In recent years, a relentless crusade against fossil fuels has gained momentum across the United States. Emboldened by environmental think tanks, progressive politicians, and climate alarmist media, this movement seeks to dismantle the very infrastructure that has empowered civilization. This anti-fossil fuel activism is not simply about concern for the environment; it is driven by an underlying worldview hostile to capitalism, industrial progress, and human flourishing. As Alex Epstein argues persuasively in his book Fossil Future, this movement cloaks itself in green rhetoric, but its core is distinctly red—anti-capitalist, anti-human, and Neo-Marxist in ideology.
This essay explores the philosophical underpinnings of the green movement’s war on fossil fuels, the irrationality of its policy proposals, the economic and moral superiority of fossil energy, and the real-world consequences of adopting green dogma at scale. It will also evaluate Epstein’s arguments, explore the role of nuclear energy, and expose the impracticality of electric vehicle mandates.
The Worldview Behind the Green Movement
The radical environmental movement is driven by a Neo-Marxist worldview that sees human industrial activity as inherently destructive and immoral. Its adherents tend to view nature as a fixed, sacred system, and humanity as a virus upon the earth. Fossil fuels, in their minds, are symbols of capitalist excess—tools used by corporations to exploit both the planet and the poor.
This perspective is consistent with what critics have called the “watermelon” ideology: green on the outside, red on the inside. On the surface, it’s about saving the environment. Beneath the surface, it’s about redistributing wealth, limiting consumption, centralizing power, and deconstructing Western civilization’s economic model.
Epstein identifies this mindset as “anti-impact” environmentalism, which seeks to minimize human influence on the Earth at all costs. In contrast, he advocates for a “human flourishing” standard, which recognizes that human beings thrive when they have abundant, affordable, and reliable energy—most of which, at present, can only come from fossil fuels.
Fossil Fuels vs. Green Energy: The Efficiency Argument
Fossil fuels—coal, oil, and natural gas—are not merely old technologies. They are superior sources of energy in terms of energy density, cost-efficiency, scalability, and reliability. They enable modern life:
- Oil powers 90% of the global transportation sector.
- Natural gas is essential for heating, electricity generation, and industrial production.
- Coal still provides the backbone of power generation in many parts of the world, especially in developing economies.
Green sources like wind and solar are inherently intermittent and low-density. They may serve niche purposes—such as powering Amish homes, off-grid homesteads, or emergency signage—but they cannot replace fossil fuels at scale without sacrificing energy reliability and human comfort.
Epstein points out that solar and wind require backup systems (usually powered by fossil fuels), massive land use, rare-earth mining, and extensive infrastructure upgrades. They are not “clean” when you consider their full lifecycle—from mining to manufacture to disposal.
Global Competition: Fossil Fuel Realism Abroad
While the U.S. imposes green mandates and penalizes fossil fuel development, nations like China, India, and Russia exploit fossil fuels unapologetically:
- China is building hundreds of coal-fired power plants.
- India relies on coal for over 70% of its electricity.
- Russia leverages oil and gas as tools of economic and geopolitical power.
By rejecting fossil fuels domestically, the U.S. is undermining its own competitiveness while strengthening authoritarian regimes who face no such constraints. Epstein calls this the “moral inversion” of climate policy: harming the free world while empowering despots.
Fossil Fuels: Climate Control for Mankind
Ironically, fossil fuels are not just blamed for climate change—they are also humanity’s best defense against it. Air conditioning, heating, refrigeration, crop irrigation, and weather-resilient infrastructure are fossil-fuel enabled. Epstein points out that despite claims of more extreme weather, climate-related deaths have plummeted by 98% over the last century—thanks largely to energy-driven adaptation.
Climate activists ignore this, framing fossil fuels as climate villains, while denying the life-saving role they play in helping humans endure temperature fluctuations.
Are Climate Activists Honest About the Cost-Benefit Ratio?
From an accountant’s point of view, the green transition does not add up. Activists regularly:
- Underestimate the capital costs of solar, wind, and EV infrastructure.
- Overlook the operational costs, including backup power, maintenance, and system balancing.
- Fail to account for the environmental impact of mining, battery production, and solar panel disposal.
- Ignore the loss of economic productivity tied to unreliable energy.
As Epstein emphasizes, the green energy transition would reduce comfort, raise prices, and likely necessitate population control or widespread austerity. It is anti-human at its core—subordinating human prosperity to environmental purity.
Why Do They Ignore Nuclear Power?
Nuclear power is a clean, scalable, and dispatchable source of electricity, with zero carbon emissions during operation. Yet many green activists oppose it.
Why? Because their opposition is not primarily scientific or economic. It is ideological. They fear nuclear because it allows continued high-energy civilization—which they see as the problem. Their real goal is degrowth, not sustainability.
Fossil Fuels: How Much Do We Have Left?
- Oil: Estimated to last 50+ years at current consumption from known reserves. More is likely to be discovered.
- Natural Gas: About 50–60 years from proven reserves.
- Coal: Over 100–130 years from proven reserves.
These are conservative estimates. Technological advances and new discoveries continually extend the life of these resources.
Are Fossil Fuels Really from Fossils?
The dominant theory is that fossil fuels formed from ancient organic material compressed over millions of years. However, there are minority views, such as the abiogenic theory, which suggest hydrocarbons could originate from deep-earth chemical processes. While intriguing, these are not widely accepted and do not change the current energy realities.
Electric Vehicles: A Case Study in Pollyannic Thinking
EVs are held up as the future—but reality tells a more sobering story:
- Battery materials (lithium, cobalt, nickel) involve child labor and toxic mining.
- Charging infrastructure is incomplete and often powered by fossil fuels.
- EVs lose efficiency in cold climates and have long charge times.
- EV production generates more emissions than gas vehicles—only balancing out after tens of thousands of miles, if ever.
Mandating EVs for all Americans is both economically irresponsible and logistically unfeasible without fossil fuel infrastructure.
Conclusion: A Moral Case for Fossil Fuels
Alex Epstein makes the compelling case that fossil fuels are not a threat to be eliminated, but a moral good to be preserved. They have enabled the greatest flourishing of human life in history and remain the most reliable foundation for energy in the modern world.
The anti-fossil fuel movement is not about environmental stewardship—it is about ideological control, anti-humanism, and the rejection of Western prosperity. As stewards of our nation, and as those who value life and liberty, we must reject this radical agenda and defend the fuels that have built civilization.
S.D.G.,
Robert Sparkman
rob@basedchristianity.org
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