So You're Concerned About Climate Change?
[repost from Dkos a while back... was thinking about writing something tonight, but have too much on my mind. Thought maybe I'd repost this piece that got little attention over there if anyone is interested in discussing.]
If, like me, you are a human being possessed of self-consciousness and reason, living on this pale blue dot, you should not just be frightened by climate change, because you will be petrified by it. At just a 6 degree rise in temperature [predicted by 2100 at current models — which get revised downward everyday], the disruption to oceanic phytoplankton could render our atmosphere unbreathable. We’re not just talking, storms, disease, sea level rise, massive food and water disruptions — we’re talking breathing.
The ‘serious people’ have plenty of solutions — from reducing emissions, taxing fossil fuels, increasing efficiency and transitioning to a ‘green economy’ on a macro level to reducing carbon footprints on a micro level. It is said that we need a ‘World War II mobilization’ to combat climate change — and that is by the most ardent of the ‘serious people’. What this approach fails to comprehend is that climate change cannot be fundamentally altered when the structure of the world economy itself is the cause. We can’t tinker at the margins and expect any appreciable positive change while we still base our entire economic order on manufactured scarcity.
One can argue whether or not the notion of scarcity is at the heart of all historical economic orders, but it is inarguable that it is the central concept of capitalism. From Smith to Ricardo to Marx to Keynes, the fundamental promise of capitalism is, if not the elimination, at least the efficient management of scarcity. Organizing a society based on exchanging labor for the ability to obtain perceived scarce goods not only created a labor pool that had the illusion of being invested in the selling of their own labor, but also immediately created a consumer base for the result of that labor. And the scarce goods were food, shelter, clothes — maybe some medicine and education thrown in.
As this system has developed over several centuries, the actual scarcity of the most important goods has ceased to exist. There is no scarcity of food. There is no scarcity of shelter. There is no scarcity of even education or medicine. And there is also no scarcity of energy. But our economy cannot exist unless those basic resources are not just believed to be scarce, but kept, in reality, scarce. Capitalism cannot abide the material abundance that it, itself has created. It requires that its labor force works to receive them. And even if it can’t continue to employ all of them, it still requires them as a customer base to continue to exist. But wait, if no one can afford to buy your product, it ceases to exist.
This circular process of labor and consumption — and the usurious resource extraction by those who maintain that cycle to pretend we have not yet conquered scarcity — is the cause of climate change. And the full repudiation of the idea that ‘work’ is required for subsistence is the only way out.
We can no longer afford to buy your product.
We need NO JOBS. How much energy is wasted pushing papers for companies that only exist because people need to make money to eat? How much energy is spent giving services and support to all of those people with other jobs that don’t need to exist in the first place? How much energy is wasted in transporting people to those jobs. How much energy is wasted in companies that make needless goods purchased by people who work all of the above jobs for companies that only exist because people need money to eat… Capitalism is the ultimate ponzi scheme.
If we simply provided everyone with subsistence level goods, which is quite easy given our technological development, none of the ridiculous carbon consumption would need to exist.
We need to recognize that the modest and below market income most of us hope for in America in exchange for labor, if we’re lucky, is itself part of the reason for our eventual extinction at the end of this century. Our income itself is part of the support system for the economic order that is destroying the only planet we have.
What we need is a full scale recalibration of scarcity. It doesn’t exist in our capacity. It only exists in our distribution. Today, every human on the planet can be fed, housed, educated, given medical care and have access to unlimited energy. Today, we need to reshape our economy so that it doesn’t inefficiently waste all of our resources by requiring work for subsistence — or worse, poverty. We should provide for everyone universally. We have the technology. We have the food. We have the housing stock. We have the intellectual capital. We lack the will.
But Wait! “It will cost too much money”! What money? We invented money. Money is the historical vehicle of aristocracy. It exists as a more efficient medium of exchange for their power. Money has no inherent value. But technology does — it actually allows for things to exist. It allows us to conquer scarcity. Without scarcity, there is no need for money. We no longer have scarcity, so money needn’t have meaning.
If we’re serious about surviving as a species, repudiating the system that requires the waste of both human and energy resources for its own survival would seem the prudent course of action. I’m honestly mystified by the resistance.
Comments
Economic Laws Are Laws of Men, Not Nature.
I agree with you.
The "laws" we are operating under keep getting treated as Laws of Nature. They are not. They are Laws of Men, and they're on shaky moral and ethical footing, like the rest of the products of the Public Relations and Marketing fields.
“Tactics without strategy is the noise before defeat.” ~ Sun Tzu
Well it isn't really that simple.
But you do have the essential element there! We need to free people up from the whole "making a living" thing (by which their subservience to money is assured), so they can pursue climate change mitigation. I've been suggesting simple measures which would transform society, so for instance:
1) The US government forms a car company.
2) All of the new government cars are electric cars.
3) Everyone is, within a certain period of time, obliged to trade in their fossil-burning cars for electric cars.
4) At some point gasoline sales become illegal and the pumps are shut off.
Of course, such a measure requires a good deal of effort. But freeing up people to put forth that effort will make it possible!
“One of the things I love about the American people is that we can hold many thoughts at once” - Kamala Harris
Those things are happenning, Cass...
Europe is leading the way. Surprise! The countries that aren't being strangled by their corporations, that have at least a modicum of social network, and think more than one fiscal quarter into the future, are implementing this "survivable future." Your prescription is just not happening here. Even China appears to be getting its shit together faster than we are.
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Vote Smart - Just the Facts - 40,000 politicians by name or zipcode
Really?
So when will Europe illegalize gasoline and shut off the pumps?
“One of the things I love about the American people is that we can hold many thoughts at once” - Kamala Harris
When? I can't say precisely.
But it's been building out solar and wind generation at astounding rates over the last decade. In Germany there are whole towns that are PVed (photovoltaic). GB is installing turbines wherever they can squeeze them. Ditto the Scandies.
Maybe it won't be enough and won't be in time. But resistance is nothing like it is here thanks to the knuckle-draggers in our own halls of power.
I'm guardedly hopeful some vestige on the species will survive.
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Yes that's good.
Has Mercedes-Benz converted to all-electric vehicles yet? As long as there's money to be made in fossil fuels, the capitalists...
“One of the things I love about the American people is that we can hold many thoughts at once” - Kamala Harris
VW conned their customers into thinking that some of
their cars were low emission vehicles, however. Corporations just can't seem to avoid corruption.
"The object of persecution is persecution. The object of torture is torture. The object of power is power. Now do you begin to understand me?" ~Orwell, "1984"
We are trying to get a carbon tax implemented here in WA
I just picked up my yard sign, so I'm kind of pumped!
The eventual goal is $100/ton (CPI linked). I know, not enough, but it's a start. And it's better than anything the DNC is planning...
We can’t save the world by playing by the rules, because the rules have to be changed.
- Greta Thunberg
I have often wondered how a Universal Basic Income would impact
I have often wondered how a Universal Basic Income would impact climate change (and other environmental/social issues). I suspect it would substantially reduce consumption, resource use, etc. Many people would focus their energies on child raising, pursuing hobbies/passions, etc. This might (hypothetically) lead to a more local food distribution network. Small farms, etc.
"First they ignore you, then they laugh at you, then they fight you, then you win."
I believe it's too late already
even if you could shut off all the CO2 pumps running all over the world 24/7 and even if you could wave a magic wand so that global industrial societies are automatically frozen in operation.
A saturation level of 1000ppm atmospheric CO2, this should happen in an extremely short period of time, I'm guessing 20-30 years depending on how soon the final methane clath gun discharges. At which point that event will serve as the coup de grace for humanity living in terrestrial-based industrial societies due to exponential increases of greenhouse gases.
That's a new Cretaceous period, with 2/3 of the earth flooded in warm waters, the water temps around 100 deg. F., with all polar ice caps melted off.
On a positive note, you could try converting your electric car to amphibious operation ASAP for the longterm aquatic environment. Would be a great way to pick up some hot mermaids you might see swimming around your submerged neighborhood, providing you are one of the survivors. But party hardy, and enjoy it while possible. After the +400 nuclear power plants have melted down, most post-apocalypse parties will be short-lived as plutonium will be evenly distributed all across Mother Oceania.
While I agree that if we
keep going this way it will happen, you should know that there are other ways.
One thing they don't get around to talking about much is the role that land plays in trapping carbon. Essentially plants draw carbon from the atmosphere, and in time that carbon is later left in the soil.
Our current farming practices tend to not only cause erosion, but it limits the ability of the soil to trap carbon. New research also indicates that the eradication of many of the herd animals roaming the Earth is having an effect on that as well.
What I'm saying is that there are many factors that are not playing in your math. If we accepted a new lifestyle, which not only consumed less, but treated the Earth differently, we could get rid of a lot of that carbon. It would require a different way of life.
The people who come after us will have to learn to repair the damage we have done. It is possible to do that, but only if we accept that our lifestyle must change.
I tend to agree...
We should probably be talking about survivability of the species at this point. I think 4 degrees, at best, is already baked in.
Democrats, we tried to warn you. How is that guilt and shame working out?
4 degrees F, probably.
Unfortunately, I wouldn't rule out 4 degrees C.
Rough times ahead.
I have a relatively large back yard. I wonder if potatoes are labor intensive. If not, maybe I could do that.
Life is strong. I'm weak, but Life is strong.
Potatoes are easy...
but are subject to blight (see potato famine). They can be planted when the ground is still frozen, grow in all kinds of soil conditions and can easily be harvested and re-seeded. Plus, like a lot of crops, are better tasting home-grown.
Democrats, we tried to warn you. How is that guilt and shame working out?
Our population must decrease.
Nothing we do will produce any meaningful results if we continue to overpopulate the planet. As we develop (as in modernize and urbanize) our living space we create a simplified environment out of a "variegated" landscape. Simplified systems are not sustainable. Complexity is the "nature" of nature and our evolutionary history. This is something roboticist are finally starting to understand.
Yup.
Which is the irony of the Pope talking about climate change. There is extreme culpability of the Catholic Church over populations growth, especially in Latin America.
Democrats, we tried to warn you. How is that guilt and shame working out?
Oh, it will,
never fear on that. But the dieback will be tremendous, unfortunately. It has to be. And ng17 above is probably right. Still, do we give up on trying? Or go out tilting at windmills?
Personally, I feel like the frog in the storks mouth and got her hands around the storks neck. You might get me, but I'm taking you with me. Seems that's exactly us right now. And gaia. Which is which? And does it matter? It's too easy to be a pessimist. So I choose not to be one. It's the only way I can stay sane. Well, that and good bud ; }
Ya got to be a Spirit, cain't be no Ghost. . .
Explain Bldg #7. . . still waiting. . .
If you’ve ever wondered whether you would have complied in 1930’s Germany,
Now you know. . .
sign at protest march
Well, given
the data I feel like something is inevitable at some point.
People are going to start to withdraw from society and try to build habitats that are separate from other countries and guarantee themselves a survivable habitat in their area. It's tremendously difficult, but not impossible. You'd need to find isolated areas that are difficult to travel to, and then you'd need to investigate alternative sustainable technologies.
I suspect a few people are already doing that.
Sustainable is not possible
The problem with all the talk about surviving the destruction of our environment is the fact that understanding the interlocking complexity is not part of the discussion. Not only are we pushing the system (dumping methane and CO2 into the air) to the limits, we are also creating an unsustainable environment (cropping patterns (monoculture) worldwide). Let me state the obvious (from my professional opinion) as an aphorism: Complexity Ensures "Stability" (Sustainability), while Simplicity Ensures "Chaos" (Collapse).
If the environment changes enough, we will not be the we that survives in any way congruent with reality. Do all the "going wild in Northern Idaho" you wish, but that just isn't going to cut it.
NT
The Earth is Full
This is an article written by Thomas Friedman five years ago. IMO it speaks to this same issue.
http://www.nytimes.com/2011/06/08/opinion/08friedman.html?_r=0
He quotes
Like ngant17 said above . . . maybe it is completely too late.
I like to hold out hope that there will be a great disruption that totally kicks us in the ass and saves us.
Based on the 30 - 50 ocean waves near Iceland last November and the fact that James Hansen predicts superstorms . . . I wonder if the great disruption will be the end of shipping on the ocean. Surely it won't be safe to navigate the seas if there are 30 - 50 foot waves.
Rising seas will happen much quicker than most expect as well.
I like your point about capitalism and manufactured scarcity.
That makes me think about the Amish. Do they experience scarcity?
The necessity of families bringing in two incomes has evolved as a horrible bullshit monster. When both parents work, you have to buy or hire a bunch of stuff that a home maker would provide. (Home maker role being any gender or half time of both.) Then we are all working so hard, so long, that we have no time to enjoy the pleasure of each other's company. Or to make music together. Or have long conversations. Or to cook delicious food from scratch.
Marilyn
"Make dirt, not war." eyo
"Waterworld" was a documentary. n/t
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If there are not drastic changes...
we are past the tipping point. However, we could save ourselves and the planet as we know it. First step is to leave it in the ground!
Here's a hopeful series published on Aug 20, 2014
CARBON is the first film in the Green World Rising Series. http://www.greenworldrising.org “Carbon” is narrated by Leonardo DiCaprio, presented by Thom Hartmann and directed by Leila Conners. Executive Producers are George DiCaprio, Earl Katz and Roee Sharon Peled. Carbon is produced by Mathew Schmid and was written by Thom Hartmann, Sam Sacks, Leila Conners and Mathew Schmid. Music is composed and performed by Jean-Pascal Beintus and intro drone by Francesco Lupica.
part 1 (8 min.)
[video:https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pP-Twj2lzB8]
“Until justice rolls down like water and righteousness like a mighty stream.”
Buckminster Fuller
opened my eyes in the early 70's when I read I Seem to Be a Verb and Operating Manual for Spaceship Earth You can read it in PDF format at this address:
http://designsciencelab.com/resources/OperatingManual_BF.pdf.
Everything he wrote seemed so self-evident to me. I couldn't understand why others didn't see it as clearly, and I still don't.
Thanks for linking the pdf of Buckminster Fuller,
a true progressive visionary scientist/sage.
Think of him in a similar way as Nikola Tesla.
He went out speaking to many college campuses at some point, didn't he, really embracing the counterculture's inquisitiveness and open-mindedness?
"If I should ever die, God forbid, let this be my epitaph:
THE ONLY PROOF HE NEEDED
FOR THE EXISTENCE OF GOD
WAS MUSIC"
- Kurt Vonnegut
U.S. Military Energy Consumption
http://www.ucsusa.org/clean_vehicles/smart-transportation-solutions/us-m...
The U.S. Military uses so much energy they don't even know how much they use:
http://www.resilience.org/stories/2007-05-21/us-military-energy-consumpt...
The U.S. Military should be a prime target for energy cutbacks.
"They'll say we're disturbing the peace, but there is no peace. What really bothers them is that we are disturbing the war." Howard Zinn