FACING
OUR GREATEST NEMESIS
15
March, 2015,
Sao
Paulo,
Brazil, a city of over 11 million people, may literally run out of
water. Let that really sink in for a moment. Politicians in Brazil
ignored or downplayed this crisis until it reached the calamitous
point it is at now. Instead they poured their attention and
money into the World Cup and displaced thousands of people from their
homes in the process. In recent weeks people across varying
demographics have taken to the streets to protest the gross
malfeasance of a government drunk on the lies of neoliberalism, which
Wikipedia defines as “privatization,
fiscal austerity, deregulation, free trade, and reductions in
government spending in order to enhance the role of the private
sector in the economy.”
It is also the most destructive, savage and final stage of
capitalism.
For
most of us the enormity of this catastrophe is still difficult to
grasp. But there it is right in front of us. The normalcy bias,
that almost hypnotic state of denial we often experience when faced
with disaster, appears to be ubiquitous these days. The media reports
these stories (sometimes) but there is seldom, if ever, a discussion
about the global ramifications an existential threat like this
presents for all of humanity. Sao Paulo should serve as a loud
wail of warning that the entire world has forever changed, and we are
not prepared for what lies ahead.
Herein lies the lesson for all of us. As climate change accelerates and the resources of our planet dwindle, rivers dry up, fields lay fallow, and flood waters rise, the wealthy and powerful will do the only thing they know how to do. They will ignore or downplay serious environmental problems. They will build more prison walls. They will arm their police forces with the equipment of the battlefield. They will launch war after war of imperialistic plunder cloaked in a veil of meaningless slogans and jingoism. They will employ racism to divide. They will continue to dismantle civil liberties under the guise of national security. They will instruct the media to distract and invert the truth. And they will keep us all on a diet while they feast on what remains.
Israel’s treatment of Gaza also provides a window into a future that all humanity may soon know all too well. It is emblematic of a future of militarized walls and open air prisons. Since the beginning of the blockade in 2007 Gaza has been reduced to rubble over and over again, the last time in the summer of 2014, in what can accurately be called collective punishment. Food and construction materials are still restricted. And an Israeli official spoke plainly regarding their intentions. “The idea,” he said, “is to put the Palestinians on a diet, but not to make them die of hunger.” After Israel repeatedly destroyed its infrastructure, Gaza may now be out of clean drinking water as soon as 2020. The casualness of such barbarity is staggering, especially since the population of Gaza is over 40% children under 14 years of age.
No matter how one views the history of this region, it should be clear to most that Israel is far more powerful than Gaza, which is restricted by Israel in exporting goods, and has no army, air force or navy. In contrast, Israel is an economic powerhouse which exports military technology and pharmaceuticals, and is the fourth largest military power in the world in addition to possessing nuclear weapons. It also controls Gazan airspace, restricts travel in and out of the strip, and routinely fires on fishermen off its coast. It is an example of neoliberal plunder being played out with textbook precision in a Western nation. The powerful vanquish the powerless; and the wealthy grow their wealth in stupefying proportions in the midst of immense and imposed poverty.
In
India, the world’s most populous democracy, neoliberalism has
carved out a landscape that magnifies wealth inequities. As in China,
river ways are polluted with industrial waste in a mad dash toward
the reward of material wealth and an inevitable descent into
dystopian misery. It is a nation that is literally on the brink of
mass migration, social collapse and extinction, but is one of the
most lauded among the neoliberal elite. Here one can see the
grotesque display of wealth sitting upon a pile of refuse being
praised for its so-called progress. Mumbai is a visual aid to
understanding the end result of neoliberalism. Gilded towers
rise in supercilious impudence above fetid shanty towns of
exploitation and misery. And the wealthy have created an
insular bubble to shield them from the blight of indigence that
surrounds them. As in Israel, there is a growing reactionary
nationalism which poses unique and terrifying prospects given that it
too possesses nuclear arms.
In truth the immoral metric of neoliberal capitalism is incapable of preparing us for the catastrophies looming on the horizon. Its machinery is greased by illusion, distraction and willful ignorance. It is the reason why depression and anxiety dominate the Western psyche. It is the most emblematic feature of a dying civilization, medicated to numbness through drugs, alcohol, violence, political spectacle and vacuous entertainment. It is an order that views the powerless as either commodities for exploitation or nuisances for disposal. The oil under the thawing Arctic or the beleaguered rainforests of South America and the bread basket of war torn Ukraine are all business opportunities. The damage done is calculated as “externalities,” essentially someone else’s problem. But the world is getting smaller and the dumping grounds are getting closer, even to the enclaves of the privileged and powerful.
We, as a species, have either created, permitted or have been oppressed by the order that is threatening our collective demise in a mere blip of geologic time. Indeed, it is this order that has already sentenced countless species to the halls of extinction; and enslaves millions of people around the world in sweatshop fire traps, pesticide ridden fields and lung choking mines. But our dissent is a raft to actualized freedom. Our ability to simply say no may be our last and greatest action against the brutality and cruelty of our age.
It
is certain that neoliberal capitalism’s days are numbered. To wit,
regardless of its implacable hubris, it simply cannot outsmart
nature. Sao Paulo, Gaza and India provide us with some of the
best examples we have of its dystopian future. They should
serve as warnings and ignite our conscience and imagination.
But the minutes to midnight are quickening; and the ability of our
species to deny reality and delay action is staggering. It is
true that human beings have a remarkable capacity to rise from
improbable ashes, but now we are facing the greatest nemesis we have
ever encountered… ourselves. And the odds of us rising again
after this ever impending fall are getting slimmer by the second.
Kenn
Orphan 2015
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