Ben Jealous: Rising waters will not drown the American spirit

In Kerrville, Texas, Leighton Sterling watches the rushing floodwaters along the Guadalupe River on July 4, 2025. Eric Vryn via Getty Images News

(TriceEdneyWire.com)—On the Fourth of July, Donald Trump signed his “mega­bill.” The law boosts the dying fossil fuel industry with tens of billions of taxpayer dollars. It invites an additional 470 million metric tons of greenhouse gas emissions per year by 2035—that’s the equivalent annual emissions of more than 100 million gas-powered cars. And it aims to stop dead in its tracks the clean energy transition and the green manufacturing jobs boom the Inflation Reduction Act was already starting to create.

Just hours later, a climate-fueled storm settled over and dumped four months worth of rain on Texas Hill Country. The Guada­lupe River rose 26 feet within 45 minutes. The resulting flash floods killed at least 104 people—at the time of this writing, although that number will go up—mostly in Kerr County. That death toll includes dozens of young girls attending the Camp Mys­tic youth camp.

This disaster was not a random event. It was a crisis written by the climate crisis and made far worse by the types of policies being pushed by this administration every day.

Before the absurdly named One Big Beau­tiful Bill Act landed on Trump’s desk, his administration had already begun gutting America’s frontline defenses against climate disasters—like the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration’s climate labs, the National Weather Service, and the Fed­eral Emergency Management Agency.

As questions abound about why parts of the flood-impacted region did not receive adequate warning about the floods, Trump insisted that “nobody expected it” and it was a “once in 100 years” event.

But storms like this, as well as increased flooding from the Guadalupe River, were expected—and predicted. The US Geolog­ical Survey—another vital body Trump is trying to eviscerate—issued a report to that effect in 2019. The science is clear: warm­er air holds more moisture, intensifying storms and accelerating flood risk. We’re now witnessing the violent proof of these predictions.

According to UCLA climate scientist Daniel Swain, “this kind of record-shatter­ing rain (caused by slow-moving torrential thunderstorms) event is *precisely* that which is increasing the fastest in [a] warm­ing climate.”

As for the “one in 100 years” claim, those once-in-a-century extreme weather events are now happening far more often thanks to the climate crisis! Between just 2015-2019, one St. Louis suburb had three major floods and at least two of them were considered “1-in-100-year events.”

It is not hard to see how the climate crisis became a political debate. Decades of anti-science propaganda from the coal, oil, and gas industries. Politicians bought and paid for by fossil fuel oligarchs. A current administration with a cabinet full of indus­try shills.

Big Oil alone spent a whopping $445 million through the 2024 election cycle to influence Trump and Congress. A stagger­ing figure to be sure, that does not include donations funneled through dark money groups (likely tens of millions of dollars more—at least). And it still falls short of the $1 billion Donald Trump asked the country’s oil executives to kick in to his campaign— an amount Trump insisted would be a “deal” for the industry because of what he was willing to give them.

But it is high time that our leaders, at ev­ery level and of every party, stop kowtowing to a toxic and unnecessary industry built on death, illness, and poisoning our commu­nities. It is time they treat this crisis as a struggle for survival—a fight for the future our children deserve.

As the people of Texas grieve and the country grieves with them, their pain is our warning.

We are at a crossroads: We can double down on denial and let superstorms, heat­waves, droughts, floods, and fires determine our fate. Or we can lead—with science, resilience, courage, and a recommitment to our values.

If we harness our outrage and come together to fight like hell for our collective future, we will win. Because when people stand up and demand a safe planet, nothing —not even rising water—can drown the American spirit.

(Ben Jealous is the Executive Director of the Sierra Club and a Professor of Practice at the Uni­versity of Pennsylvania.)

 

 

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