With wildfires raging across California on Wednesday—and with portions of the state living under an unprecedented “Extreme Red Flag Warning” issued by the National Weather Service due to the severe conditions—some climate experts are openly wondering if this kind of harrowing “new normal” brought on by the climate crisis could make vast regions of the country entirely uninhabitable.

Lack of rain coupled with powerful Santa Ana winds in the state, some gusting with hurricane-level force, have left officials warning residents in many communities that the worst is yet to come even as firefighters already report being stretched to the max.

Reflecting on the current and recent devastating fires in California, climate activist Bill McKibben wrote in an op-ed for The Guardian Tuesday that what the state has been experiencing “starts to feel like the new, and impossible, normal” for both residents and victims as well as those witnessing the destruction from afar.

Citing an article in the San Francisco Chronicle published Tuesday—which described how the fires had “intensified fears that parts of California had become almost too dangerous to inhabit”—McKibben wrote: “Read that again: the local paper is on record stating that part of the state is now so risky that its citizens might have to leave.”

Writing for The Atlantic, journalist Annie Lowery detailed the dynamics leading increasing numbers of people to believe the state has become “unlivable”:

The state’s “housing crisis has exacerbated its wildfire crisis, and its wildfire crisis has exacerbated its housing crisis,” explained Lowery, and that “vicious cycle is nowhere near ending.”

For many critics, the state’s largest utility PG&E remains a chief corporate culprit in the mess. As Common Dreams has reported, the company’s has failed to adequately respond to the increased fire dangers—choosing to reward investors and seek profits instead of making the kind of changes and safety investments that communities and experts have demanded.

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Meanwhile, as the following Now This video details, the scenes created by the California wildfires in recent weeks depict a hellscape fueled by the climate crisis—the scale and destruction of which fulfill some of the dire warnings scientists have been making for years:

In response to the video, climate activist group Friends of the Earth declared: “Thanks to the climate crisis, this is the new normal in California. To save lives, communities and wildlife, we must #ActOnClimate.”

After a new fire broke out in Simi Valley on Wednesday, fire crews spent the day protecting—among other homes and structures—the Ronald Reagan Presidential Library.

Speaking to Democracy Now! on Tuesday, Leah Stokes, assistant professor of political science at the University of California, Santa Barbara, criticized the corporate media for ignoring the role of the climate crisis in the fires and explained that the scientific research about what’s happening in California is crystal clear.

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