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Taking a Reagan approach to climate change

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Mary Bruno

George Schultz, former president Ronald Reagan's Secretary of State, compared the way his boss responded to warnings by scientists back in the 1980s that certain industrial chemicals were destroying the earth's ozone layer. "There were doubters," writes Schultz in his Washington Post opinion piece, "... but under these circumstances, President Ronald Reagan thought it best not to argue too much with the doubters but include them in the provision of an insurance policy. With the very real potential for serious harm, U.S. industry turned on its entrepreneurial juices, and the Du Pont company developed a set of replacements for the chemicals implicated in the problem ... the action worked and became the basis for the Montreal Protocol, widely regarded as the world’s most successful environmental treaty. In retrospect, the scientists who were worried were right, and the Montreal Protocol came along in the nick of time. Reagan called it a “magnificent achievement.

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Mary Bruno

By Mary Bruno

Mary was Crosscut's Editor-in-Chief and Interim Publisher. In more than 25 years as a journalist, she has worked as a writer, editor and editorial director for a variety of print and web publications,