There is absolutely nothing for me here to take objection to.
A
generation ago social movements had a chance of success because they
only had national governments to get past.
Take Occupy, for example
No
genuine social movement or protest can succeed in today’s
globalised world where national sovereignty is being done away with.
I would say that most protest these days fits into the designs of the
globalist elites.
Extinction Rebellion!
Rebellion
per se is not a virtue. If it were, we would have some heroes on very
low levels.
Norman Thomas
~
3
December, 2018
We
can accept our fate with grace or we can rebel. I’m a huge fan of
rebellion, and I’m rebellious by nature. I’m
not the only one who believes rebellion is often virtuous and
important.
I’ve
concluded that rebellion, in the case of Extinction Rebellion (XR),
is not obviously virtuous. However, this particular rebellion may
have unseen virtues, especially with respect to transmission of
information to the slumbering populace. As a result, I have mixed
feelings that I will attempt to express with this essay.
The
opening quote atop this essay comes from a long-deceased American
socialist and six-time presidential candidate who clearly understood
the merits of swimming against the societal current. Because nature
always bats last and also because nature always gets her way, a human
rebellion at this late date hasn’t got a chance at preventing or
slowing human extinction. Even if we did have the means and fortitude
to rebel, I don’t know how we can meaningfully rebel, and against
what. After all, our several-thousand-year-old rebellion against
nature, in the form of civilization, is precisely the route by which
we’ve found ourselves peering into the abyss of extinction.
Upon
initially learning of XR, I thought, “Whiskey Tango Foxtrot!?!”
How does one person — or for that matter, every individual on Earth
— rebel against a natural, ongoing process to which we’ve already
committed? Lacking a time machine, how do we undo actions taken
decades ago? Wouldn’t we be equally successful rebelling against
setting of the sun or the rising of the moon?
And
then I realized I was just being pessimistic, as I am sometimes
accused. I turned my thoughts to the amazing record of human
ingenuity. I began wishing, hoping, and praying to non-existent gods.
And then, a few seconds later, my senses returned.
XR
has a website.
I’m often prone to disagreement, yet I found it difficult to
disagree with anything I read on the XR blog. The
science is presented clearly,
albeit without
mention of the aerosol masking effect,
as I’ve come to expect. The crux
of the XR movement is presented compellingly and clearly.
Dr.
Gail Bradbrook is a professor of molecular biophysics who co-founded
the group Rising Up!, which is now helping organize the Extinction
Rebellion. When
asked what she is willing to risk with her actions for the Extinction
Rebellion, Bradbrook replied, “everything.”.
Nearly a decade after I gave up everything except my
integrity, likely
decades too late for substantive actions that could result in a
positive outcome,
Bradbrook and other activists are prepared to take radical actions.
I’ve been pointing out the causes and consequences of our
collective actions for decades, and explaining relevant individual
responses along the way. Newcomers, welcome aboard the runaway
train to the worst of the Six Mass Extinction events on Earth.
Good luck with actions, radical and otherwise.
Gabriel
Carlyle wrote a decent, skeptical overview of the Extinction
Rebellion. It
was posted online 1 November 2018.
I largely agree with Carlyle’s article, although of course it fails
to acknowledge the aerosol masking effect and it therefore proposes
reduced industrial activity as a solution. Carlyle also points out
that XR proposes beginning this reduction in industrial activity in
2025, which seems ridiculously optimistic in terms of maintaining
this set of living arrangements. In other words, the article is
simultaneously skeptical about XR and also not nearly skeptical
enough.
With
respect to the
aerosol masking effect,
I’ve concluded that the administration of President Donald Trump
knows more than the world’s climate scientists are willing to
admit. After all, the advice we often hear from the latter group is
long on imposing shame, guilt, and blame while coming up short on
facts. Bicycling and recycling won’t make a dent in the predicament
known as abrupt climate change.
I’m
no fan of Donald Trump. As with each of his predecessors, I believe
he’s the worst U.S. president in my life.
In
my early days as a teacher, I’d tell students not to pursue
projects I thought were impossible. They’d do it anyway, and prove
me wrong. For the most part, I stopped telling students to pursue
projects I thought were impossible. As with my students during the
early part of my career, I think XR is attempting the impossible. I
wish to be wrong, and I’m well beyond telling people what to do.
In
the wake of Carlyle’s article, I spoke with one of the activists
leading the rebellion, Roger Hallam. I found him sufficiently
refreshing and interesting to invite onto Nature
Bats Last on the radiotomorrow
as a guest.
A
few facts are relevant to this situation. The projected rate of
climate change based on IPCC-style gradualism outstrips
the adaptive response of vertebrates by a factor of 10,000 times.
Humans are vertebrates. More recently, it has become clear
that mammals
cannot evolve fast enough to escape the current extinction crisis.
Already, goats,
sheep, and cattle are dying by the thousands because of rapid changes
in temperature.
These are mammals. Humans are mammals. Because Earth
is headed for a new Cretaceous,
humans are about to fall into the dustbin of cosmic history. I
strongly suspect all vertebrates and all mammals will join the “dust
to dust” party, along with most or all life on Earth. I
recently covered all this material, and more, with a synopsis of the
evidence.
I
wish to be wrong, as I’ve pointed out many times. And I’m not. I
also wish to remain useful while collating and synthesizing
scientific evidence with accuracy.
And,
again, I’m not promoting human extinction. I’m promulgating
evidence. Please familiarize yourself with the English language
before embarrassing yourself with an attack on the messenger.
The
folks at XR seem genuine, and they understand most of the science of
climate change. They are intelligent, hopeful, and they are
attempting to inspire action for a better future. I’ve never
believed it was my place to tell other people what to do, so I’ll
not tell the XR people their task is impossible.
I’m
not suggesting a rebellion is a bad idea. I’m generally in favor of
steps taken outside the dominant paradigm. And I’m certainly not
suggesting extinction is a good idea, even when it includes Homo
sapiens.
But I think XR falls short, perhaps because I don’t fully
understand their mission. Thus the invitation to have a conversation
on NBL radio.
Perhaps
the abundant media attention focused on XR is intentionally
distracting the masses. Now that is
immoral, typical, and expected for the corporate media.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: only a member of this blog may post a comment.