2024-10-29
9 分钟Hi, I'm Josh Haner, and I'm a staff photographer at the New York Times covering climate change.
For years, we've sort of imagined this picture of a polar bear floating on a piece of ice.
Those have been the images associated with climate change.
My challenge is to find stories that show you how climate change is affecting our world right now.
If you want to support the kind of journalism that we're working on here on the climate and environment desk at the New York Times, please subscribe on our website or our app.
This is the Opinions, a show that brings you a mix of voices from New York Times opinion.
You've heard the news.
Here's what to make of it.
My name is Michelle Goldberg and I'm an opinion columnist at the New York Times.
I have felt so paralyzed by a combination of utter terror and boredom when following this election.
I mean, because the stakes are so terrifically high and yet there is so little new to say about the depravity of Donald Trump and the logjam that we're stuck in as a country.
So I wanted to go to a place where something new and potentially hopeful is developing.
And weirdly enough, I found it in Nebraska.
I'm standing outside a cider brewery in Ashland, Nebraska.
I'm about to go meet Dan.
Nobody thought that the Senate race in Nebraska was going to be remotely competitive.
Everybody assumed that the Republican senator, Deb Fisher, was pretty safe.
Well, thanks everyone for being here.
And this independent candidate named Dan Osborne has come out of nowhere and really is giving Deb Fisher a run for her money and making it close to a toss up.
His race could be a potential model for people who want to challenge Republican power in places where the Democratic Party really isn't competitive.