‘Accumulate,
accumulate, is the Moses and the Prophets’ - Marx
The ecological crisis is here and now, not in some far-off
future. We all know the global
environmental crisis is worsening. We all stand upon the cusp of total annihilation
– a global breakdown of such magnitude that the very existence of our species
is a possibility. What is the cause of this change? The fundamental cause is the capitalist
system. Over the past years there has been very little to inspire optimism in
socialists or environmentalists. Some environmental movements and parties have
become complicit in maintaining the status quo. People don’t see an economic
alternative, and the ‘left’ are often on the right.
However, eco-socialism
is the idea that to solve the ecological crisis you have to challenge
capitalism. We share the inspiration of Joel Kovel who said in a speech to
Occupy Wall Street:
“An association of free people will take care of nature
because they see themselves as part of nature. They will struggle for a new world
based on a new kind of production that gives nature intrinsic value. They will
develop the tools for overcoming and healing the cancer of accumulation and the
ecological crisis it generates. Such a society will be in harmony with nature
and not nature’s enemy. I would call it “ecosocialism,” and I hope you will
join in its building.”
Building a strong, independent socialist movement is the
hard work that lies before us. A socialist party needs to build a mass base of
dues-paying members in order to hire the organisers and staff they need to
seriously challenge the parties of capital. A socialist movement will have to
sink deep roots in a diverse range of communities. There are no shortcuts to
this project. The thing that often strikes us is how many socialists, generally
disillusioned by politicians, are politically unaffiliated but looking for an
organisation to be a part of. The only reason that socialists should be active
in the Socialist Party is because they believe that it has the potential to play
a part in building the mass movement of working people which is the only agency
capable of rebuilding society.
However, we need to explicitly develop clear aims and
objectives that can assist the formation of new democratic forms of common
ownership, control and planning. It is necessary to transform the mode of
production and living. The present political system does not take into account
the needs of the people, and that they are not invited to participate in
decision-making.
Many involved in the environmentalist movement and in
particular the Green Party are clearly sincere in their opposition to
capitalism and their desire for a better world, but they seem to have no real
conception of what "socialism" might mean. "Socialism" for
too many is a mere catch-all word for good causes in general but not as the
viable vision of the democratic economic and social transformation of society.
The
Green Party can be described as the American labor activist Eugene Debs once
put it, “…A middle class party, by whatever name, would still be a capitalist
party, for while it might champion ‘little interests’ against ‘big interests,’
with a sop to labor, it would still stand for the capitalist system and the
perpetuation of wage slavery…”
It is essential to challenge the “common sense” that
economic growth equals social progress. Economic growth is measured at present
by an increase in output (or income or expenditure), so by definition if
activity increases the economy grows.
Economic ‘activity’ is not about directly meeting human needs but is
something abstract, buying and selling and financial transactions are examples
of such activity. So in theory there is no link between abstract economic
activity and resource use. However for
capitalism to expand, we have to produce and consume more; if we could do
better on less, the economic system of capitalism would go into reverse. So while in a rational system we could use
fewer resources, capitalism expands when we use more. The whole world has to be
shaken down for profit. Thus a
rainforest is more ‘economically valuable’ if it is exploited for palm oil or
bauxite than if it is conserved.
Everything tends to be turned into commodities that can be bought and
sold, a process which tends to degrade ecosystems.
The Lima climate talks produced a statement,
adopted by everybody, simply because it carries no obligation. It is a gentlemen’s agreement, where it is supposed that the world is inhabited
only by gentlemen, including the energy corporations. For the sake of an
agreement, not one solution has been found and instead every country is left
with the task of deciding its own cuts in pollution according to its own
criteria, based on criteria established by national governments on the basis of
their domestic politics – not on what scientists have been indicating as
absolutely necessary. Everybody is aware
that this is most certainly a disaster for the planet. The interests of
humankind are not part of the equation. Humankind is supposed to be parcelled
among 196 countries, and so is the planet. It is irrational to expect all the
countries producing energy, like Saudi Arabia or Venezuela, Iran or Ecuador,
Nigeria or Qatar, whose governments are interested in using oil exports to keep
afloat will sacrifice their self-interest.
India’s Prime Minister Narendra Modi is moving to eliminate
any regulatory burden for industry, mining, power projects, and so on with a high-level
committee assigned to rewrite India’s environmental law system under which
business owners themselves will monitor the pollution generated by their
projects, and they will monitor their own compliance! Small coal mines have a
one-time permission to expand without any hearing; and there is no longer any
need for the approval of tribal villages for forest projects. Environment
Minister Prakash Javadekar boasted: ”We have decided to decentralise decision
making. Ninety percent of the files won’t come to me anymore”. And he said that
he was not phasing out important environmental protections, just “those which,
in the name of caring for nature, were stopping progress.” He also plans to
devolve power to state regulators, which environmental expert say is akin to
relinquishing any national integrated policy.
Capitalism is based on continuous expansion. Instead of
“production for production’s sake” our economy should be geared towards meeting
real human and social needs, something which is compatible with a reduction of
material production (and fossil fuel use). Only a socialist transformation will
allow us to solve the ecological rift between nature and humankind.
The trouble with parties built on single issue politics like
environmentalism, is that lot of people with vastly different political stances
may agree on that one issue, meaning that when they come other principles beyond
that single issue, and sometimes even in how they handle that issue, there are
massive divisions and conflicts. Unless the Greens call for the abolition of
capital as a necessary condition for the solution of ecological problems then
it is not socialist. At best it can be described as utopian-reformist as from
our understandings, the Green Party has plans and ideas about working within
the framework of the capitalist mode of production regarding their green
policies. They lack an articulated idea about post-capitalism. The Green Party
is not anti-capitalist, it just believes in highly regulated capitalism and it
naively thinks to implement the reforms the party advocates that this can be
done by a mixture of electoral politics and non-violent direct action unaware
that it would require a revolution, the
abolition of capitalism to achieve them. The biggest challenge for
eco-socialists is convincing Green Party members and the wider green movement
that sustainability and social justice can only be achieved in a society based
on the common ownership, and a multiplicity of democratic forms of control, of
the means of production. If socialism isn’t the answer, then it’s likely there
is no answer.
The questions are yet to be answered: does humanity have the
capacity that will ensure the maintenance of our species? Can each one of us
consummate the radical transformation of consciousness that will spawn a new
narrative throughout the world? Or will the human race descend into collective
barbarity and primitivism? Human destiny will unfold according to our ability to
implement a political awakening, to struggle for the only pragmatic solution,
the only realistic alternative. People, all over the world, have very different
priorities from corporations and industry but they also have much less
political clout. Moments of unusual unrest provide opportunities to break through
attitudes of indifference and to highlight social and political injustices. Ultimately,
actions speak louder and than words. Actions that underline the urgency, the
life-and-death reality of issues the deepening climate crisis, are the most
effective and quickest way to bring about substantive change. We can make a new
world if we’re willing to undertake the kinds of action called for, actions that
become a major component of social activism in this crucial and decisive
decade.
Reds and Greens unite! We not only have a world to win, but a
planet to save!
“Socialism without
ecological concern will still wreck the planet, while ecological concern
without a socialist analysis of capitalism will fail to save it” – Michael
Lowy
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