AND A GREEN WORLD |
The most serious issue to mankind is the threat of global
warming. The problem is simple: the increase in emissions of so called
greenhouse gases, principally carbon dioxide, due to human activity. Unless
this is halted and reversed the consequences could be catastrophic, even
threatening the future viability of civilization itself. Even the world’s leaders
recognise this, at least in words if not in actions. Global warming is the most
terrifying environmental threat facing the world today. The picture is clear.
The world’s major economies, based on burning fossil fuels and products which
depend on these fuels, are threatening to destabilise the world’s climate with
potentially catastrophic global consequences. The fossil fuel economy is
dominated by some of the world’s biggest capitalist corporations and supported
by governments which see their role as serving these interests. These
corporations depend on this way of organising society, and production, for
their profits, wealth and power. The pressure from these corporations on
governments is huge and effective. The fossil fuel giants are at the heart of
the world’s ruling class. Many of the politicians in the world’s governments
need little encouragement to pursue policies in the interests of big business
in general and the fossil fuel giants in particular. These politicians and
their parties share the same worldview – pro-business, pro-market, pro-profit
system – as the corporations. They instinctively act in line with what such
corporations feel is in their interests. Being capitalist corporations with an
eye to profit, some of these companies may decide there is money to be made
from developing energy technologies and products based on cleaner, renewable
sources which do not contribute to global warming. But it would be foolish to
gamble that the logic of profit and the vagaries of the market will somehow reshape
the core of the world’s economy in time to head off disaster.
Workers see through the motives of politicians. That's why
they won't vote for them. Not in parliamentary elections, not in local
government elections. And not even in their own organisations, union elections.
Politics are a big turn-off. We have said before that the worst mistake the
British workers made was the creation of the Labour Party. The politics was:
you do our thinking for us, you represent us in the house of the enemy. As if
this were possible. We were a class doing its best to turn its back on class
politics. There is a whiff of the peasant mentality, touching our forelocks to
our ‘betters’. It should not come as a surprise that the level of
class-consciousness among workers in Britain is at a low level and to believe
that class-consciousness improves as things get worse is the same dangerous
illusion that pretends that the poorer you are, the more revolutionary you are.
This lack of class-consciousness is at the root of the failure
of all working class organisations to recruit and thrive. It must be reversed
for growth to come. "What can you do? It's all beyond us" has been
the prevailing thought for many but now many are asking "We can do
something about it" and it becomes the most revolutionary idea. We have to
work out what is needed and get on with it.
What's missing is the recognition that we can do without capitalism
which by its nature wastes resources and fritters away energy. Capitalist politicians ludicrously call upon
workers to cut down on energy consumption by turning down the heat, forgetting
that the thousands of our old folk die of hypothermia every year. Most Greens
are not interested in socialism and are not prepared to take their analysis to
its logical conclusion, in that they propose class-collaborationist solutions,
expecting the capitalists to act against their own material interests.
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