While the northeast will also see some coastal flooding, its
geography is such that that aside from a few projecting sandbars like
Long Island and Cape Cod, the land rises fairly quickly to well above
sea level. Sure, Boston, New York and Philadelphia will be threatened,
but these are geographically confined areas that could lend themselves
to protection by Dutch-style dikes. The West Coast too tends to rise
rapidly to well above sea level in most places. Only down in Southern
California towards the San Diego area is the ground closer to sea
level.
So what we see is that huge swaths of conservative America are set to face a biblical deluge in a few more presidential cycles.
Then
there’s the matter of the Midwest, which climate experts say is likely
to face a permanent condition of unprecedented drought, making the
place largely unlivable, and certainly unfarmable. The agribusinesses
and conservative farmers that have been growing corn and wheat may be
able to stretch out this doomsday scenario by deep well drilling, but
west of the Mississippi, the vast Ogallala Aquifer that has allowed for
such irrigation is already being tapped out. It will not be replaced.
So
again, we will see the decline and depopulation of the nation’s vast
midsection—noted for its consistent conservatism. Only in the
northernmost area, around the Great Lakes (which will be not so great
anymore), and along the Canadian border, will there still be enough
rain for farming and continued large population concentrations, but
those regions, like Minnesota, Wisconsin and Illinois, are also more
liberal in their politics.
Finally, in the Southwest, already
parched and stiflingly hot, the rise in energy costs and the soaring
temperatures will put an end to right-wing retirement communities like
Phoenix, Tucson and Palm Springs. Already the Salton Sea is fading away
and putting Palm Springs on notice that the good times are coming to an
end. Another right-wing haven soon to be gone.

So the future
political map of America is likely to look as different as the much
shrunken geographical map, with much of the so-called “red†state
region either gone or depopulated.
There is a poetic justice to
this of course. It is conservatives who are giving us the candidates
who steadfastly refuse to have the nation take steps that could slow
the pace of climate change, so it is appropriate that they should bear
the brunt of its impact.
The important thing is that we, on the
higher ground both actually and figuratively, need to remember that,
when they begin their historic migration from their doomed regions, we
not give them the keys to the city. They certainly should be offered
assistance in their time of need, but we need to keep a firm grip on
our political systems, making sure that these guilty throngs who
allowed the world to go to hell are gerrymandered into political
impotence in their new homes.
There will be much work to be done
to help the earth and its residents—human and non-human—survive this
man-made catastrophe, and we can’t have these future refugee
troglodytes, should their personal disasters still fail to make them
recognize reality, mucking things up again.
It should be considered acceptable, in this stifling new world, to say, “Shut up. We told you this would happen.â€