A serious critique of capitalism is essential to help solve the
current world environmental crisis. Important questions are being raised about
the dire state of the Earth’s ecosystems. We must now rethink our vision of a
future society. We need to have a global perspective, understanding revolution
and revolutionary transformation as a world process. Ecological issues must
fundamentally be dealt with on a world scale. But that can only happen on the
basis of a social and economic system—socialism—that does not treat the
environment simply as a means by which to accumulate wealth. The world doesn’t
need to go green to save the planet and the people on it, it needs to go red. The
only solution is to get rid of capitalism.
Socialism presents a criticism of the god, Mammon, its
high priests of finance and those lords of the universe, the
industrialists, who worship the market at the sacred altar of money, and like a
god, claim omnipotence that they can do anything. Socialism, disputes such a
premise and argues that the market is unable to solve everything and that the
world cannot live only for consumption and ever more consumption, as the
"god-capitalism" always decrees it to be so. Who has eyes to see
knows that there is a contradiction and conflict between capital and nature. Ecological socialism (eco-socialism) denies
the divinity of the market.
Capitalism cannot deal with the environment in a sustainable
rational way. Its logic is “expand-or-die”, limitless growth, to cheapen cost
and to expand in order to wage the competitive battle and gain market share.
And unplanned, large-scale, globally-interconnected production poses grave
threats to the environment. Zero growth is not possible in a capitalist
economy. Firms compete to make profit. Those who make the most profit can
reinvest in capital and with more efficient machinery they out compete other
firms. Firms have to make profit to survive. It’s not a case of wicked
capitalists but instead a system with a built in growth imperative. Capitalism
without growth is capitalism in crisis. Capitalism tend to be based on the short
term. They seek to maximise returns quickly. They don’t think about the
consequences in 10, 20, 30 years. Capitalist production is by its nature broken
up into competing units of capitalist control and ownership over the means of
production. And each unit is fundamentally concerned with itself and its
expansion and its profit. The economy, the constructed and natural environment,
and society cannot be dealt with as a social whole under capitalism. It’s all
fragmented and each part looks at what lies outside itself as a “free ride.” An
individual capitalist can open a steel mill and be concerned with the cost of
that steel mill. But what they do to the air is not “their cost,” because it’s
not part of their sphere of ownership. In mainstream economic theory, this is
called “externality.” Socialism is not guided by profit but by social need,
achieving rational balances between industry and agriculture, reducing gaps between
town and country, factoring in the short-run, medium-term, and long-term, etc.
And socialist planning is able to take into account non-economic factors: like
health, the environment, alienation that people may experience from jobs. Society
itself, and not a small oligarchy of property-owners—nor an elite of state
techno-crats will be able to decide, democratically, what will be produced and
in what way and in what quantities and they will be free to choose how much of
the natural and social resources are to be devoted to education, health, or
culture. Far from being “despotic,” planning is the exercise by a whole society
of its freedom. A significant increase in free time is a condition for the
democratic participation of working people in democratic discussion and
management of the economy and of society. Human labour force itself is a
natural resource. "The natural force of people" and "the natural
force of the earth" are "the only two sources of wealth" and
those are plundered by capitalism. A number of environmentalists don’t like to
use the “c” word for risk of offence, but it’s all about “capitalism”.
The ecological socialist utopia is only a possibility, not inevitable.
One cannot predict the future, except in conditional terms. In the absence of a
socialist transformation the logic of capitalism will lead the planet to
dramatic ecological disasters, threatening the health and the life of billions
of human beings, and perhaps even the survival of our species. There is no
reason for optimism. Rosa Luxemburg could
reasonably assume that the alternative to socialism would be barbarism. The
ecological crisis has made barbarism even more probable. The entrenched ruling class
is incredibly powerful, and the forces of radical opposition are still small.
But socialism is the only hope that the catastrophic course of capitalist
“growth” will be halted. Socialism is pragmatic, not utopian. The society we
want to build must reverse the growth imperative and system of private and
government ownership, make work life-affirmative, and create an economy based
on community, cooperation, sharing, and a system of production that takes into
account our impact on ecological systems. It should contribute to the
betterment of society while allowing each individual to develop to their full
potential. Technology will inevitably be part of our solution, but we must use
and re-focus science and technology to serve the priorities of people and
nature.
The language of life and death, of apocalyptic cataclysm is
not poetic rhetoric — it is the reality of cancer from polluted waters, of
choking asthma attacks from poisoned air. Climate change is no longer a future
consequence. It is now an actuality. This is capitalism in all its naked brutality—
willing to destroy everything for profits. This should not only cause us to
despair but rather should motivate all of us to join the struggle to solve the
ecological crisis in the only way it can ultimately be resolved — through the
revolutionary transformation of our society. Our self-interest in preserving
and regenerating healthy eco-systems, living and working in a way that does not
compromise ourwell-being, will become central in making decisions about how
food is grown and all other aspects of getting our basic needs met. When and
where possible we should develop infrastructures for local food, water, and
energy sovereignty, recognising that we will need an intricate balance between
local production and a more centralised distribution and reallocation of
resources. There are decisions that cannot be made on local or regional levels
since their consequences obey no borders and affect other regions and,
potentially, the entire planet; somehow, we must make these decisions globally.
Those who live downstream must be as much involved in decision making as those
upstream.
We must uphold the banner of socialism if we are to
transform society and fight for all of humanity and for the planet that is our
home.
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