Capitalism the culprit in the Sixth Extinction

PATRICK J. FOOTE  |  people’s world


peoplesworld-everyone

[dropcap]T[/dropcap]he journal Science Advances has published an article in which they state that the Earth’s population of mammal species is dying off at 20 to 100 times their average rate. No space rock or massive volcano to blame, the culprit is much closer to home.

The culprit is capitalism.

Dubbed “the Holocene extinction,” scientists have found that 477 species have gone extinct in the last 100 years whereas, under normal conditions derived from study of the fossil record, that number of species should have been two.

The Holocene extinction, sometimes called the Sixth Extinction, is a name proposed to describe the currently ongoing extinction event of species during the present Holocene epoch (since around 10,000 BCE) mainly due to human activity.

Scientists blame these developments on the results of human productive activity, which, at this stage, is guided by the profit motive. How many times have we read about industrial plants dumping whatever useless and toxic byproduct they produce into green spaces or waterways to save money?

It’s a trope any child would be familiar with: every cartoon having an episode where some mustachioed evildoer is sacrificing natural beauty for unnatural profit.

Energy lobbies fight tirelessly to maintain their ability to flout regulation and the entrenched car companies work to pass state level legislation to prevent clean transport alternatives like Tesla [electric car] from taking steps to make their product affordable. 


The solidarity between unions and environmental groups especially should be strengthened. A global society must have global responsibilities and it’s up to the people’s movements to lead.


Credit where credit is due, the people’s movements have been able to move the Obama administration to implement rules at the EPA that have done things like double car mileage standards and tighten up restrictions on CO2 emissions. That being said, when the regulations on something like coal plants can be undone like they were recently at the Supreme Court because they fail to take into consideration costs (read: lost profits) we know that we face a deep seated structural problem.

When the court establishes that precedent, the legislative and executive branches can only do so much in their current form. With capitalism at the roots of all three branches of government, how can we expect them to? The passage of fast track for the environmentally irresponsible Trans-Pacific Partnership via some deft maneuvering in the face of a popular uproar led by the trade union movement we’re once again reminded that the U.S. government works on behalf of the owning class.

With the 15 largest container ships producing as much nitrogen oxide and sulphur dioxide into the air as the earth’s 760 million cars, expanding trade with Pacific Rim countries without regard to serious environmental regulation is a long term loss for the planet.

Any internal change within capitalism toward a trajectory aligned with our higher ideals, as Barack Obama said during his interview on WTF with Marc Maron, can only be implemented “by degrees.” Maron, the former liberal radio show host, described the U.S. president’s position as “middle management” and correctly so in this respect.

Can we wrest control?

[dropcap]H[/dropcap]umans are capable of great things, but we’re a young species. We’re hurtling toward catastrophe, but it’s exciting! We’re pulling resources out of the ground, refining them in a crude fashion, stocking our shelves with frivolities, come what may!

Our current stage of ethical consumerism is a trend in production responding to the harsh objective truths of climate change. It’s equivalent to those first signs that it may be time to “get help” as a species, like experiencing your first hangover that lasts all day and swearing to drink only on the weekends.

It may take rock bottom, but if life on earth is to survive then we must reorient the means by which we survive currently toward keeping a balance with nature.

Some organizations believe that change by degrees is fundamentally impossible. Though few in number, there are those that recommend total de-industrialization but I cannot square that with considerations for quality of life. Keeping with the alcoholism metaphor, withdrawals can be lethal.

The reason alcoholics enter treatment is because treatment imposes structure. Treatment led by professionals plans out the patient’s day and addresses the root of the problem, often trauma in the patient’s past. It’s an unpleasant process for a while, but it is ultimately liberating. We are experiencing the anarchy of capitalist production, sloppily stumbling and spilling our waste around the planet. Only a socialism that places nature at the center of its plan can turn us around from our self-destructive course.

One of the defined attributes of addiction is continued use regardless of consequences. Rock bottom for individuals manifests in many ways, but the most tragic way is when a person under the influence is responsible for the taking of another life. Our addiction to free market anarchy has cost the lives of 477 whole species in the last 100 years and we haven’t truly reckoned with the implications as a society.

“People and nature before profits” is a slogan for the age of the Holocene extinction, but it must be more than that. Any groups organizing around social justice should do their best to incorporate an environmental component. The solidarity between unions and environmental groups especially should be strengthened. A global society must have global responsibilities and it’s up to the people’s movements to lead.


Flickr/People’s Climate.org

 

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Ecosocialism as Holistic Earth Care

ENVIRONMENT AND CLIMATE CHANGE | from our classic archives | first posted in August 2010


REPOSTED 4 april 2015

Redefining our role as Environmental Agents

AN INTERVIEW WITH JOEL KOVEL | August 16th 2010
Click here to download FREE the book THE ENEMY OF NATURE (Requires Acrobat Reader/ PDF)

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Canadian Dimension: There are lots of serious struggles around the world against instances of environmental destruction, privatization of water and other resources, etc. Yet these efforts are almost always isolated, fragmented, one-off events even within national boundaries, let alone the globe. What needs to be done to create resistance movements at a national and global level? Where will the leadership come from?
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Joel Kovel: Of key importance is the notion of “environmentalism” itself. The environment is by definition what is outside us rather than something in which we participate and to which we are connected. Environmental thinking conduces to seeing everything in terms of resources and not as an interconnected manifold of ecosystems. Note that this reproduces the economic logic of capitalism itself. At a deep level, capital creates the ecological crisis by monetizing everything in its relentless effort to commodify the world. Isolation and fragmentation is an essential feature of the breakdown of ecosystems; this extends to ways of thinking and seeing for those ecosystems in which we take part. Thus mainstream environmentalism can be said to be part of the problem rather than a move to solve it.
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This is why it is essential to emphasize the role of capitalism as the “efficient cause” of the ecological crisis. People are more ready to understand this than appears at first glance; once encouraged, they get the idea readily, and then the whole world opens up for them. The ecological perspective is inherently anti-capitalist, insofar as capital destabilizes ecosystems. This is also a way of saying that we need eco-socialism, not environmentalism! Since ecosocialism focuses on empowering human agency rather than technocratic tinkering around the edges, leadership will come from those activists who directly resist capital’s destabilization of ecosystems through building community: people like Lois Gibbs and Chico Mendes.
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Making Moves For Change

CD: Beyond pressing for direct caps on polluters through regulation, what actions should ecosocialists be taking to keep the oil in the soil, the coal in the hole and tar sand in the land?
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JK: Ecosocialist activism is a kind of guerrilla warfare against an occupier. Its means may be nonviolent, but it is a struggle to the death — and for life. Capital is as much an invader as any army: it breaks down boundaries, takes over communities as well as bodies like a parasite, insinuates its commodified relations into life-worlds, and introduces alienating institutions and form of reason. All of these points have to be contested.
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There is no way that frontal assault can win such a war. We need, rather, to employ multiple campaigns, coordinated in ways that weaken and demoralize the adversary while building zones of ecosocialist production. We might schematically sort these into three categories:  at the level of the state or trans-statal organization, like the Copenhagen or G-20 meetings; against the corporation, the bank, etc: for example, suing Chevron in Ecuador; taking on BP in Houston while drawing on radically feminist strategies; at the point of extraction — the “soil,” the “hole” etc. — Niger Delta, West Virginia, Alberta.
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Needless to add, there is no fixed plan, and campaigns have to be creatively adaptive. For instance, activists did what they could to directly block mountain-top demolition in West Virginia; but also took some of the debris back to the metropolis and dumped it in the ATM vestibules of Morgan-Chase bank. Successful people’s war (think, say, of Cuba) takes place throughout a land: in the mountains, the universities, the plantations, the city streets. It always starts small, not through big invasions. Nor can it possibly succeed through any one of these zones, especially the parliamentary. The ultimate source of strength is whatever is closest to popular struggle at the point of life’s resistance to capital. This is where small beginnings can germinate into transformative movements. Mere spontaneity will never work if the points of struggle cannot connect each with the other, and equally important, if they do not become conscious of what it is that they are undertaking and where it can lead them. Here is where the matter of an ecosocialist vision to break out of the traps of fragmentation enters. As this grows, it does so within the struggle for life and against capital, and also connects with international movements, because it is the earth itself that “global capital” has invaded and occupied. In no sense, except the narrowest immediacy, can an ecosocialist movement be restricted within national boundaries. Hopefully, as the international ecosocialist movement matures, it can provide a forum for a conscious planning of such campaigns.
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CD: The Dark Mountain Project argues that it’s too late to save industrial civilization and that it is futile to try to reduce its impact by way of green technology, regulation, and renewable energy. Rather, we should be thinking about how we are going to live through its fall and what we can learn from its collapse. What is your take on the Dark Mountain Project?
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JK: As capital inexorably destroys its own conditions of production, our so-called civilization is undergoing a process of devolution leading to collapse. Gramsci famously saw this as the time when the old order is dying and the new one cannot yet be born, and he foresaw that under such grim circumstances a great deal of weird behavior would emerge. The Dark Mountain project is one such piece of weirdness, to be classified with survivalists and various militias as different kinds of primitivist reversion. Its class base, however, is not drawn from right-wing backwoods types and the dispossessed, but from intellectuals and artistes seeking fulfillment through romantic rejection of the world. This is an illusion, nor can it go very far.
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The Project’s virtue lies in a slogan much favored on its website: “Giving up on Environmentalism.” As I noted, environmentalism is very much part of the problem. But instead of confronting the issue where it is actually located, namely, society and the way it transforms nature, the Project simply evades social relations, or rather, continues existing tendencies to the point of extermination. On the contrary, I see capitalism as a society so hollowed out by processes of alienation as to have become radically de-sociated. So, in its later (i.e., present) stages, capitalism turns into a collection of ego-particles agitated by the forces of the market into desperate and fearful searches for individualized sensation: living in gated communities, traveling about in mutually isolated cars, and plugged into remote forces of mass cultural manipulation. This is both a sign of the ecological crisis and a way it is perpetuated, for individual egos can do nothing to mend our relations with nature.
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The only rational way of overcoming the crisis and of restoring society and nature is through the recovery of ways of as-sociation, that is, through forms of “commoning” capable of resisting the inroads of capital and building solidarity with others. Only in society can the human animal fulfill its “nature” and do justice to nature. Organized from below into a new society we can prevail in the struggle for life that marks this epoch. The Dark Mountain Project offers instead, further isolation, further self-centeredness, and further disintegration.
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Climate Change is Bad, But Not Our Only Problem
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CD: The UN biodiversity report coming out this summer says that the case for global action to stop the destruction of the natural world is even more important than the argument for tackling climate change. Do you concur with this importance attached to protecting biodiversity?
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JK: Climate change is a menace without parallel in the whole history of humanity. Its spectacular and dramatic character can generate narratives capable of arousing general concern and thus provide a stimulus to build movements of resistance. But climate change is not the sole problem we face, even if this property makes it seem as such. Hopefully, the UN’s forthcoming report about the stupendous die-off now underway can have the salutary effect of disabusing people of this illusion.
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I’m not happy with prioritizing either of these massive processes of eco-disintegration, because to do so becomes part of the artificial separation noted above. Better to realize that we are part of one ecosphere suffering from a planetary disease — a kind of cancer produced by Homo sapiens who has blighted nature with the accumulation of capital. Within the myriad disorders set forth, there arise configurations affecting various “tissues” of the planetary body, with innumerable secondary and tertiary interactions, many of them unpredictable and chaotic. Climate change is one such, species loss another. They need to be seen in relation to each other, and to the cancer of which they are symptoms.

As the chief driving factor in species loss is habitat alteration, climate change is most definitely implicated in the great die-off, whether by heat, drought or flooding. But the two threats are not structurally identical, nor can dealing with the one be considered ipso facto adequate for dealing with the other. Consider the laudable goal of diminishing concentrations of atmospheric CO2, for example, Bill McKibben’s “350” campaign to bring greenhouse gas concentrations below the current level of about 390 ppm. Now it’s possible to imagine this being done, though fantastically difficult. But there are two logical strategies toward this end — either lowering carbon emissions and/or augmenting carbon sequestration — and these can have drastically different implications for species loss. Sequestering carbon, say, in the ocean, might alleviate the greenhouse effect — at the cost, however, of worsening the lot of countless creatures through acidification of the seas, which destroys shelled sea-life including the corals that provide the dwelling places for innumerable aquatic species. Similarly, some of the technical fixes now being considered to directly lower temperature, as by injecting SO2 into the atmosphere, are obviously reckless of the integrity of living beings. Just so, are the strategies of biofuel development that require monocropping, thereby sacrificing biodiversity. Thus there can be a real contradiction between dealing with these two threats if they are regarded in isolation.
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The rational way, then, to contend with any and all ecological menaces is by developing a vision of sufficient universality that regards them as aspects of a common ecosphere undergoing a common assault. This returns us to the overarching question developed in The Enemy of Nature, of capital accumulation as the “efficient cause” of the ecological crisis. Only within the framewotk of a revolutionary ecosocialist society can we deal with the twinned crises of climate change and species loss — and others as well — within a coherent program centered around the flourishing of life.
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Here I would add one aspect of the great extermination now underway: the “un-flourishing of life.” Nothing so indicts Homo sapiens (subspecies: capitalisticus) as the mass murder of species at a rate far greater than anything done over the last 70 million years. The fact that so much of this happens unspectacularly, indeed, silently and with the elimination of life forms that we have never bothered to knowabout, much less appreciate for their intrinsic value, only deepens the indictment. May this realization spur our awakening.
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CD: What are the implications of Deepwater Horizon?
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JK: In itself, the oil spill (this is being written in the first half of July) is hideous, a concoction of corporate crime and government corruption/incompetence. But without diminishing its significance one bit, we should consider the BP spill not in itself but as part of a larger aggregate of the lesions inflicted on Mother Earth by the capitalist energy barons, not limited to but including:  spills elsewhere, for example, the Niger River delta, which dwarf Deepwater Horizon in scale, and have driven life expectancy in the delta down to about 40 years; “dead zones” in the Gulf from Mississippi River run-off of nitrogen generated by ethanol production (as fuel additive) upstream. These are quite comparable in scale to the release of crude petroleum from Deepwater Horizon; studies of large marine mammals throughout the seven seas, including sperm whales, disclose such a burden of toxics, chiefly deriving from petroleum that was “successfully” extracted, as to guarantee the extinction of these great creatures within a century; there are 27,000 abandoned wells in the Gulf of Mexico. If you study the frequency of drilling over time, you will see the all-too-familiar “hockey-stick,” or exponential curve as “peak oil” and economic depression drive the oil barons mad.



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JOEL KOVEL’S Capitalism: The Enemy of Nature is a must read introduction to the need to develop an ecosocialist perspective on ecological struggles, if we are to surmount and leave behind the utterly compromised big environmental groups.
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EDITOR’S ADDENDUM
The business system can never stop; it can never change what its core DNA dictates. The same cast of characters and criminals that betrayed the Gulf of Mexico and its animals, are now again at it, responding to the same pressures while the grave for the Gulf’s ecosystem and its many victims is still warm. Meanwhile, as it happened during the disaster itself, we hear little or nothing from the Big Tent enviros, by now utterly absorbed into the ways of the Corporate System. With defenders like that, we’ll be lucky if even bacteria survive.

October 12, 2010, 11:45 AM

There they go again!
White House Is Lifting Ban on Deep-Water Drilling

1:15 p.m. | Updated WASHINGTON – The Obama administration announced on Tuesday that it is lifting a moratorium on deepwater drilling that was imposed after the BP oil spill after imposing new rules intended to prevent another such disaster.
“We have made and continue to make significant progress in reducing the risks associated with deepwater drilling,” Interior Secretary
Ken Salazar told reporters on a conference call. Therefore, he said, “I have decided that it is now appropriate to lift the suspension on deepwater drilling for those operators that are able to clear the higher bar that we have set.’The administration imposed the moratorium after the blowout of a BP well in the Gulf of Mexico on April 20 led to the largest offshore oil spill in American history. But the White House has come under intense pressure from the industry and from regional officials and businesses that have complained about the economic impact. The moratorium was supposed to run through Nov. 30 but the administration has been working on changes designed to improve safety, oversight and environmental protection standards. The Interior Department nearly two weeks ago issued new rules governing areas like well casing and cementing, blowout preventers, safety certification, emergency response and worker training.

 

Mr. Bromwich, director of the Bureau of Ocean Energy Management, Regulation and Enforcement, was assigned to draft a report for Mr. Salazar providing a blueprint for safely resuming drilling. Even after the moratorium is lifted, officials have said it could be weeks or even months before new permits are granted to start up operations again.The moratorium idled 33 deepwater rigs in the gulf, affecting many jobs and triggering anger in the region. Senator Mary Landrieu, a Louisiana Democrat, has blocked the confirmation of Mr. Obama’s nominee to run the Office of Management and Budget, Jack Lew, until the moratorium is eased. Environmentalists have called on the White House to extend the freeze on deepwater drilling and extend it to shallow-water drilling.

 





OpEds: Fairness and Sustainability – Taking the FAS-Track

by Diane Gee, Editor, The Wild Wild Left


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Economics is not a thing.  It’s a contrived process, miles of convoluted intestinal tracts, twisting sinews, spasming to pass along fetid human flotsam and degraded resources with every value leached out along the way leaving nothing in its wake but the product it defecates.  We all know how lovely that is.

Yeah, I love economics.  All theory is based on previous theory, including the Leftist “greats” who I am finally slogging my way through.  Marx, Lenin, whoever.  Not to be dismissive of their groundbreaking idea that the peasantry itself was actually the source of all wealth, though I gather slaves have fathomed that nuance throughout the entire reality of human interaction.  It’s a great thing to say out loud.  I said it long before I read them.  “We are money.  We are the source through which all gains flow, and there truly are no gains that are not ill-begotten gains, if you really think about it.”

They say money doesn’t buy happiness. I counter money buys unhappiness, actually misery and suffering in an exponential pyramid to those on the bottom holding it up.

What money really buys?  Is time.  Time to enjoy life rather than endure it.  It is not only labor being stolen, our inherent value, but the most precious thing we have on our short trip on this blue marble.  Our time. Time well spent is the only true happiness there is.

Sure, we want that sailboat, or sweet car, or bigger house, or flat screen.  Toys are cool, there can be no denying.  If every person in upstate New York had a boat, even a lake as big as Seneca would be wall to wall boats.  We (they) can’t have that, now can we? Picture the parking problem of 1000 ships trying to make Troy.  Some of those poor bastards would have to walk a loooooong way.  Heh.  Too many people equals insane congestion.

Think about why that is, starting with the fact concentrations of people are always in cities centered around the concept of “finding work.”  Just leave that in the back of your mind for a moment.  We will come back to it.

Let’s go back to economic theory, the voodoo myth that says everything must rely on consumption:  Supply/demand, labor/production, value/markets. Even worker-owned capitalism (socialism) is still capitalism in a sense, because the well being of the people still relies on buying and selling (economy) rather than creating a system where purchase (cum profit) is unnecessary.  There is no kinder, gentler vampirism, when the host system has limited blood.

My audience is primarily made up of people who agree with these things, many, most vehemently.  Compared to what we have now?  A society in which we ourselves own our labor and means of production is nirvana.  Check.  Got it.  Some of you are economic theorists who will speak of debt and taxes and my naivete in thinking that economic theories are all just more faith-based illusions meant to keep you trembling before the God of the Dollar.  Bear with me here.  Some faith is good.  If you are in your car, what stops utter vehicular devastation but the faith you hold, and each person in their vehicle holds?  You believe you must stay in your lane.  They believe they must stop at a stop light.  But some faiths are the antithesis of avoiding “devastation,” and the most basic of these faiths is that we must have a system based on consumption.

We are in that position now, nearing utter devastation. The end of finite resources is coming, accelerated beyond imagination by what amounts to the two new shiny tools that Leftists of old never imagined:  The mechanizing of most labor (robots don’t unionize!) and the opening of international labor pools to a degree that essentially has rendered the elites into a single extraction-entity.  One world market, one global country, ruled by elites that have no allegiance to anyone but themselves.  Make cheap, sell high, record profits and environmental destruction without remorse.  The Class War has happened, and all wealth and resources have been redistributed to the top.  We lose.

This really sounds daunting until we remember there are some 7 to 8 billion of us on the planet.   That’s a big number.  Poor Lockheed Martin only made 2.93 billion profiting off war last year. And they only employ 132,000 people of the 7 billion on the planet, presumably not the other 6,999,868,000 people they are not trying to kill.  It’s madness. More so when you think about the mere 200 people (200!) who hold most of the planet’s wealth.

Socialism, communism could cure that to a degree.  Both are inherently democratic concepts and on a global scale could help to eradicate these gross inequalities that by random luck of birth leave one baby to live in gross luxury and the next to starve to death by the age of two. Socialist principle redistribute wealth back to those from whose labor it actually comes.  Awesome concept.  But?

What those systems cannot do, with their plodding planning and anarchistic “local control” is overcome the FACT that resources are finite.  Or that in any trade, benefit is gained by demanding more value than something is worth in order to profit.  Local control is a wonderful thing when it is a more organic notion, living sustainably within and as a part of an ecosystem.  Local control over factories based on mass production just adds to the overarching problem.  You see, “the economy” in and of itself is based on the very Western concept of “work” and “productivity” as being a virtue.  It does not address diminishing resources, melting ice caps, peak oil, vanishing rainforests or carbon in our atmosphere.

Secondly?  Any system of buying and selling has self-interest at its core.  Local control under that system would still produce those who wanted to benefit from more “money” and compete with other localities, as well as among themselves at some point… even under the most stringent of safeguards.  Markets would not be markets without competition, or profit, even shared profit. The point of the work itself is to do better for yourself, even your “collective selves.” It’s a snake eating its tail.

That core concept, that only in labor and productivity does man have value is flawed.

That core concept, of “producing” and “consuming” even in the fairest of fashions is flawed.

You probably think this is a universal concept.  It is not.  It is the result of humans moving northward to ever more hostile environments that created the need to create caches of excess to survive the cold months between growing seasons.  It became a self-fulfilling, positively-reinforced concept of the north and west. Slackers died.  Hard workers lived and gained more.   It became part of the mindset of Western imperialism, so ingrained as a “virtue” as it were, that when they conquered other lands they were aghast at sustainable societies, and deemed them lazy, heathen, tribal vermin.  As is the case now, for the most part today’s society cannot begin to fathom a world without work for works sakes, cannot dream of the idea of a non-monetary system and scream, “How would we get STUFF without work and income?”  We are less racist about it now, but we are still equally judgmental.

primitiveWWII_Tunga_Photo_Villagers_smoking_

Picture the cultural clash when during WWII, soldiers from Europe and America landed in, and created stations in Polynesia.  At first they saw it as Paradise.  Beautiful women willing to be joyous sexual partners.  What seemed endless free time for the villagers.  Communal sharing.  That quickly turned into disgust, as chronicled by James Michener in “Tales of the South Pacific” and Hemingway’s love of the people of Cuba.  (although he loved the western, exploitative bars too)

You see, in places of plenty, the very concept of self and greed were the foreign concept.  No one “owned” anything, right up to and including the children.  Competition was unimaginable.  Work was done only when necessary, by whomever was handy to do it.

The West worked hard to crush those ideals, shamed the women into hating their bodies, taught the men they had to stake out territory and defend it, and most of all?  Tricked them into working as they taught them the idea of “coveting” some trinket or another.

Chile, before the Chicago Boys Straussian indoctrination had a wonderful and growing quality of life.  Well fed, healthy coastal villages became slums as the US businessmen sent in factories.  The workers could no longer afford what they themselves once grew.  From an article written at that time:

The inhuman conditions under which a high percentage of the Chilean population lives is reflected most dramatically by substantial increases in malnutrition, infant mortality and the appearance of thousands of beggars on the streets of Chilean cities. It forms a picture of hunger and deprivation never seen before in Chile. Families receiving the minimum wage cannot purchase more than 1,000 calories and 15 grams of protein per person per day. That is less than half the minimum satisfactory level of consumption established by the World Health Organization. It is, in short, slow starvation. Infant mortality, reduced significantly during the Allende years, jumped a dramatic 18% during the first year of the military government, according to figures provided by the UN Economic Commission for Latin America.

Neoliberalism crushed them, true. They were better off under Socialism, true as well. But the indigenous tribes that are self-sustaining are still the bane of both systems; and in most cases both systems seek to crush that way of life and bring them into the labor-force fold.  Why?

It’s not just profit, private or collective that drives it.  It is a combination of a delusional “must produce” mindset with an ecological exploitation diktat and the idea that free living people must be brought into the “Westernized’ fold.

The single most frightening thought of all is the idea that work is no longer truly necessary.  It is as foreign to us as the idea of work for work’s sake was to the Polynesians.

I understand fully well we do not live in small numbers in some tropical paradise where the trees drip with fruit and the fish are there for the taking.  I understand as well the demographic nightmare we have in moving food to concentrations of people in concrete jungles that will not support any life.

What we do have is technology, and the ability to make most of that process mechanized and not labor intensive.

I read Lenin’s “An order of civilized co-operators in which the means of production are socially owned,” and see the justice in it.  I also see the gaping flaw.  Lenin’s “What is to Be Done” refers solely to Industrialized Nations, and sought to industrialize the World – hence adding legions of “workers”  to his cause.  He sees agricultural, sustainable societies as lesser beings that had to be brought into the system of supply and demand, labor and “economics.”

We have the capacity for limitless, green power, so much so, that Germany’s surplus threatens its ancient grid, while other nations are “paying” insane amounts for the expense and increasing rarity of fossil fuels.  We could entirely eliminate all the labor and “exchange” in the providing of power with ease.

Without monetary markets and trade and the horrific Monsanto crushing of the bio-diverse DNA codes of natural foods, food itself could be sustainable. Harkening back to my demographic point – without the need for work, people would again disperse to more rural settings and garden themselves. How many of you would live where you live if you did not have to live there to serve your job?  We would not need to fill every lake with boats, nor every ski slope with skiers.  Our interests are as varied as we are.  Without the concept of “weekend” or vacation, time sharing could be as easy as pie.

If the God of all Economic theory is Production/WORK?  The God of Production/WORK is Inherent Obsolescence.

In a soundbite?  “It has to break, so you have to buy more, so people can have WORK!”

Picture a world where you are given a vehicle at the appropriate age, if need be, an environmentally sound vehicle that will last FOREVER.  There would be no need for car payments on a vehicle built so well that it never breaks down, rusts or needs replacement.  Think even further to the point where mass transit negates the need for individually owned transport in the first place.

We have the technology.  Who will make them?  Or the TV’s and Computers on which we rely so heavily?  Perhaps, as part of our expanded educational system, 6 months must be given in some sort of “labor” in whatever field that a student feels a “calling” to.  Remember callings?  Rather than grow up to be in a cubicle, where people were called to a profession?  Would teachers teach without the idea of having more than their non-teaching neighbors?  Sure they would… because what has long been missing from our equation is real value.  Gratitude, honor, esteem of our neighbors.  Did the people of Polynesia have exceptional fishermen, weavers, builders and teachers?  They did, not because there was any currency per se; because the villagers loved and honored them for their contribution.

“Treat the earth well: it was not given to you by your parents, it was loaned to you by your children. We do not inherit the Earth from our ancestors, we borrow it from our children.” ~ Ancient Indian Proverb

We, as a whole, have shit in our own nests, our own water, and one may say we deserve to die of thirst.  Water, too is finite.  There is no sane society that would despoil forever the water tables sustaining life on Earth fracking for gas that is absolutely UNNEEDED to provide power.  Even our excrement could be composted into useful matter with our levels of science and technology without using this most precious of resources to “wash” it away.

Basic levels of housing, heat, and food could be met on a sustainable level with very little human “labor” involved.  Things like clothing, which do wear could be produced by robotic means, but would require we lose the vanity/consumption addiction to have ever new garments with which to decorate ourselves.  Medicine could again be a calling, and cures given to all mankind.  Without the profit motive?  Endless treatment of symptoms would lose out to people looking for true cures.

So, what would we do with all our time?  Love our children.  Help one another.  Learn, create art, enjoy and protect nature.  Party naked! Heh.  Ok, I may go too far there.

If the drudgery was not our main reason for living, who knows what we could do with our brilliance and creativity?  Certainly our energies could be better spent than to think of new ways to compete, and make war on one another.  Instead of making sure all who need it get insulin?  We could spend that energy on splicing some DNA into a stem cell that would heal your pancreas.

We could reverse the Climate Change, protect the diversity of our eco-systems and all the living things within it.  We could live as part of the world, again, rather than its Consumers.  Consume:  To eat.  We are predating and killing our life support system, driven by some madness that says we have to “work, make, use, discard, then work more to use more, only to discard again,” in some demented game that is propagating the false idea that we must serve this thing called an “Economy” to survive as a species.

We know where the sun goes at night.  We no longer have to work to the bone to survive a winter.  And no amount of “work” in the world will prepare us for the long winter that global warming could create, anyway!.

Work is not the point of our existence.  It’s barely necessary at this point.  Even in a Socialist System, Capitalism is inherent too.  It is still slavery to serve pointless production that kills our planet, and pointless work to consume what must by its nature produce more consumption.

The rich are rich in time.  Time is the only thing that matters.  We are giving away our time in a counter-intuitive venture that is completely unnecessary and planet-killing.

It could be a world of fairness.  It could be a world of sustainability.  It could be Paradise. It could be Global Cooperation.

It could be a world based on LEARNING, problem solving an coexisting in nature.

Let’s leave the fast track to oblivion, and start talking about the FAS track to Nirvana.  Fairness and Sustainability.

Think about it.  A factory, a cubicle, or here?

naturelibrary1

Diane Gee is a political commentator and activist residing in Michigan. She is the founding editor of The Wild Wild Left, and Links for the Wildly Left (Facebook).

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Radical changes (14.50 / 2)
only come from radical thinking.

by: Diane Gee @ Thu Jan 03, 2013 at 18:30:35 PM UTC
On a purely technological level, we can stop predating on the planet (17.00 / 2)
By bare thermodynamics, recycling takes lots and lots of energy, since it is reversing entropy.  So, even with a conservation modality, energy production would need to go up (way, way up!), not down.  Not because of being spendthrift wastrels, because of pure physics, in that case.

In any event a whole lot of effort needs to be put into recycling technologies.

I think we can do a lot better in communities without the need for so much stuff.

I hate to be such a communist with a one-blanket answer, but by living the way we live, at least in America, a huge huge amount of waste is entailed.

We live isolated in our ticky tacky apartments, get mentally ill and kill each other, pleasing Wayne LaPierre in the process.

The weirdo also known as AndyS In Colorado




Pro-Environment Groups Outmatched, Outspent in Battle Over Climate Change Legislation

By Evan Mackinder

Betrayed by corrupt and hypocritical politicians, whorish media, criminal oil companies, and inept enviros.

IT WAS SUPPOSED TO BE THEIR TIME.

With significant majorities in Congress, a president promising action and favorable public opinion all on their side, many environmentalists believed their political stars had properly — and finally — aligned.

Sensing the unique opportunity to address global warming on a national scale, environmental interest groups poured considerable capital into federal lobbying expenditures in an effort to topple their significantly more wealthy foes in the energy industry whose political standing appeared uncharacteristically wobbly.

At the height of the legislative push, during 2009, pro-environmental groups spent a record $22.4 million on federal lobby efforts. That is double the average expenditure between 2000 and 2008.

Advocacy groups lobbied independently of, and in partnership with, like-minded corporations. Industry leaders — the Nature Conservancy, Environmental Defense Fund and World Wildlife Fund — hit hardest, investing more than $6 million. The US Climate Action Partnership, an unprecedented conglomeration of leading advocacy groups, energy businesses and some of the U.S. largest producers, spent $1 million independently.

Yet even as pro-environment groups seemed poised to capitalize on favorable trends, moneyed opponents girded for a fight with more financial capital than ever before.

Clients in the oil and gas industry unleashed a fury of lobbying expenditures in 2009, spending $175 million — easily an industry record — and outpacing the pro-environmental groups by nearly eight-fold, according to a Center for Responsive Politics analysis.

Some of the largest petroleum companies in the world together spent hundreds of millions of dollars in various attempts to influence politics during the past 18 months

ExxonMobil, the industry leader in 2009, spent $27.4 million in lobbying expenditures that year — more than the entire pro-environment lobby.

And in July, congressional debate on global warming stopped cold.

In other words, Goliath whipped David.

“The way it turned out was a huge disappointment, to put it mildly,” Nathan Wilcox, the Federal Global Warming Program Director for Environment America, one group that lobbied heavily on comprehensive climate change legislation, told OpenSecrets Blog.

“The opposition outspent us, and they took it to a new level this time.”
MOMENTUM GIVES WAY TO DEFEAT

Though only recently coming to a head, the battle over climate change policy — and subsequent dramatic increase in political spending — began a few years earlier for both of these groups.

Energy and climate change became major issues for both groups following the Democratic sweep of the congressional mid-year elections in 2006. Environmental groups scored major victories in the 2008 election cycle, betting heavily on a Democratic majority and the presidential candidacy of Barack Obama.

Individuals and political action committees contributed nearly $5.6 million to political candidates in 2007 and 2008. Ninety-four percent of the total went to Democrats.

These same groups favored Obama, who campaigned on a promise to aggressively tackle global warming, if elected. Pro-environment groups poured more than $1.2 million into his campaign, donating to his campaign over Democratic rival Hillary Clinton’s by a seven-to-one margin.

Oil and gas groups again outspent pro-environmental groups considerably, and with their own partisan slant. With more than $35.6 million, individuals and political action committees contributed far more, at a more than six-to-one rate. Seventy-seven percent of contributions from this industry went to Republicans during the 2008 cycle.

Still, it was pro-environmental groups that backed the winning candidates. And it was pro-environmental groups who carried the political momentum into 2009 and the first legislative battleground in the House of Representatives.

Advocacy groups pushed hard for a bill that would tackle global warming by placing an economy-wide cap on carbon emissions. Major industry players lobbied heavily in the first half of the year.  Established leaders favoring the legislation — the Environmental Defense Fund, the Natural Resource Defense Council, the Sierra Club — all lobbied heavily, bringing the industry to more than $4.7 million during the first quarter.

In the American Security and Clean Energy Act (H.R. 2454), which passed the House of Representatives in June 2009, most saw a serious victory.

Wesley Warren, director of programs for the Natural Resources Defense Council, today calls the House’s passage of H.R. 2452 “proof” that money isn’t the final arbiter in legislative matters.

“It’s not only about the money,” he told OpenSecrets Blog. “Having money helps, but the other side will always have more and they don’t always win.”

Far from united on the issue, however, many environmental activist groups cried foul over perceived carve-outs for special interests, citing massive amounts of carbon offsets given to energy and coal companies, which would exempt large parts of the industries from a cap on carbon emissions.

Greenpeace, a group that is well-known for its environmental activism and which also lobbied on the bill in 2009, went on record as not supporting the legislation. It called H.R. 2454 a “victory” for lobbyists from industries of oil, coal and others.

Indeed, looming over the negotiations throughout the first half of the year was the oil and gas industry’s influential shadow.

During the first half of the year, oil and gas groups spent more than $86.5 million on legislative influence. Some of the largest oil companies in the world — who double as industry spending leaders — lobbied heavily on H.R. 2454. ConocoPhillips, Chevron Corp, ExxonMobil and U.S. petroleum conglomerate Koch Industries each individually spent millions of dollars lobbying Congress that quarter . Each listed H.R. 2454 repeatedly on their federally mandated lobbying reports in 2009.

“It was a major job-killer,” Bill Bush, a spokesperson for the American Petroleum Institute, a trade association that represents oil and gas interests, told OpenSecrets Blog. “It wasn’t an efficient way to go about the problem of climate change — it would have placed a great burden on those Americans who use and are employed by oil and natural gas companies.”

The fight between pro-environmental and oil and gas groups would only grow more bitter as the fight shifted to the notoriously slow-moving Senate.

Center for Responsive Politics Researcher Matthias Jaime contributed to this report.

Negotiations over legislation to reform the nation’s health care system had inflamed an already deep partisan divide between Democrats and Republicans. It was the perfect situation for opponents of climate change legislation: As Democrats wrangled with the moderate factions of their party over health care, oil and gas groups hammered away in the background.

In the year following the House’s initial passage of H.R. 2454, the oil and gas industry lobbed about $163 million at Congress, bringing their 18 month total to nearly $250 million.  Many of the same leading oil and gas interests lobbying on H.R. 2454 also focused on the Senate versions of the legislation — the Clean Energy Jobs and American Power Act (S.1733), sponsored by Senators John Kerry (Mass.) and Barbara Boxer (Calif.), and which later became known as the American Power Act.

By the time it was over in July of this year, with legislation stalling out in the Senate, the oil and gas industry had outspent environmental interests more than seven-to-one.

PRO-ENVIRONMENTAL GROUPS REFLECT

What’s next for environmental groups isn’t completely clear.

Some of the largest groups, such as the Natural Resources Defense Council and the Sierra Club, are turning their attention to the oil spill disaster in the Gulf of Mexico and the fight to hold oil giant BP responsible for the incident.

On the fight for comprehensive climate change legislation, opinions are mixed as to what it will take to move legislation forward, but many groups argued they’ve already made progress.

Nathan Wilcox at Environment America said he believes environmental groups will “undoubtedly” have to spend more money.  But he also notes that in the process of a long debate, pro-environmental groups succeeded in bringing together many organizations that don’t always agree with one another — something that he thinks helped move legislation forward to some degree.

“An unprecedented number of groups [came] together in support of climate,” he said, including the renewable energy and national security fields. “We really raised the profile of the issue.”

Such partnerships, notes Bob Bendick, government relations director at the Nature Conservancy, can also help break a standard narrative in the climate change debate: that the issue pits jobs against the environment.

Bendick cited Nature Conservancy’s work with the US Climate Action Partnership as one example: USCAP, he said, “presented to the American people that this isn’t about: ‘Jobs versus Climate’, but that climate can be a very important part of the future of our economy.”

Another advantage groups cited was an ability to bypass Congress and take its message directly to the American people.

Joe Smyth, a spokesperson for Greenpeace, said environmental groups need to pressure Congress from the bottom-up, rather than relying on buying a seat at a committee room through federal lobbying.

“We as a community are not going to be able to out-lobby [oil and gas], or other industries,” he said. “We need to take our fight elsewhere. There needs to be grassroots pressure on members of Congress.”

And grassroots pressure is one thing that advocacy groups do particularly well. With millions of members among them, such an effort may help them outflank oil and gas interests in the next debate.

As Smyth puts it: “It’s the only way that we are going to break out of the stranglehold they have over the issue.”

Go to “Fueling Washington: How Oil Money Drives Politics” series page.

THIS ARTICLE IS ALSO AVAILABLE AT http://www.opensecrets.org/news/2010/08/pro-environment-groups-were-outmatc.html

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Major Trade Association Asks Issa To Curb Toxin, Safety, Financial Reform Regs

SCUMWATCH:

Brian Beutler | January 12, 2011 | [print_link]

BE SURE TO ANSWER OUR POLL AT THE END OF THE ARTICLE

In response, the GOP-friendly National Association of Manufacturers has asked him to probe forthcoming regulations aimed at enhancing worker health, improving toxin standards, mitigating climate pollution and preventing another crisis on Wall Street.

EPA puts it. “These rules would significantly cut emissions of pollutants that are of particular concern for children. Mercury and lead can cause adverse affects on children’s developing brains — including effects on IQ, learning, and memory. The rules would also reduce emissions of other pollutants including cadmium, dioxin, furans, formaldehyde and hydrochloric acid. These pollutants can cause cancer or other adverse health effects in adults and children.”

________________________________

BONUS FEATURE

Issa’s Glaring Omission: War Spending

By Andy Kroll | Wed Jan. 5, 2011 4:58 AM PST

holding [2] seven committee hearings a week. On CBS’ “Face the Nation,” Issa pledged to identify as much as $200 billion in wasteful spending at the federal level, and an early target list [3] for Congress’ top watchdog includes WikiLeaks, housing giant Fannie Mae, and Food and Drug Administration recalls. However, a top Democrat on the oversight committee, Rep. Dennis Kucinich (D-Ohio.), is calling out Issa on a glaring omission in the chairman’s attack plan: the US’s bloated defense budget.

Source URL: http://motherjones.com/mojo/2011/01/kucinich-issa-waste-oversight

Links:
[1] http://motherjones.com/politics/2009/09/darrell-issa-enter-stage-right
[2] http://www.cbsnews.com/8301-503544_162-20022217-503544.html
[3] http://www.politico.com/news/stories/0111/46952.html
[4] http://kucinich.house.gov/UploadedFiles/letter_to_Issa_regarding_potential_waste_at_DOD.pdf

COMMENTS

    •  

fargo1169 HOURS AGO
Watch Issa slavishly do what they want and the Democrats to cave right along with him.

  • docb7 HOURS AGO
  • How did this guy get elected and why is the media ignoring this?
    http://mediamatters.org/resear…

  • Powkat9 HOURS AGO
  • Shorter version: Keep allowing us to poison and abuse people for profit.

  • CMO9 HOURS AGO
  • marconichols7 HOURS AGO
  • afblac7 HOURS AGO