On
Friday September 20th an estimated 4 million people took time to say
that they wanted change. In the U.S. alone, 600,000 people—or two
percent of the population—attended various types of demonstrations.
And now campaigners consequently carried out follow-up public events
to lobby for action on the climate crisis culminating in another worldwide
day of protest when an estimated half a million participated in Montreal, Canada along with many other global protests on September 27th
We
must clearly identify just what and who are the enemies of humanity.
It is the capitalism and the capitalist class. The main obstacle to
reducing global warming is our economic system, where production is
geared to profit, and production costs have to be kept to a minimum.
Oh
yes. Everybody’s issuing green policy statements supporting those
in the ecological campaigns, speaking so many nice words.
Action
to counter climate change calls for less fossil fuel usage, reduced
carbon dioxide emissions and a shift toward renewable energy sources.
The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) determined that
the turning over of more and more land to commercial agriculture has
resulted in increasing net greenhouse gas emissions, the loss of
natural ecosystems and declining biodiversity. According to one
study, adoption of regenerative farming practices
— like
more cover crops and conservation crop rotation — could cut the
greenhouse gas footprint of the U.S. agricultural sector in half by
mid-century. The pathway toward more sustainable farming practices
is opposed by powerful political force actively which spends more on
lobbying than even the defence sector - the American Farm Bureau
Federation which has made its stance on climate change clear by
opposing regulatory measures. In 2001, the U.S. pulled out of the
Kyoto agreement, which attempted to set internationally binding
emissions reductions targets. “The Farm Bureau was absolutely
critical in derailing Kyoto,” Stuart Eizenstat, President Clinton’s
chief U.S. negotiator on the Kyoto Protocol. The worldwide industrial
food system, change of land use entailing massive deforestation for
monocrop production and biofuel plantations, production of crops as
commodities rather than food, all cause huge but unnecessary
additional emissions. With big investors around the world looking for
profitable returns, capitalist politics takes no heed of public
opinion. Vested business interests hire foundations and think tanks
in order to denounce or reduce the impact of scientific reports.
Capitalists are ideologically blinkered against climate change since
it exposes the dangers of capitalism as an environmental threat.
Capitalists and their corporations will seek to distort the facts of
the matter so they can carry on as usual. Regulation won't work. The
legal system which govern these matters end up as the preserve of
corporate lawyers of whom Big Business have more than the
governments.
The
100 corporations that
emit most of the world’s suffocating carbon dioxide first tried to
frame the crisis as illusory and untrue. Then they argued that the
science is disputed. More recently they’ve tried to suggest that
emissions are an individual problem and could be solved by
individuals becoming vegetarians and such stuff and nonsense as that.
The hundred include state-owned
Chinese coal companies and in the private sector, ExxonMobil, Shell,
BP and Chevron as
the highest-emitting companies, whose profits depend on the burning
of fossil fuels. ExxonMobil covered up its own scientists’ findings
of rapid global heating and paid for PR campaigns to muddy the waters
and allow it to keep profiting from wrecking the planet.
Political
and economic decisions are overriding the interests and well-being of
the majority of the people for the benefit of a select few. We need
to have well-informed and knowledgeable citizens who can unite for
the purpose of not negotiating with our class foe but to overthrow
them. We have years of conferences and summits all concluding with
vacuous declarations but with non-binding, ineffectual, voluntary
agreements. We cannot expect the problems to be solved within
capitalism. Consider the fact that since climate change has been on
the international agenda nothing of real substance has been achieved.
Emissions have increased. The environment must come second to the
economy.
Only
in a society where we have the power to determine what can and cannot
be done will we be able to stop this headlong rush to environmental
devastation. We must recognise the unequal struggle for what it is –
them against us; power against the people and, unless collectively we
abandon hope's triumph over experience, it will ever be thus. Only
socialism can deliver on the environment.
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