately, the United States has been at the frontlines of digging the world into a

  • 11:38

    deep hole of climate chaos, so in order to repair the damage it's done, the U.S. not

  • 11:44

    only needs to stop digging, but turn its resources towards building a ladder so that we might

  • 11:49

    all escape the worst of climate catastrophe.

  • 11:53

    Unfortunately, videos like these, while very important, do terribly with the YouTube algorithm

  • 11:59

    and sponsors don’t want to touch them.

  • 12:02

    But there is a way you can help.

  • 12:04

    Becoming a patreon member helps Our Changing Climate stay afloat and independent.

  • 12:10

    As an OCC patron, you’ll not gain early access to videos, but also special behind

  • 12:15

    the scenes updates, and a members only discord channel.

  • 12:18

    In addition, each month my supporters vote on an environmental group that I then donate

  • 12:23

    a portion of my monthly revenue to.

  • 12:25

    Patreon supporters are the financial backbone of the Our Changing Climate operation, without

  • 12:30

    them I wouldn’t be able to take creative risks and dive into difficult topics.

  • 12:36

    So if you want to help keep this channel alive or are feeling generous, head over to patreon.com/ourchangingclimate

  • 12:43

    or use the link in the description and become an OCC patron.

  • 12:46

    If you’re not interested or aren’t financially able, then no worries!

  • 12:51

    You can help by subscribing, liking the video, and commenting.

  • 12:55

    I hope you enjoyed the video, and I’ll see you in two weeks!

All

The example sentences of SUBSIDIZE in videos (9 in total of 9)

maybe adverb we personal pronoun need verb, non-3rd person singular present to to subsidize verb, base form small adjective family noun, singular or mass - owned verb, past participle businesses noun, plural to to some determiner extent noun, singular or mass if preposition or subordinating conjunction we personal pronoun want verb, non-3rd person singular present them personal pronoun .
not adverb only adverb do verb, base form these determiner imperialist noun, singular or mass attacks noun, plural secure verb, non-3rd person singular present and coordinating conjunction subsidize noun, singular or mass the determiner future noun, singular or mass of preposition or subordinating conjunction oil noun, singular or mass use noun, singular or mass in preposition or subordinating conjunction a determiner time noun, singular or mass
subsidize noun, singular or mass their possessive pronoun filmmakers noun, plural and coordinating conjunction and coordinating conjunction the determiner arts noun, plural and coordinating conjunction in preposition or subordinating conjunction particular adjective is verb, 3rd person singular present the determiner canadian proper noun, singular film noun, singular or mass board noun, singular or mass
as preposition or subordinating conjunction it personal pronoun turns noun, plural out preposition or subordinating conjunction , this determiner is verb, 3rd person singular present almost adverb the determiner exact adjective amount noun, singular or mass that preposition or subordinating conjunction the determiner state noun, singular or mass will modal have verb, base form to to subsidize verb, base form
you personal pronoun might modal even adverb think verb, base form it personal pronoun 's verb, 3rd person singular present a determiner good adjective way noun, singular or mass to to subsidize verb, base form the determiner cost noun, singular or mass of preposition or subordinating conjunction development noun, singular or mass making verb, gerund or present participle video noun, singular or mass games noun, plural cheaper adjective, comparative
perhaps adverb a determiner more adverb, comparative applicable adjective takeaway noun, singular or mass might modal be verb, base form that preposition or subordinating conjunction governments noun, plural don verb, non-3rd person singular present t proper noun, singular need noun, singular or mass to to subsidize verb, base form solar adjective farms noun, plural
as adverb far adverb as preposition or subordinating conjunction how wh-adverb she personal pronoun affords verb, 3rd person singular present her possessive pronoun surgeries noun, plural , her possessive pronoun fans noun, plural are verb, non-3rd person singular present more adjective, comparative than preposition or subordinating conjunction happy adjective to to subsidize verb, base form her possessive pronoun transformation noun, singular or mass .
the determiner first adjective group noun, singular or mass were verb, past tense substance noun, singular or mass enthusiasts noun, plural who wh-pronoun did verb, past tense the determiner work noun, singular or mass to to subsidize verb, base form their possessive pronoun own adjective usage noun, singular or mass since preposition or subordinating conjunction
think verb, non-3rd person singular present of preposition or subordinating conjunction the determiner way noun, singular or mass in preposition or subordinating conjunction which wh-determiner our possessive pronoun political adjective institutions noun, plural subsidize verb, non-3rd person singular present large adjective agro proper noun, singular businesses noun, plural , bail noun, singular or mass out preposition or subordinating conjunction

Use "subsidize" in a sentence | "subsidize" example sentences

How to use "subsidize" in a sentence?

  • Trees and soils can absorb carbon dioxide released by fossil fuel burning. It would be great to subsidize responsible farmers and forest managers.
    -Alana Beard-
  • The big difference in those days was that in England the Government subsidized TV, in America we work on TV so we can subsidize the Government.
    -Bob Hope-
  • Eventually I want to subsidize my income with other creative outlets that are going to not keep me tied to the road so much.
    -Scott Weiland-
  • As long as I can make lots of money in other businesses, I'll continue to subsidize my own work.
    -Francis Ford Coppola-
  • I hope we can all agree that, instead of continuing to subsidize yesterday's energy sources. We need to invest in tomorrow's.
    -Barack Obama-
  • I believe we ought to subsidize some health care for the poor, but Medicare subsidizes everyone's health care
    -James Q. Wilson-
  • You cannot subsidize irresponsibility and expect people to become more responsible.
    -Thomas Sowell-
  • If you want more of something, subsidize it; if you want less of something, tax it.
    -Ronald Reagan-

Definition and meaning of SUBSIDIZE

What does "subsidize mean?"

/ˈsəbsəˌdīz/

verb
To aid, assist, or help pay a cost or price.

What are synonyms of "subsidize"?
Some common synonyms of "subsidize" are:
  • sponsor,
  • fund,
  • finance,
  • capitalize,
  • underwrite,
  • back,
  • support,

You can find detailed definitions of them on this page.