"Capitalism is
Mother Earth's cancer," Bolivian President Evo Morales told the crowd.
The COP21 agenda for Paris has been criticized for its side-stepping
of issues like the role of capitalism in climate change and for the robust
involvement of multinational corporations in the talks.
“We demand that the Paris Agreement does address the structural
causes of capitalism," the declaration reads. "It does not have to be
an agreement that reinforces the capitalist model, through more market
mechanisms, allowing volunteer commitments, encouraging the private sector and
strengthening patriarchy and neo-colonialism."
The Declaración de Tiquipaya calls for, among other things:
1) the creation
of an international tribunal with "a binding legal capacity to prevent,
prosecute and punish states that pollute and cause climate change by action or
omission";
2) compensation
from wealthy countries to developing nations for "climate, social, and
ecological debt accumulated over time";
3) reclamation of
the global commons; and
4) wholesale
rejection of global capitalist and colonialist systems.
The World People's Conference website elaborated further:
The world is being buffeted by multiple global crisis that
manifests itself in a climate, financial, food, energy, institutional,
cultural, ethical and spiritual crisis. These are the manifestations of
unbridled consumerism and a model of society where the human being claims to be
superior to Mother Earth... It is a system characterized by the domination of
the economy by gigantic transnational corporations whose targets are the
accumulation of power and benefits, and for which the market values are more
important than the lives of human beings and Mother Earth.
The establishment of an independent climate tribunal emerged
as a central goal of the Bolivian summit, but Reuters noted that the idea "is
a non-starter with almost every other country going to the Paris talks." Even
the European Union is increasingly talking about a' pledge and review' system under
which national commitments would be re-assessed every five years against a goal
of halving world emissions by 2050.
As this blog has often said, there are many sincere and well-meaning people
(even politicians such as Evo Morales) who seek to tackle the global warming
threat but yet always come up short by advocating their reformist solutions that
are hidden behind their revolutionary rhetoric.
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