Here
is someone else in New Zealand who is saying what needs to be said
“The
only way to turn things around now is to reject, then reverse their
political influence, their self-serving instruments, their skewed
privilege, their pitiless policies. There is no other way”
Too
Big to Fail – Why National will Never Act on Climate Change
Dave
Hansford
16
April, 2015
Californians,
withering in the worst drought in the state’s history, are being
exhorted to leave their urine standing in the toilet, to keep their
showers shorter than five minutes and to replace their lawns with
rocks and cacti. Meanwhile, figures released last Monday show the
Californian fracking industry used nearly 265 million litres of water
in the last 12 months in the quest for more oil and gas.
Californians
appear to be living out some 21st Century equivalent of the tragedy
of Easter Island, in which the state is using its precious, decimated
water to sponsor the quest for more oil and gas – the very agents
of its demise.
Meanwhile, oil companies are exploiting the collapse
of Arctic ice cover to drill for more oil. The big three US auto
makers have sued electric car pioneer Tesla, blocking it from direct
sales in Michigan, Ohio, Texas and at least five other states.
Such
profound failures of logic make the carbon age a baffling time for
the clear-minded. Why won’t Governments – bound by legislature to
act in the public interest – intervene? Administrations around the
world have serially declined to take the actions any primary school
kid knows must happen if we’re to avert catastrophic warming. The
global response ranges from simple inertia through greenwashing and
double-speak to outright sabotage: Tony Abbot, who abolished
Australia’s Climate Commission in 2013, citing budget constraints,
last week found four million dollars to embed anti-environmentalist
and climate contrarian Bjorn Lomborg in a new “consensus centre”
at the University of Western Australia.
Here
in New Zealand, the Key Government continues to procrastinate,
obfuscate. So disengaged from his portfolio is Climate Minister Tim
Groser that he wrongly claimed last week that more trees were being
planted in New Zealand than were being chopped down – an
intolerable ignorance. In March, Energy Minister Simon Bridges
invited oil companies to come drill across more than 424,000 square
kilometres of New Zealand territorial sea.
Groser
insists that we are “on track” to meet our albeit feeble
emissions target – a cut of just five per cent by 2020 – even as
our greenhouse emissions continue to climb (by one per cent every
year since 1990). It has now become clear that he means to buy his
way out of climate obligations by resorting to ‘hot air’ carbon
credits – unverifiable and widely rejected get-out-of-jail-free
cards from former Soviet bloc countries.
Critics
usually put such cynicism down to mere climate denial. This is a
serious underestimation, and one reason why governments have been
allowed to get away with it for so long. Not only do conservatives
believe in climate change; they understand it – or at least its
consequences – far better than many liberals. All this time, we’ve
slated them for being behind the eight ball when in fact, they’re
way ahead of us. We’ve been played for a bunch of saps.
As
Naomi Klein pointed out in This
Changes Everything,
neoliberals are not just blocking action on climate change; they’re
sandbagging a global economic and political empire they took thirty
years to create. Neoliberalism is the belief system of the global
elite: the transnational capitalist class. It began as a right-wing
counterattack against socio-economic reforms that began with F.D.
Roosevelt’s New Deal, conceived to redistribute wealth and reverse
the disastrous free market policies that led to the Great Depression.
It’s
been a brilliant success. Since 1970, thanks to collusion with
muscular institutions like the International Monetary Fund, the World
Bank, filthy-rich corporations and conservative political
parties, the neoliberals have installed a free market plutocracy
across the western world. Don’t underestimate how serious these
people are about global economic supremacy: free market reforms were
often imposed at the barrel of a gun, enforced under the distraction
of bloody coups.
Multinationals,
eager to get their hands on South America’s state-owned natural
resources, funded a series of murderous overthrows led by handpicked
dictators – Pinochet in Chile, Quadros in Brazil, OnganĂa in
Argentina, Ovando in Bolivia, Suharto in Indonesia. These and many
other countries, held to economic ransom by the World Bank, were
forced to privatise state institutions and assets, de-unionise
labour, deregulate their markets and open their borders to
multinational looters.
Still
greater were the victories of the eighties: the enforcement of
Reaganomics in the US – tax breaks for the wealthy, slashed public
spending (except on military contracts) – gave Margaret Thatcher
some implied moral authority to tear down the British welfare state.
Assisted by her lieutenant, Rupert Murdoch, she began by kneecapping
the two institutions that stood in her way; the unions and the
liberal media. Reagan’s legacy was a three-trillion-dollar national
debt. Thatcher’s was the despair of more than three million
unemployed.
By
the end of the eighties, neoliberalism was the entrenched economic
doctrine of the west. But it wasn’t about to end there: wherever
the status quo faltered, the neoliberals were waiting to plug the
constitutional gap. First, South Africa, with a suite of offers the
incoming African National Congress found itself unable to refuse.
Then came the Holy Grail; the collapse of the Soviet Union –
neoliberal intervention allowed the rise of Putinesque capitalism and
the Russian oligarchs.
It’s clear then, that an awful lot of time, money and zeal went into the annexation of the global economy, though much remains to be done: the last remaining barriers to multinational mastery are currently being stripped away by non-military overthrows disguised as ‘free trade’ agreements like the TPPA. In New Zealand, there are still some irksome echoes of the welfare state to be silenced, assets to be privatised, environmental protections to be stripped.
So
what has any of this got to do with climate change? Everything. The
right wing understands that fundamental capitalism has not only
greatly exacerbated climate change: it has no mechanisms progressive
or inclusive enough to address it. No: business-as-usual got us into
this mess, and left to run its course, will deliver us to ruin. The
fact that people are beginning to understand that reality keeps
fundamental capitalists awake at night.
Worse,
the sort of global-scale action needed now to avert disaster can only
be brought about by sweeping reforms led by governments, progressive
businesses and empowered, engaged communities – the very sectors
neoliberalism despises most. Greenhouse emissions must be regulated
for, and that’s an intolerable anathema to the economic right, as
are the kind of interventions and incentives necessary to tip the
playing field back to level – and perhaps beyond – to allow
alternative technologies and clean energy to finally compete. Because
climate change will only worsen the global inequality neoliberalism
created, combatting it necessarily entails the redistribution of
wealth and the reinstatement of a more equitable society. Don’t
expect the right wing to roll over on that.
A
still greater terror is the prospect of polluter pays: the very
notion that climate-hostile businesses might be penalised – God
forbid, taxed. Corporations, let off the regulatory leash by market
reforms, would once more have to take responsibility for the social
and environmental costs of their profits. Restoring a leadership role
to government in any new green deal is an outrage that simply will
not be brooked.
But
above all, the realisation that we cannot continue this reckless
pursuit of the aphorism that is infinite growth – that the Earth
cannot go on bankrolling the orgiastic consumption on which
free-market capitalism so desperately depends; that we must draft a
new contract with Nature in which we set limits – this is a heresy
that strikes straight to the heart of the neoliberal empire.
As
Klein has pointed out, climate change is the one – the only –
crisis of sufficient magnitude to galvanise just such a global
revolution. We shouldn’t be surprised, then, that neoliberals have
given millions to conservative think tanks to manufacture doubt,
distortion and denial. That right-wing governments everywhere,
including New Zealand, have stonewalled meaningful action. That they
instead do all they can to perpetuate a free-market continuum. That
they are, if anything, forcing through the outstanding tasks in their
manifesto with renewed urgency, straining the legality of standing
orders and the leash of public tolerance to breaking point.
We
have wasted precious years trying to appeal to some sense of
propriety, of responsibility, of stewardship. It is not there to be
tugged at. It is futile to keep pointing to the destruction we’re
inflicting on the poor nations of the world, the small island states.
Neoliberals are social Darwinists; they genuinely believe that those
who will not adapt – by which they mean those that do not subscribe
to their ideology – will die, and they’re fine with it.
And
don’t try imploring any sense of legacy. These people will judge
their benefaction only by the totality of their domination – the
completeness with which they were able to eradicate solidarity,
welfare, community, opportunity, the state.
Neoliberalism is an economic hegemony, a vicious social fundamentalism – I described it in my previous post as a broken belief system. Adherents abide in a quasi-religious jingoism, in which they chant their mantras in a collective reinforcement – as such, they are utterly deaf to reason, blind to the overwhelming global evidence of their failure.
There
can be no changing their minds. Instead, they blame their failures on
us, because we interfered with their experiment. They will persist as
long as we allow them to.
The
only way to turn things around now is to reject, then reverse their
political influence, their self-serving instruments, their skewed
privilege, their pitiless policies. There is no other way. The only
thing that will save the planet now is nothing less than global
revolution, and it may just have started last week, when nearly 900
Dutch citizens filed a lawsuit against their government for failing
to act against climate change. Their case, based on human rights
laws, argues that the Dutch Government has not acted in their
interests.
Who
knows? It might just serve as the precedent for a global class action
– an emphatic renunciation of the politics of cynicism and greed.
That’s very much up to us, and what we do next.
This
post is the second in a three-part series about the implications of
neoliberalism. The first part is here.
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