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Thursday, August 08, 2013

We are not alone

Socialist Courier came across this article by Richard Smith at “Capitalism and the destruction of life on Earth”  on the Real World Economic Review. It is well worth reading in full but these are some pertinent extracts. We would, however,  not accept some of what Smith suggests to address the environmental problems such as his advocacy of nationalization for the large key industries and the continuance of small businesses.

Extracts

Corporations aren’t necessarily evil, though plenty are diabolically evil, but they can’t help themselves. They’re just doing what they’re supposed  to do for the benefit of their shareholders. Shell Oil can’t help but loot Nigeria and the Arctic  and cook the climate. That’s what shareholders demand. BHP Billiton, Rio Tinto and other  mining giants can’t resist mining Australia’s abundant coal and exporting it to China and India.  Mining accounts for 19% of Australia’s GDP and substantial employment even as coal  combustion is the single worst driver of global warming. IKEA can’t help but level the forests  of Siberia and Malaysia to feed the Chinese mills building its flimsy disposable furniture (IKEA  is the third largest consumer of lumber in the world). Apple can’t help it if the cost of extracting  the “rare earths” it needs to make millions of new iThings each year is the destruction of the  eastern Congo – violence, rape, slavery, forced induction of child soldiers, along with  poisoning local waterways.  Monsanto and DuPont and Syngenta and Bayer Crop Science have no choice but to wipe out bees, butterflies, birds, small farmers and extinguish crop diversity to secure their grip on the world’s food supply while drenching the planet with their Roundups and Atrazines and neonicotinoids. This is how giant corporations are wiping out  life on earth in the course of a routine business day. And the bigger the corporations grow, the  worse the problems become.

In  Adam Smith’s day, when the first factories and mills produced hat pins and iron tools and  rolls of cloth by the thousands, capitalist freedom to make whatever they wanted didn’t much  matter because they didn’t have much impact on the global environment. But today, when everything is produced in the millions and billions, then trashed today and reproduced all over  again tomorrow, when the planet is looted and polluted to support all this frantic and  senseless growth, it matters – a lot.


The world’s climate scientists tell us we’re facing a planetary emergency. They’ve been telling  us since the 1990s that if we don’t cut global fossil fuel greenhouse gas emissions by 80-90%  below 1990 levels by 2050 we will cross critical tipping points and global warming will  accelerate beyond any human power to contain it. Yet despite all the ringing alarm bells, no  corporation and no government can oppose growth and, instead, every capitalist government  in the world is putting pedal to the metal to accelerate growth, to drive us full throttle off the  cliff to collapse. Marxists have never had a better argument against capitalism than this
inescapable and apocalyptic “contradiction”.

Solutions to the ecological crisis are blindingly obvious but we can’t take the  necessary steps to prevent ecological collapse because, so long as we live under  capitalism, economic growth has to take priority over ecological concerns or the  economy will collapse and mass unemployment will be the result.

We all know what we have to do: suppress greenhouse gas emissions. Stop over-consuming  natural resources. Stop the senseless pollution of the earth, waters, and atmosphere with  toxic chemicals. Stop producing waste that can’t be recycled by nature. Stop the destruction  of biological diversity and insure the rights of other species to flourish. We don’t need any new  technological breakthroughs to solve these problems. Mostly, we just stop doing what we’re  doing. But we can’t stop because we’re all locked into an economic system in which  companies have to grow to compete and reward their shareholders and because we all need  the jobs....

...In mainstream discourse it is taken as an absolutely unquestioned given by scientists like  James Hansen, environmentalists like George Monbiot, not to mention CEOs and presidents,  that demand for everything must grow infinitely, that economies must grow forever...No one stops to ask “what’s it all for?” Why do we “need” all this energy? Why do we “need”  all the stuff we produce with all this energy? It’s high time we start asking this question.  Economists tell us that two-thirds of America’s own economy is geared to producing  “consumer” goods and services. To be sure, we need food, clothing, housing, transportation,
and energy to run all this. But as Vance Packard astutely observed half a century ago, most  of what corporations produce today is produced not for the needs of people but for the needs  of corporations to sell to people...

.... Companies can’t change, or change much,  because it’s too costly, too risky, shareholders won’t allow it. And given capitalism, most  workers, most of the time, have no choice but to support all this suicidal overconsumption  because if we all stop shopping to save the planet today, we’d all be out of work tomorrow.

Yet even as corporations are plundering the planet to overproduce stuff we don’t need, huge  social, economic and ecological needs – housing, schools, infrastructure, health care,  environmental remediation – go unmet, even in the industrialized world, while most of third  world lacks even basic sanitation, clean water, schools, health care, ecological restoration,  not to mention jobs. After 300 years of capitalist “development” the gap between rich and  poor has never been wider: today, almost half the world, more than 3 billion people, live on  less than $2.50 a day, 80% of humanity lives on less than $10 a day. This while the world’s
richest 1% own 40% of the world’s wealth. The richest 10% own 85% of total global assets  and half the world barely owns 1% of global wealth. And these gaps have only widened over time. Tell me again where Karl Marx was wrong?

We need a comprehensive global plan, a number of national or regional plans, and a  multitude of local plans – and we need to coordinate them all....

...Today, there’s more than enough wealth and productive  capacity to provide every person on earth a very satisfactory material standard of living. Even  more than half a century ago, Gandhi was right to say then that “there’s more than enough  wealth for man’s need but never enough for some men’s greed.” I doubt that it would even be  much of a technical challenge. Google’s Larry Page predicts that the virtually everyone in the world will have access to the internet by 2020. Quantifying human needs, global resources, and global agricultural and industrial capacities is, I would think, a fairly pedestrian task for today’s computers, with all their algorithms.

Right-wing economists like Milton Friedman denied the very possibility of planning any  economy, equating all planning with Stalinism. I don’t buy that. The question is, planning by  whom, for whom? Stalinist central planning was planning from the top down, by and for a  totalitarian bureaucracy. It completely shut out workers and the rest of society from the  planning process. So it’s hardly surprising that planning didn’t work so well in the USSR. But I don’t see what that tells us about the potentials of planning from the bottom up, of democratic  planning. Besides, capitalists indirectly plan the national and global economies all the time...Capitalists are very good at planning – for their own interests. So why can’t we plan the  economy for our own interests?...

.....The problems we face with respect to the planetary environment and ecology can’t be solved by individual choice in the marketplace. They require collective democratic  control over the economy to prioritize the needs of society, the environment, other species,  and future generations. This requires local, national and global economic planning to  reorganize the world economy and redeploy labor and resources to these ends....

.... Let’s put the big questions up for a vote. Shouldn’t everyone have a say in  decisions that affect them all? Isn’t that the essential idea of democracy? The problem with  capitalism is that the economy isn’t up for a vote. But it needs to be... But today, huge decisions that affect all of us, other species, and even  the fate of life on earth, are all still private decisions, made by corporate boards on behalf of  self-interested investors...? Why shouldn’t we have a say in these decisions? We don’t have to be experts; corporate boards aren’t composed of experts. They’re mainly comprised of major investors. They discuss and vote on what they want to do,  then hire experts to figure out how to implement their decisions. Why can’t we do that – for
humanity’s interests? ...

....Every cook can govern. From Tunisa to Tahir Square, Zacotti Park to Gezi Park, Madison Wisconsin to Kunming  Yunnan, Songjian Shanghai, Shifang Sichuan, Guangzhou and thousands of sites and cities  and towns all over China, ordinary citizens demonstrate remarkably rational environmental  sense against the profit-driven environmental irrationality and irresponsibility of their rulers...

If corporations and capitalist governments can’t align production with the common good and ecological rationality, what other choice is there but for society to collectively and  democratically organize, plan and manage most production themselves? To do this we would  have to establish democratic institutions to plan and manage our social economy. We would have to set up planning boards at local, regional, national/continental and international levels.  Those would have to include not just workers, the direct producers, but entire communities,  consumers, farmers, peasants, everyone. We have models: the Paris Commune, Russian soviets, Brazil’s participatory planning, La Via Campesina, and others. Direct democracy at the base, delegated authority with right of recall for higher level planning boards. What’s so
difficult about that? ...

....Freeing ourselves from the toil of producing unnecessary and/or harmful commodities – the  three quarters of current U.S. production that’s a waste – would free us to shorten the work  day, to enjoy the leisure promised but never delivered by capitalism, to redefine the meaning  of the standard of living to connote a way of life that is actually richer, while consuming less, to realize our fullest human potential instead of wasting our lives in mindless drudgery.

This is the emancipatory promise of eco-socialism.



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