400 parts per million of atmospheric carbon dioxide may seem an
arbitrary milestone, but given the scientific consensus that 350 ppm is
the maximum compatible with long-term species-survival, we may take the
newer and higher figure as an occasion for reflecting on where human
society is headed.
I suspect that in most parts of the world, the 400 threshold is being
crossed without much notice. Too many concerns of a more immediate
nature get in the way, be they the routines of daily life or the more
spectacular events – almost always of the “bad news” variety except on
sports-pages – that flood our media-outlets.
This is unfortunate, for although many such matters have a legitimate
claim on our attention, the conditions for our collective survival are
being undermined on a continuing basis while we’re not looking.
To the extent that people are oblivious to this danger, it is
pointless to criticize them. What we must do, rather, is discover the
real links that exist between those unavoidable day-to-day occurrences
and the forces that are now steadily undermining the conditions of life.
A necessary step toward establishing such links is to understand – and
explain to others – that the fate of the environment is a class issue.
Of course, the destruction of the environment will ultimately engulf
people of all classes, including even the capitalists (whatever
short-run success they might have in hoarding vital necessities). But
the immediate policy issues are nonetheless framed by class, in a number
of ways.
First of all, it is the class interest of capital that dictates the
permanent pursuit of economic growth. Without this capitalist drive,
increased economic activity in some sectors could be more than offset by
reduced activity in sectors whose output does not add to human well
being (e.g., military, status luxuries, excessive numbers of cars,
etc.).
Related to this is the fact that capitalism’s political operatives
consistently obstruct efforts to protect the population against
environmentally destructive activities, such as the increasingly
dangerous processes involved in extracting fossil fuels (e.g.,
deep-water drilling for oil, mountaintop removal for coal, hydraulic
fracturing for natural gas).
More generally, while it is true that no one has a positive interest
in destroying the environment, capital has an interest in blocking
measures that could protect it. In countries where the political
opposition to capital is well-organized, such obstruction may be
partially neutralized. But, given the extreme scale of the current
danger, it is necessary to do more than just regulate and punish the
worst abuses; we have to redefine the priorities of production and
consumption. We need fewer planes and more bicycles; fewer parking areas
and more biodiversity; fewer high-tech gadgets and more opportunities
for direct interaction in public space.
On a global scale, the strongest opposition to such altered
priorities comes from the government that most fully embodies the power
of capital, namely that of the United States. Here, capital shows its
basic thrust with the least restraint. It has to such an extent
dominated the environmental debate that the very fact of humanly
produced climate change is still widely viewed as being unproven.
Thus every level of the political battle over environmental policy is
bound up with class interests. The capitalist class, with its
commitment to accumulation and expansion, still holds most of the
positions of strength. Recognizing this class-dimension to the
environmental struggle is important at both the domestic and the
international levels.
At the domestic level, we can become more alert to how preservation
of the environment is tied to other working-class or anti-capitalist
demands. The forces that drive the assault on the environment are the
same ones that seek to hold down wages and that divert resources away
from satisfying human needs and toward concentrating wealth and
maintaining global military supremacy.
The military dimension alerts us to the international level at which
we need to consider capital’s anti-environmental thrust. It is common
knowledge that nature does not recognize political boundaries. What is
done to the ecosphere in one locality affects all other localities as
well. This gives people in all countries a legitimate interest in
practices pursued anywhere insofar as these affect the future of the
planet.
The common interest of people across national boundaries reminds us
once again of the need for the kind of internationalism that was
initially advanced in the Communist Manifesto, but which subsequently
suffered crushing setbacks throughout the world. Its guiding principle
is quite straightforward. The working class – or, more generally, the
popular majority – in each country has more in common (in terms of basic
interests) with its counterparts in other countries than it does with
the ruling class in its “own” country.
For Marx and Engels in 1848, this insight was the key to
revolutionary consciousness. For us in the 21st century, it is also the
key to survival.
by Victor Wallis from here
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