All
forms of vegetable and animal life are part of a network of relations
called an “ecosystem” in ecology. Normally this system is
self-regulating to the extent that, if an imbalance develops, this is
rectified spontaneously, either by the restoration of the previous
balance or by the establishment of a new balance.
Isn’t
it in the interests of the capitalists themselves to preserve the
ecosystem? Don’t they depend on it like everyone else? Of course.
The trouble is that they are incapable of rationally assessing their
interests. Their money-making obsession creates a psychological block
against any idea that they sense may threaten their pursuit of
profit. They repel the voice of nature from the very threshold of
consciousness, so the question of factoring it into the equation can
never even arise. At some level the capitalists rightly fear
that the natural world demands an end to the system they embody. They
blind and deafen themselves to climate change. The
existing economic system has failed and if it continues it will lead
to catastrophic consequences. We doom millions of people to climate
catastrophe or we don’t get rid of capitalism. Concern is growing
at the global warming and environmental destruction caused by the
unplanned and competitive exploitation of the world's resources. In
every country a privileged few control the government and own the
land and industry. Wealth is produced for their profit rather than to
satisfy human needs.
No
State is going to implement legislation which would penalise the
competitiveness of its national enterprises in the face of foreign
competition. States only take into account environmental questions if
they can find an agreement at international level which will
disadvantage none of them. But that’s the snag because competition
for the appropriation of world profits is one of the bases of the
present system. No agreement to limit the activities of the
multinational corporations in their relentless quest for profits is
possible. Measures in favour of the environment such as the
far-reaching transformation of the productive apparatus and transport
system these imply come up against the interests of enterprises and
their shareholders because by increasing costs they decrease profits
and dividends.
Humans
are capable, whatever the form of production, of integrating
themselves into a stable ecosystem. That was the case of many
“primitive” societies which coexisted in complete harmony with
the rest of nature, and there is nothing whatsoever that prevents
this being possible today on the basis of industrial technology and
methods of production, all the more so that renewable energies exist
(wind, solar, tidal, geothermal, waves, biomass, etc) but, for the
capitalists, these are a “cost” which penalises them in face of
international competition. So
it’s not production as such (i. e., the fashioning of nature to
meet human needs) which is incompatible with a stable balance of
nature, but the use of particular productive methods which disregard
natural balances or which involve changes that are too rapid to allow
a natural balance to develop.
Whether
it is called “the market economy”, “economic liberalism”,
“free enterprise” or any other euphemism, the social system under
which we live is capitalism. Under this system the means of the
production and distribution of social wealth – the means of
society’s existence – are the exclusive property of a dominant
parasitic minority – the holders of capital, or capitalist class –
for whose benefit they are inevitably managed. As a system governed
by economic laws which impose themselves as external constraints on
human productive activities, and in which enterprises are in
competition with each other to obtain short-term economic gains,
capitalism pushes economic decision-makers to adopt productive
methods which serve profitability rather than concern for the future.
So it is not “Mankind” but the capitalist economic system itself
which is responsible for ecological problems. In fact, not only have
people as consumers possess no influence over the decisions taken by
enterprises but those who do have the power to decide - the
capitalists - are themselves subject to the laws of profit and
competition.
Because
by definition capitalism can only function in the interest of
accumulating capital and expanding markets, no palliative, no
rearrangement, no measure, no reform can (nor ever will be able to)
subordinate capitalist private property to the general interest. For
this reason only the threat of a socialist movement setting down as
the only realistic and immediate aim the establishment of social
property (hence the name socialism) of society’s means of existence
so as to ensure their management by (and so in the interest of) the
whole community.
Mankind's
ability to satisfy his material needs has never been greater. The
technology exists today to ensure that no man, woman or child in any
part of the world goes hungry. A vast network of productive units
capable of turning out abundance spans the world. The work of
producing the wealth of the world is already the co-operative effort
of people everywhere. Clearly humanity’s social arrangements are
lagging behind technical achievements. It is out of line with the
co-operation and planning large-scale production demands. This clash
between modern technology and outdated class society is the root
cause of today’s social unrest. Nothing short of the radical
reconstruction of society on the basis of the ownership of the
world’s resources by all mankind will provide the framework within
which a lasting solution to current world problems can be worked out.
To encourage a growing understanding of the need for action to
establish such a democratic world community is the aim of the
Socialist Party.
Will
capitalism recover from the effects of global warming or will
climate change go on increasing until civilisation as we are
accustomed to collapses? In
any event, capitalism will have to be ended by the conscious action
of people who want to replace it by a system where the resources of
the planet have become the common heritage of all. It is only after
having placed the means of society’s existence under the control of
the community that we will be able to at last ensure their
management, no longer in the selfish interest of their present
owners, but this time really in the general interest. Only then will
we be in a position to achieve a world in which the present system of
rival States will be replaced by a world community without frontiers,
the rationing of money and the wages system by free access to the
wealth produced, competition by cooperation, and class antagonism by
social equality.We can only “cure the planet” by establishing a
society without private productive property or profit where humans
will be freed from the uncontrollable economic laws of the pursuit of
profit and the accumulation of capital. In short, only a world
socialist society, based on the common ownership and democratic
control of natural resources, is compatible with production that
respects the natural environment.
No comments:
Post a Comment