U.S. Senate candidate Mike Beitiks is running to represent California on a platform that includes eliminating money, freezing job growth, and deploying the military in people’s front yards. He’s not crazy, he says, just focused on what he sees as the only issue of Pearl Harbor-level importance: our response to climate change.
“We’re literally going to die,” he writes on his campaign website. “ISIS. Obamacare. Russia. The NSA. Wealth disparity. Immigration reform. Gun control. What do all of these hot issues for the 2016 election have in common? None of them matter because we’re all going to die.”
%E2%80%9CISIS.%20Obamacare.%20Russia.%20The%20NSA.%20…%20What%20do%20all%20of%20these%20hot%20issues%20for%20the%202016%20election%20have%20in%20common%3F%20None%20of%20them%20matter%20because%20we%E2%80%99re%20all%20going%20to%20die.%E2%80%9D’
Beitiks is joking, of course, but he’s also deadly serious. The 31-year-old surfer, lawyer, and father of two is acting rationally irrational, he tells msnbc. His plan is to use absurdity to fight the absurdity of our political response to global warming. And his lark is starting to pay off.
With a year still to go before the Democratic primary, Beitiks is on track to easily make the ballot, forcing millions of Californians to confront his wild and crazy idea of being a politician who will “not do nothing” on climate change.
“It comes from a very honest and sad place,” Beitiks says of his campaign. “I’m just a regular dude. But I have a son who has never lived in a non-drought California and a new daughter and, like a lot of people, I haven’t seen any political reaction that I find satisfactory, or even close to satisfactory.”
This past Earth Day, Beitiks decided to fill the political void himself, albeit with his own winking style. He may be the only 2016 Senate candidate to appear shirtless on his campaign webpage. He’s definitely the only politician to rally support behind what might be described as a green police state.
He has strange ideas on money, job growth, and the military, but they’re linked by what he hopes is a more common appreciation for “being alive” and avoiding “unnecessarily dead things.”
To that end, he promises to take all the rich people’s money, and all the poor people’s money, and put it toward fighting climate change. In a Beitiks world, “nobody gets money anymore until no more climate change.”
He also promises no new jobs, and his reasoning is hard to oppose. “Everyone I know hates their jobs,” he writes, and it’s a little odd to promise more of something so many people end up hating. Plus, “jobs create a lot of CO2.”
The military will have a multi-purpose role if Beitiks gets his way, but he’s still trying to figure out the details. He’d like to withdraw all troops from the Middle East, for example, and redeploy them in people’s driveways. The idea is to make sure they’re not lazily using their cars for local errands.
RELATED: White House warns of doomsday climate scenario
But he’s also keen to ban private car ownership entirely, “not like socialism, per se, but like a species that wants to survive, per se.” If the no-private cars plan happens, he’d redeploy the military to countries that haven’t cut their carbon footprint.








