The
world is increasingly at risk of “climate apartheid”, where the
rich pay to escape heat and hunger caused by the escalating climate
crisis while the rest of the world suffers, Philip Alston, a UN human
rights expert has said.
Alston’s
report said. “The risk of community discontent, of growing
inequality, and of even greater levels of deprivation among some
groups, will likely stimulate nationalist, xenophobic, racist and
other responses.”
Alston
said. “We risk a ‘climate apartheid’ scenario where the wealthy
pay to escape overheating, hunger, and conflict while the rest of the
world is left to suffer,” he said.
Socialism
cannot exist without a change in consciousness resulting in a new
approach and attitude toward humanity. The Socialist Party claims that although the viewpoint of working people is partisan, it is
better than that of rich people for understanding reality. This is
because working people are positioned by capitalism to see more than
rich people do: they can grasp the actions of the rich and their own.
Capitalism is an evil that calls for immediate destruction.
Billions
around the world don’t have access to basic needs like clean
drinking water, housing or education. The values socialists hold
dear, such as the creation of a free and classless society and an
economy that is environmentally sustainable and
democratically-controlled by workers and communities, are those which
are shared an overwhelming majority of the world’s population. If
you want to know the real extremists, look no further than the
supporters of global, corporate capitalism, those financial criminals
who helped engineer the greatest economic catastrophe since the Great
Depression and were bailed out by the governments they had bought,
and now seek further tax cuts, more deregulation and have launched
attacks on the rights of working people. These are the minority of
pie in the sky, out-of-touch political zealots and fanatics.
Socialists condemn capitalism because it has failed the vast mass of
humanity in the most decisive way. It promises freedom, democracy and
prosperity but defaults on all three. Capitalism's driving principle
is the struggle between capitalists for commercial supremacy and
competitive survival in the jungle of the misnamed "free
market". Human needs are met only in so far as they are backed
up by purchasing power. Thus, for instance, suppose you need
somewhere to live: if you have money you'll get what you can pay for,
otherwise you can die on the streets or throw yourself on charity.
Socialism, expropriating the capitalist class and putting society's
productive forces under social ownership and democratic control,
would put a stop to this madness.
The
growing global environmental crisis is in the opinion of many the
greatest challenge mankind has faced. Species and entire habitats are
disappearing at a pace unseen since the extinction of the dinosaurs.
Natural resources are being consumed far faster than they can
regenerate. It is already clear that climate change is leading toward
catastrophic collapse of the natural systems that billions of people
depend upon. These problems are not accidental, but are symptoms of
the irrationality of our capitalist system of production and
distribution. Greenhouse gases will increase as long as our economy
depends on coal, oil and natural gas, controlled by some of the
wealthiest corporations in history following the logic that
accumulating profits over-rides all other concerns. Abandoning fossil
fuel investments and converting the whole economy to the use
renewable energy would impose huge costs on corporate bank balances.
Coal-mining, petrochemical complexes, and oil and gas exploration and
infrastructure are among the industries benefiting from the loans and
guarantees, which cover projects in countries including Slovakia,
Russia, Brazil, India, Germany, Norway, Vietnam, the Philippines and
Saudi Arabia.
Under
capitalism, decisions on what and how to produce are made by CEOs
seeking to maximise return by raising sales figures and cutting
costs. Individual lifestyle changes and some new technology may buy a
little more time but are grossly insufficient to save the planet
while capitalist industries are given free rein to continue
polluting. Achieving an environmentally sustainable social system
will require fundamental political and economic change. The
entire production system must be transformed; we must change the way
society allocates its resources. We call such a system socialism
which has at its material roots the inability of capitalism to solve
humanity's problems.
We
are approaching tipping points that if reached will give global
warming a momentum that human actions will have little or no control
over where human intervention will be unable to slow down and stop
this process. Obviously civilisation as we know it will change
drastically. It is easy to make a case that global warming is the
preeminent challenge for humanity to tackle. Every new scientific
finding makes it imperative to immediately recognise the need to
reduce carbon emissions. This degradation of nature is a compelling
argument for the new urgency of socialism - a society that protects
people and the environment. World socialism will put the preservation
of the ecosystems of the entire planet above the self-interest of
nation-states and prevent widespread ecological collapse.
Freed from
national rivalries this new society can share scientific knowledge
and technology with unprecedented planet-wide cooperation of
scientists and the involvement of local communities, learning from
the experiences and insights of all people around the world. We
depend for our survival on the natural world. We are linked with the
natural world through complex evolutionary chains and through
networks of ecosystems. There is now pressing time-line for our
actions act. If we do not move quickly to stem climate change by
protecting and preserving our fast-disappearing flora and fauna this
planet could very well become uninhabitable for billions of people,
and possibly all of humanity who may well also vanish from the face
of the Earth.
Socialism
makes it possible for us all to live lives worthy of human beings
while at the same time living in harmony with our environment and
heighten our determination to make the socialist revolution happen.
Socialism requires a conscious collective decision about the lives we
want to live and the communities we want to live in – and it takes
a collective effort in that goal – in order to create truly
sustainable communities–socially, economically, and environmentally
sound. Even if you personally reduce, reuse and recycle the changes
necessary are so large and profound that they are beyond the reach of
individual action. Sadly, individual action does not work. It
distracts us from the need for collective action, and it doesn’t
add up to enough. Getting people excited about making individual
environmental sacrifices is doomed to fail. The reality is that we
cannot overcome the global threats posed by greenhouse gases without
speaking the ultimate inconvenient truth: we need a socialist
revolution.
It’s
capitalism, a global system based on prioritising profits over
people, which has brought us to the brink of a climate-induced
catastrophe that can destroy humanity. In a world with billions of
people living in poverty and exclusion, production is determined by
the profit motive, not human needs. In a world with millions of
unemployed or low-income workers, access (distribution) to wealth is
conditioned to having a job. In a world of globalised market, there
is no coordination to supply and what is produced. Instead there is a
killer competition for profit between companies. There is no
"sustainable capitalism". There is only "disaster
capitalism". Green reformism – the default position of most
environmental campaigners and thinkers, pursue change through
existing structures and it does not seek to replace capitalism or
challenge class structures. It isn’t revolutionary, but attempts to
work with government and business interests to affect change.
Ecological degradation is not halted; it is instead measured,
monitored, and manipulated within capitalism.
Marx
and Engels showed that capitalism is driven to constantly
“revolutionise” industry and commerce, continually transforming
the globe. This is not to satisfy basic needs or to genuinely improve
the quality of life of the population. Capitalism seeks to create new
needs, destroying what it built only yesterday and governments will
continue to bend to capitalist interests. In contrast socialists seek
all people, co-operatively and together, to be in control of their
lives and work would be for the long-lived benefit of all, caring for
the whole global ecology and all its inhabitants. Only mutual aid,
not self-sacrifice, is enough to motivate real changes. People can
build their collective knowledge through the organisations they need
to advance their interests and build the confidence needed to take on
capitalism as they win a larger hearing from more and more people,
and make the socialist revolution possible.
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