The science is clear. The Paris climate summit is one more
chance and probably the last for the world to agree and implement the tough
actions needed to keep global warming at below 2 degrees. Any higher, and the
planet and ourselves are in serious peril. The continued exploitation of fossil
fuels threatens not only the other millions of species on the planet but the
survival of humanity itself and the timetable is shorter than we think. The
earth’s climate is changing quickly, much faster than experts thought. Many
scientists are saying that it is already too late. Humanity is in uncharted
territory, and it's clear that capitalism is incapable of navigating out of it.
Capitalism is not just the cause of climate change and
incapable of solving it, but the system actually benefits from it. The solution
of the ruling class isn't to eliminate climate change, but to control it
through technology and use it to expand capital. Climate change is the greatest
business opportunity of this century. Even if climate change could be stopped
under capitalism--which it can't--there are countless other forms of
environmental destruction. The environment would still be freely exploited and
used as garbage, because profit still comes first. There is only one possible
solution a social revolution that will rid us of the profit system and replace
it with a sustainable and just society. Socialism offers an alternative, seeing
capitalism itself as the source of the climate crisis and radical system change
as the only viable solution. We must tell the truth: climate change is a
product of the capitalist system – a system that is clearly broken beyond
repair. We can place no faith in politicians who act in the interests of big
business and the capitalist class to solve these problems. The need for
constant growth is endemic to capitalism and therefore makes it impossible to
find a permanent solution to environmental degradation within a competitive,
profit-driven system. Alongside that is the international competition between
nation states over resources and political hegemony. If we want a sustainable
future for our planet, then we need to fight for socialism.
More and more people around the world are recognising the
need for “system change.” They want to prevent not only climate change, but
address a host of other social issues generated by capitalism that are
inextricably intertwined with our ecological problems. The World Socialist
Movement possesses a vision for an entirely different system of organising production.
In order to achieve that vision, we will need to build a movement that
harnesses the collective power of the 99 per cent of humanity who have a stake
in overturning capitalism and replacing it with a more democratic cooperative
and needs-based economic system for producing the things we need to stay alive.
Such a system requires rational and coordinated long-term planning, another
feature inimical to the anarchy of the market. A society based on common-sense,
cooperation, and a bottom-up democracy would use a combination of science, the
best available technology, and local knowledge of weather patterns, soil,
agriculture and food needs to decide where and what to plant and farm in any
given location. Our vision for the alternative society has to be holistic and
to achieve a new world we must make the connections between different struggles
and unite the forces capable of making such a vision a reality. Moving toward a
holistic understanding of nature and humanity's place on the planet means we
must reject the very idea of nation states and transcend all national divisions.
Achieving such a vision of a borderless world, where humanity and nature are
intimately connected and co-evolutionary, will be a giant task. But if we
examine our history, it is not one without precedent. It's easy to become
despondent when assessing the urgency of fixing our ecological crisis, and
recognising the plans of the ruling classes around the world to exacerbate it
for short-term economic and political gain. But understanding that we face a
systemic problem can offer us a clearer picture of the kind of movement we need
to build to take on the entire system. That picture offers us hope.
"We are many,
they are few."
No comments:
Post a Comment