The
Last Gasp of Climate Change Liberals
Chris
Hedges
31
August, 2014
The
climate change march in
New York on Sept. 21, expected to draw as many as 200,000 people, is
one of the last gasps of conventional liberalism’s response to the
climate crisis. It will take place two days before the
actual gathering
of world leaders in
New York called by U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon to discuss the
November 2015 U.N. Climate Conference in Paris. The marchers will
dutifully follow the route laid down by the New York City police.
They will leave Columbus Circle, on West 59th Street and Eighth
Avenue, at 11:30 a.m. on a Sunday and conclude on 11th Avenue between
West 34th and 38th streets. No one will reach the United Nations,
which is located on the other side of Manhattan, on the East River
beyond First Avenue—at least legally. There will be no speeches.
There is no list of demands. It will be a climate-themed street
fair.
The
march, because its demands are amorphous, can be joined by anyone.
This is intentional. But as activist Anne
Petermann has
pointed out, this also means some of the groups backing the march are
little more than corporate fronts. The Climate Group, for example,
which endorses the march, includes among its members and sponsors BP,
China Mobile, Dow Chemical Co., Duke Energy, HSBC, Goldman Sachs,
JPMorgan Chase and Greenstone. The Environmental Defense Fund, which
says it “work[s] with companies rather than against them” and
which is calling on its members to join the march, has funding from
the oil and gas industry and supports fracking as a form of
alternative energy. These faux environmental organizations are
designed to neutralize resistance. And their presence exposes the
march’s failure to adopt a meaningful agenda or pose a genuine
threat to power.
Our
only hope comes from radical
groups descending
on New York to carry out direct action, including Global
Climate Convergence and Popular
Resistance.
March if you want. But it should be the warm-up. The real fight will
come once people disperse on 11th Avenue.
“The
march is symbolic,” said Kevin Zeese of Popular Resistance when I
reached him by phone, “but we are past the time of symbolism. What
we need is direct action against the United Nations during the
meeting. This should include blockades and disruption of the meeting
itself. We need to highlight the fact that the United Nations has
sold out to corporate interests. At U.N. meetings on climate change
you see corporate logos on display. During the last meeting on
climate change in Poland, the U.N. held a simultaneous conference to
promote coal as a clean energy source. These U.N. meetings have
become corporate trade shows where discussions on climate are
hijacked to promote corporate interests. Barack Obama has announced
he will continue the U.S. stance of only calling for voluntary
climate goals in advance of the upcoming climate summit in Paris next
year.”
The
fossil fuel industry and corporations, from ExxonMobil to Koch
Industries, underwrite political campaigns and author our
legislation. They have stacked the courts with their judges and the
airwaves with their apologists. They fund our scientific research and
have effectively silenced dissidents. This corporate reach extends to
the United Nations. Companies set up exhibition halls at U.N. climate
summits promoting various corporate schemes to profit from the
climate crisis, from “clean” coal and biofuel to nuclear power
and carbon trading. Those who attempt to offer a counter narrative,
especially after the disruptions at the climate summit in Copenhagen
in 2009, are swiftly silenced by U.N. security. Fences and security
barriers now ring heavily guarded U.N. climate conferences.
Protesters are herded into police-controlled “free speech” zones
outside—like the march in New York—and ruthlessly dealt with if
they deviate from the approved routes or make their voices heard
among the delegates. The U.N. security at climate summits, which
includes physically removing journalists so they cannot photograph or
document protests that are shut down by force, is so absolute that
the U.N. demands preapproved wording for T-shirts worn at its
gatherings. The elites, whether in Congress or attending U.N.
summits, have no intention of cutting off their access to wealth,
power and privilege. They know where the money is. They know what
they have to do to get it. And we are not part of the equation.
Our
democracy is an elaborate public relations charade. And the longer we
accept this charade the longer we will be irrelevant. Only when we
understand power can we fight it. This fight must be waged on two
fronts. We must disrupt the machinery of corporate capitalism and at
the same time build parallel, autonomous structures for
self-governance that address basic needs such as food and green
energy. Capitalism, as Karl Marx pointed out, is not merely a system
of economic exploitation. It justifies itself by hijacking the ruling
political and economic ideologies—ideologies that buttress
capitalism’s ceaseless expansion and commodification of the natural
world and human beings. “The ruling ideas are nothing more than the
ideal expression of the dominant material relationships,” Marx
wrote, “the dominant material relationships grasped as ideas.”
And this makes our struggle a battle for ideas as well as a battle
for power.
This
is not a battle I would have picked. I prefer incremental and
piecemeal reform. I prefer a system in which we can elect politicians
to represent the governed and thwart corporate abuse. I prefer a
United Nations that serves the interests of people around the globe
rather than corporate profit. I prefer a vigorous and free debate in
the public arena. I prefer a judiciary that is not a wholly owned
subsidiary of the corporate state. I prefer the freedom to express
dissent without government monitoring of my communications and
control of my movements. I prefer to have my basic civil liberties
protected. But we do not live in such a system.
The
corporate state’s response to climate change has been to pass a
series of draconian laws and set up a vast security and surveillance
apparatus that obliterates our privacy, allows us to be snatched off
the streets by the military and held without due process in
indefinite detention, and criminalizes dissent. The corporate state
holds in its hands the legal and physical tools to shut us down. Its
response to climate change is not to alter course, but to silence any
who resist.
Joe
Sacco and I spent two years writing “Days of Destruction, Days of
Revolt.”
We wrote the book out of the nation’s most impoverished
sacrifice zones, places such as Indian reservations, abandoned
manufacturing centers, the coalfields of southern West Virginia and
the nation’s produce fields. Corporate capitalism holds total,
unchallenged power in these sacrifice zones. The politicians, the
judges, the press, even the boards of education bow before the
dictates of corporate power. And in these sacrifice zones activists
have learned something many Americans have yet to
understand—corporations are willing to poison Earth and all of its
inhabitants for profit. There are no limits.
The
collapse of the ecosystem in sacrifice zones brings with it despair,
joblessness, high cancer rates, the loss of hope and increased state
repression. Those trapped in these sacrifice zones often retreat into
drugs and alcohol, the only way for many to blunt the pain. They
believe they have no agency. And this misery and despair serve the
ends of corporate power. As the environment devolves, the planet
becomes one vast sacrifice zone. Joe and I wrote the book as a
warning.
The
New York Times published a story last week based on a draft of a new
report from the U.N. ’s Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change
that speaks of climate change with uncharacteristic bluntness and
alarm.
Runaway growth on the emission of greenhouse gases is swamping all political efforts to deal with the problem, raising the risk of “severe, pervasive and irreversible impacts” over the coming decades, according to a draft of a major new United Nations report.
Global warming is already cutting grain production by several percentage points, the report found, and that could grow much worse if emissions continue unchecked. Higher seas, devastating heat waves, torrential rain and other climate extremes are also being felt around the world as a result of human emissions, the draft report said, and those problems are likely to intensify unless the gases are brought under control.
The world may already be nearing a temperature at which the loss of the vast ice sheet covering Greenland would become inevitable, the report said. The actual melting would then take centuries, but it would be unstoppable and could result in a sea level rise of 23 feet, with additional increases from other sources like melting Antarctic ice, potentially flooding the world’s major cities.
We
have known about the deleterious effects of carbon emissions for
decades. The first IPCC report was published in 1990. Yet since the
beginning of the Kyoto Protocol Era in the late 1980s, we have
emitted as much carbon dioxide as was emitted in the prior 236 years.
The rising carbon emissions and the extraction of tar sands—and
since the industry has figured out how to transport tar sands without
building the northern leg of the Keystone XL pipeline, this delivery
seems assured—will continue no matter how many police-approved
marches are held. Play by the rules and we lose.
Resistance
will come from those willing to breach police barricades. Resistance
will mean jail time and direct confrontation. Resistance will mean
physically disrupting the corporate machinery. Resistance will mean
severing ourselves from the dominant culture to build small,
self-sustaining communities. This resistance will be effective only
when we refuse to do what we are told, when we turn from a liberal
agenda of reform to embrace a radical agenda of revolt.
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