Mainstream environmentalists seek to solve ecological
problems almost exclusively through either through the silver bullets of
geo-engineering technology or by extending the market to all aspects of nature,
carbon trading and valorization of the commons. Sustainable capitalism is a
contradiction in terms. Green capitalism cannot be sustainable because every
year every capitalist entity has to grow larger in a constant dynamic of
capital accumulation. If a business does not expand, it dies. Every nation on
the planet seeks to have 2 percent or 3 percent rise in its GDP or face a fall
into a tailspin of unemployment and cuts to welfare spending. Capitalism is
literally a system that is based on the maxim “grow or die.” So the idea that
in any way that could be sustainable or that they could somehow care about the
resources that they put in or the waste that goes out is an impossibility. Facing
competition from rival businesses, each company must minimise its costs while
maximising profit and market share. As environmental protection appears as a
cost on the enterprises balance sheet it must be minimised.
This fact operates independently of the personal views or
ethics of CEO’s. If concerned managers implement costly environmental controls,
they either sacrifice profit or lose market share to the competitor who can
undersell at a cheaper price in the marketplace much to the displeasure of his investors.
For this reason, pressures from the competitive market inevitably impede
voluntary "green"capitalism.
Socialists aren’t against people taking personal
responsibility for their life-styles, as consumers, why not recycle? But it’s
important to recognize that it distances us away from the product itself and
the way it has been manufactured. We now become the problem because we don’t
put it in the right coloured bin. This evades the whole question of why was
that thing made in the first place to be disposable. If we can’t reuse it
again, maybe we should never have made it in the first place. We feel individually
good about recycling, but it focuses on consumption and takes the spotlight
away from the production. If you look at
waste statistics, very little of all waste is domestic, that is, what all of us
produce. So even if we could magically get rid of all of that, that would still
leave the vast amounts of industrial and agricultural waste. It would be
irrelevant, in other words. Missing from the green view of the market is an
adequate appraisal of the inherent logic within capitalism that necessitates
environmental destruction. Every time capitalism messes something up, it
doesn’t try and correct that problem, it just tries to sell you something else.
So the food system has become so adulterated again that they invented another market
called organic food and charge extra. Businesses are still willing to pander to
the environmental consciousness of consumers if such a venture is profitable.
Thus great sums are spent earmarked for advertising the allegedly green aspects
of a particular commodity, even if such features must be fabricated as in the
case of products in such labelling ploys as “100% natural”. Big-Ag know how to
maximise profit from a person’s environmental concerns using false or misleading advertising than actual
change to the production process.
There is no prospect of success unless revolutionary change for
a just and sustainable society emerges from the periphery and social revolution
is mirrored in movements for ecological liberation. Some may say this is an impossible goal and we
should limit ourselves to achievable legislation and fiscal reforms but
socialism and a sound ecological society are one, inseparable, indivisible. Capitalism
has failed too many times, yet we keep trying that. Socialism is now our last
chance so why not try it. It’s not about buying green products. It’s about
getting involved in politics. It’s the only thing we have. They have all the
money but we have the numbers. What is urgently required is to get our power
organized. We’re the people who make all. If we don’t go to work, nothing
happens and nothing moves. Those concerned with environmental destruction must
eventually confront the question of the global capitalist market system of
production--is it to be embraced, regulated, or replaced? People must now not
only ask themselves what kind of a planet they want to live on, but in what
kind of a society they want to do it in. We should learn that live in symbiosis
with this planet and all its life-forms. We do not act in a vacuum. So let’s
make the most of our interconnection.
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