Connecting the Dots
This is an op-ed by John Steppling from Dec. 21, 2019 at off-guardian.org for your consideration. We’d been discussing both capitalism and climate change recently, and although this all seems so utterly beside the point now given the ever-increasing US threats to increased war on Iran (now even nuclear war). But I’d said I’d post it, so I am; I’ll offer a couple things at the end. As John’s kindly given me permission to republish all that he writes, I’ll post it all.
Capitalists are no more capable of self-sacrifice than a man is capable of lifting himself up by his own bootstraps.”
Lenin – Letters from Afar
Many on the left seem to have forgotten that capitalism is actually bad. That the reason the planet sinks under the weight of pollution and militarism is because of capitalism.
Nothing that works within the capitalist system is going to save anyone and will only reinforce the existing problems and further the suffering of the poor and disenfranchised.
Now allow me to first start with a few observations on writers published by leftist sites…in this case Counterpunch actually. Louis Proyect titles his piece as a question, If Time Magazine Celebrates Greta Thunberg, Why Should We?
The answer is, if TIME celebrates something, if corporate media celebrate someone or thing, the response should logically be INVESTIGATE and be suspicious. Which is what Cory Morningstar has done.
But Proyect spends the entirety of his pointless article attacking Morningstar….go figure. He also lies. Morningstar does not attack Greta, she investigates the forces behind Greta. For a guy who wears his Marxism like placard around his neck, you would think Proyect might grasp the distinction. Cory Morningstar is almost certainly the most important living journalist in the world (next to Assange perhaps).
And just by way of cursory correction…when Proyect writes:
‘Just two months ago, (Jamie) Margolin joined other young people in suing Democratic Governor Jay Inslee and the State of Washington over greenhouse-gas emissions. Inslee depicts himself as a liberal, environmentalist governor. If Margolin is a Trojan Horse like Thunberg, her choice of a target hardly sounds like she is trying to make it in corporate, Democratic Party, environmentalist circles.’
…what he fails to recognize is that Margolin is already in the Democratic Party inner circles and served as an intern for Hillary Clinton.
But the bigger problem is that Proyect seems on board with all the activities of Thunberg, and her cohorts. Proyect quotes Morningstar…
‘Today’s climate emergency mobilization must be recognized for what it is: a strategically orchestrated campaign financed and managed by the world’s most powerful institutions – for the preservation of capitalism and global economic growth. This is the launch of a new growth industry in the Global South coupled with the creation of new and untapped markets.’
And then writes…
‘Yeah, who cares about icebergs melting and the Great Coral Reef disappearing? The real problem is capitalism—as if the two phenomena were not related.’
The entire point of Morningstar’s work is to bring attention to the fact that Capitalism IS related, not just related but the primary cause of planetary destruction. How does massive PR and billions of marketing stop the death of coral reefs?
But again, class analysis is the issue (and perhaps an inability to read carefully). Thunberg has enlisted corporate billionaire backers (well, they enlisted her). That was the goal.
If Proyect thinks the capitalists behind Thunberg are about to bring radical change and challenge the status quo, he is for a rude awakening. But then Proyect calls Off- Guardian a conspiracy-minded site. Such provincial disdain is all too representative. But more on conspiracy theory below.
Allow me to link to Morningstar’s investigation of We Mean Business, a project that gets the Proyect stamp of approval (We Mean Business, not Morningstar)…
I ask the reader to consider the facts. (hint: class analysis, the rich are not there to help anyone but themselves).
Then we have Kirkpatrick Sale and an article (Political Collapse: The Center Cannot Hold) that might well have been written by the state department. In this hideously distorted piece Mr Sale also lies. The biggest of his falsehoods is that Venezuela is a failed state. Uh….maybe he has a different definition. But what Sale is really doing is excusing and providing cover for the Imperialist west.
Yemen is listed as failed but the reasons for its failures are not really made clear. Global Warming? The correct answer is a vicious several year-long attack by the Saudi monarchy and the US and UK military. A genocidal assault that has resulted in mass death and pestilence (180,000 NEW cases of cholera were just reported by WHO). But Mr Sale never mentions that.
Not a peep about western militarism. Not a single word. Nor about the orchestrated illegal covert CIA assault against Venezuela, and more recently and successfully, Bolivia. Imperialism is not touched upon, even once.
Mr Sale writes:
“At the moment, there are no less than 65 countries are now fighting wars—there are only 193 countries recognized by the United Nations, so that’s a third of the world. These are wars with modern weapons, organized troops, and serious casualties—five of them, like Afghanistan, Libya, Syria, Somalia, and Yemen, with 10,000 or more deaths a year, another 15 with more than 1,000 a year—all of them causing disruptions and disintegrations of all normal political and economic systems, leaving no attacked nation in a condition to protect and provide for its citizens.”
But he never explains the role of the US in any of this.
Who made the weapons used in these wars? Well, the answer is largely the US, but also Russia, China, Israel and Brazil. But the vast majority are from the US. Also Syria was targeted by the US for a coup (referred to in polite company as regime change…a term created by the marketing arm of the Pentagon).
Assad has openly been a target of the U.S. Who created and funded ISIS in fact? Answer is the U.S. and Saudi Arabia. Not a word about that fact either.
Here is another quote from Sale…
“These include seven completely failed states—Congo-Brazzaville, Central African Republic, Syria, Yemen, Somalia, South Sudan, and Venezuela—and another seven that are on the edge—Guinea, Haiti, Iraq, Zimbabwe, Afghanistan, Chad, and the Sudan—plus 19 that are in an “alert” category, meaning that some but not all government functions have failed, 15 in Africa and 4 in Asia.”
What do these nations have in common?
They were targets of the Imperialist West (directly in the cases of Syria, Yemen, Somalia and South Sudan, and Iraq…not to mention the non-failed Venezuela, or indirectly in the neo-colonial plunder of Congo, AFR, Guinea, and Haiti). And, as I pointed out, Venezuela is not failed, nor even close to failed. Its a perfectly functioning country under sanctions by the US. Another fact Sale omits.
Why is Libya not on that list? You know, Libya, where the U.S. destroyed the African nation with the highest standard of living on the continent and reduced it to a slave market run by traffickers.
All in all, Sale is either about room temperature IQ or just a liar or politically aligned with the State Department and Pentagon.
I have no idea which but I do wonder why his tripe is appearing in a leftist site like Counterpunch.
Proyect I understand, because he wears that placard announcing he is a leftist, and because he sort of is an editor at CP. Sale doesn’t and isn’t, so I really do wonder at why this reactionary non-article is published by anyone this side of the CATO Institute?
But that brings me to the next point, which is the narcotic-like effect that the entire Greta story has had on, mostly middle-aged white men. If you cannot but see the obvious stage-managed aspect of the Greta story, the marketing and image control involved, then you are blind or possibly caught up in the cult-like thinking of much new green activism yourself.
For one example, just look at the photo TIME used for its cover.
Greta in an oversized sweater, sans make-up —how old does she look? 13, or 14 I’d say. Well, she is in fact 16. Her sister is 15 and looks much older and certainly clearly into puberty or even past it. Greta is being presented as the virgin symbol of purity.
Now this will be called an attack on Greta…by Proyect anyway. But I am sure many others. It’s not. She is simply the actor in all this (though actors are responsible for their choices, too). For her troubles she gets yacht rides and great dining with world leaders. Why wouldn’t she sign on?
But the rest of the phenomenon is in fact global capital usurping the green movements and activists globally. And the coup in Bolivia is against the indigenous of that nation, many of whom are environmental activists as was President Morales. Which is why the smear campaign (by the same people who help manage Greta) was designed to undermine his environmental work. The biggest thing environmentally that Morales did was to throw out the U.S. military.
But the white men of the West are channeling their disappointments (because capitalism disappoints, at the very least, nearly everyone but the top 3%) into something that resembles a fairy tale narrative of a guardian flock protector (the white guy narrator) defending the honour of blond pre-pubescent teenager (in volkisch pigtails and large sweater). Greta is the virgin queen of the environment.
What happens when she gets a boyfriend? I’ll be curious to see. Will the white middle-aged flock protectors feel betrayed? Seems possible. As my friend Hiroyuki Hamada noted, the white male defense of Greta is a reflection of patriarchy and that disappointments today are felt more acutely because they are more flagrant and there are fewer mitigating salves than in the past.
The point here is that why would any socialist or communist sign on to anything supported by the Royal Families of Europe, by global billionaires, and why cant they see that photo ops with Obama and the Pope are not just accidental.
Nobody ever granted Berta Cacerces a photo shoot in Vogue. A genuine activist today is at risk of death by the rising tide (rising fast) of fascism. Look at the heroic defense of Bolivia by the indigenous people of that nation. So many of whom have fought off western mining interests. And the same in Brazil where today there is a wholesale war on the indigenous. Or the vast western mining interests in Africa, and the forced displacement of entire villages to accommodate those interests. Enforced by western security forces.
Much of the climate consensus seems aligned with the ruling class in a fear of a black and Asian planet, and one that is fuelled by the spectre of eugenics (making the world safe for white people). And lest you think that at all hyperbole, just spend some time investigating the activities of the Gates Foundation. It’s curious to me why so many liberals froth in admiration of Gates.
Jimmy Wu writes (Capitalism is Dangerous for Your Mental Health, Medium 2019):
‘Yet capitalism’s reach extends much further than its economic effects; it also shapes our ideology and how we perceive our place in the world. Modern-day capitalism, with its unshakable faith in deregulated markets, privatization of the public sphere, and austerity budgets, has of course contributed to our financial misery, leading to mass hopelessness and anxiety.
But far from being confined to economic policy, contemporary capitalism (often called “neoliberalism”) also embodies a philosophical belief that self-interest and competition, not cooperation, should pervade every aspect of our lives.
In short, our world is shaped in the image of the market. For those in distress, Margaret Thatcher’s oft-cited mantra, “There is no such thing as society,” sends the most disturbing possible message: “You’re on your own.”
This is the psychology of advanced capitalism. And Hollywood and mass media drive home in obsessively repetitious fashion that message of individualism. Of a ruthless individualism. In the recent V Wars (vampire wars) on Netflix, a doctor struggles valiantly throughout the first season looking for a cure. He fails. His only son abducted.
In the last scene we see him, presumably months later, doing chin ups…his rock hard abs and bulging biceps glistening with sweat. He turns to face the came and slings an AK 47 over his shoulder. He stares at camera…he is ready for season two. And the message is, don’t be a pantywaist doctor, they get nothing done. Be a violent sociopathic vigilante.
That’s the message of America in a nutshell.
Richard Slotkin in Gunfighter Nation wrote…
‘1890, the moment when the landed frontier of the United States was officially declared ‘closed’, the moment when ‘frontier’ became primarily a term of ideological rather than geographical location.”
That remains the principle shaper of consciousness in the U.S. today.
Now one might ask why so many on the left view the Climate discourse without any class analysis. Do you not think that if Prince Charles is supporting a cause that one might be suspicious? I mean would he betray HIS class? Not fucking likely. Would Pierre Omidyar? Would Jeff Bezos, Richard Branson, or Bill Gates??
The answer is no, of course, and yet I see people lining up to sign onboard projects that are endorsed by millionaires and royals. Why? Well, because, partly, of what Jimmy Wu wrote. And I will add another quote from Wu’s piece…
‘The psychological toll of this market-extremist thinking is ubiquitous and measurable. A long line of social science research has shown that unemployed people are much more likely to become depressed; after all, under the reigning ideology, our self-worth is measured by our economic output. Moreover, since the market is (we are told) a level playing field, with no single actor appearing as the obvious coordinator, those who happen to be losers in this global scramble ostensibly have no one to blame but themselves.”
Jimmy Wu (Capitalism is Dangerous for Your Mental Health)
The same logic applies to those throwing Maduro or Morales under the bus. Or for that matter Assad. Look, if you are a leader targeted by the U.S. there must be a reason. And that reason is independence from the global neoliberal system — and independence is not allowed. Ask the people of Iran or the DPRK or Cuba. Ask Qadaffi. The U.S. does not do things for moral reasons. They are not motivated by ethics or morality.
The rise of fascism is also a reflection of the same conditions that spawned the ‘Greta Defender’ symptomatology.
Fascism is attractive to those who fear being identified as *losers*. Fascism provides a sense of belonging, of unity and purpose. American democracy does not. The ideological frontier that Slotkin noted is what defines the consciousness of most Americans, certainly white americans.
That rugged individualism that Hollywood continues to spew forth in cop shows and spy shows and lawyer shows and even doctor shows is one that is not real. There is no space, materially or psychologically, for Daniel Boone today.
Most of the empty spaces of western America are owned by the federal government.
Most land overall is owned by billionaires. Sixty-one percent of the surface land of America is privately owned. And most of that is empty. The government owns around thirty percent. The working class owns nothing, essentially. Blacks (13% of the population) own under 1%, as of 2016.
‘But over the past decade, the nation’s wealthiest private landowners have been laying claim to ever-larger tracts of the countryside, according to data compiled by the Land Report, a magazine about land ownership in America.
In 2007, according to the Land Report, the nation’s 100 largest private landowners owned a combined 27 million acres of land — equivalent to the area of Maine and New Hampshire combined.
A decade later, the 100 largest landowners have holdings of 40.2 million acres, an increase of nearly 50 percent. Their holdings are equivalent in area to the entirety of New England, minus Vermont.”
Christopher Ingraham – Washington Post, 2017
80% of the people live on 3% of the land.
Ted Turner owns over 2 million acres. John Malone over 2 million. Stan Kroenke owns over a million and a half acres. The Hadley family, the Galt family, the Lee family…these are the owners of America’s land. Or Anne Marion who owns the 260,000 acre Four Sixes ranch in Texas. Or the Collier family, or the Barta family in Nebraska.
All own close to a million acres of land. There are essentially 75 families, maybe a few more, that own the vast majority of land in the U.S. Jeff Bezos owns half a million acres in Texas. The Irving family owns a huge percentage of Maine, or the Reeds, who own vast swaths of northern California and Oregon.
You and I own shit. We are the new serfs in the feudalism of advanced capital. So, why defend those who represent the ruling class?
‘The racial disparity in rural land ownership has deep historical roots based not just in chattel slavery, but in the post-slavery period as well. After emancipation, black farmers tended to be tenants of wealthy white landowners working for sub-poverty wages and doing mostly subsistence farming.
Average land ownership for black farmers peaked in 1910, according to the Agriculture Census, with about 16 to 19 acres. In contrast, black farmers owned just 1.5 million acres of arable land in 1997.
In many cases, the land African Americans lost over the 20th century was expropriated in one form or another and not sold freely. In the 2007 documentary, Banished, filmmaker Marco Williams describes numerous examples of white mobs forcing out African-American farmers and taking their land.
This outright stealing, intimidation, and violence had a devastating impact on black wealth ownership.’
Antonio Moore (Inequality.org)
Just as white America feared black ownership of, well, anything, the white ruling class capitalists today fear the potential for a black planet. America has military bases in all the countries of Africa save one. France and Germany and the U.S. continue to recolonize Africa. And now, the U.S. is directing renewed attention to Latin America where they fear indigenous power and socialist movements.
The international financial institutions, all of them situated in Europe or the U.S., are the contemporary expression of colonialism, essentially. They discipline and punish the dark-skinned peoples of Africa, South and Central America, and many Pacific Islands. And in many cases, too, those countries formally part of the Soviet Union.
If you want to grasp the work of Cory Morningstar, this is not a bad place to start for now.
One cannot separate climate change from Imperialism. You cannot separate climate change from militarism. If change is going to try to correct global warming, or limit its impact (which honestly nobody knows) then one must learn to read how marketing works.
One must question anything applauded by the Royal families of Europe, of by billionaires in general. Those billionaires will not betray their class, rest assured. The billionaires and corporate interests behind Greta Thunberg are not looking to help the poor and working class, they are looking for massive land grabs and further raids on pensions, social security, and what’s left of working class and socialist movements.
Maybe Proyect can connect the dots between the coup in Boliva, the opposition in Venezuela (that failed state per Sale) and the big money orchestrating the Thunberg phenomenon. The ruling class stick together.
*Conspiracy theory* used to be reserved for invisible helicopters and such, now it’s simply any class analysis. Anytime someone points out who is funding a project there are cries of *conspiracy theory*.
Why would any rational person look at the Greta phenomenon and not grasp that it is manufactured? There is a LOT of money behind this girl. But the non-profit industrial complex, the UN, the World Bank and IMF — they don’t do things altruistically. Capitalism is investment, not virtue. Capitalism created the crisis, it won’t solve it. Greta also retweeted the now sort of infamous Minh Ngo tweet that was part of the smear campaign against Morales. She is linked and backed, additionally, by Purpose and Avaaz — both of whom are connected to U.S. foreign policy in South America.
But Morningstar has the details here:
She also endorses and tweets support for Hong Kong colour revolution leader Joshua Wong (yet another U.S. asset). She is, as Club de Cordeliers put it (on twitter), ‘the ruling class poster girl’. And this is not even to get into her comments about holding disobedient leaders up against the wall. The infantilism of the western public is well prepared for child leaders. This is a canny gambit by the marketing apparatus and by all indications (and articles like Proyect’s) it is working to perfection.
Greta is not anti-capitalist. She may say a few things that suggest, vaguely, an anti-capitalist sensibility, but the reality (which is what Morningstar provides) is that she works for big money, corporations and FOR capitalism.
You know when Greta gave her last speech in the U.S. … at the UN in fact…(where she flubbed her lines, saying creative PR and clever accounting. It was meant to be creative accounting and clever PR…but learning lines is tough) she sailed back to Europe. The captain had been flown in to sail the yacht on its return voyage.
The whole thing is so ludicrous and idiotic that one really does wonder if the West is not in some trance state. The inability to read marketing as marketing is at this point inexcusable in someone self-identifying as a leftist.
The system sails along, like a billionaire’s yacht, increasing profit at the expense of the everyone not of the top 2 or 3%. Greta is a manufactured distraction, and all those protests that her campaign managed to generate are not to help stop war and exploitation. They are pretty much as meaningless as choosing to drive a Prius.
I will end with a quote from Cory Morningstar (from social media)….
‘You are about to get slammed by 2 globally orchestrated campaigns
- #GlobalGreenNewDeal
2. #NewDealForNature & People
And when I say slammed – I mean slammed. Like a hammer over your head. Another campaign to assist both is #SuperYear2020.
Goal: obtaining the social license required to re-boot / save the failing global capitalist economy. To usher in an new unprecedented era of growth. The monetization of nature, global in scale (new/ emerging markets)(see past posts). That is, the corporate capture of nature. Those with money – will literally buy nature.
The pitch: The ruling class, corporations, capital finance – all those that have happily destroyed the planet in pursuit of relentless profit have learned their lesson. They have magically changed. Those that destroyed the biosphere will now save it. And save you. All they need is your consent. Forget that capitalism devours everything in its path. They can work around this inconvenient truth. But it’s going to take everyone. There are no class divisions, we are all in this “together”. Yesterday’s capitalists are today’s activists. Accept. Join hands.”
……………………………………………………………………………………………
First, I admit to having winced at this: ‘Cory Morningstar is almost certainly the most important living journalist in the world (next to Assange perhaps).’ While Julian Assange is a very good journalist, he’s also the most important publisher on the planet.
Second, while I’ve learned a whale of a lot from Morningstar over the years, my current eye-brain configuration lacks the…elasticity…to read at the Wrong Kind of Green collective site without getting the cobbly-wobblies. There are so many font sizes, images, colors, etc. they goof up my comprehension/give me a headache, meaning: even though I click in from time to time, I haven’t yet read her series on Greta, but can understand her short-handed comments Tweets.
Third, I believe that Greta’s reTweet of Minh Ngo’s hyperbolic Tweet was the start of the case to essentially R2P/putsch Morales; please try not to notice that Ngo is the chairman of the board of the Friends of UNFA (“UNFPA is the lead United Nations entity for reproductive health and rights for all.”), okay?. How dare he not allow USAID convoys and the American military to in to douse the Amazon Rainforest fires he’d created?!
I do hope you’ll save the 2010 Bolivian or Peoples Agreement that the indigenous caravans took to the Rio 2012 Earth Sustainability ‘conference’ as the Cochabamba Accords. Of course the indigenous weren’t allowed into the Hallowed Halls, so held side conferences of their own.
At the core of a lengthy and well-written document lies:
“We confront the terminal crisis of a civilizing model that is patriarchal and based on the submission and destruction of human beings and nature that accelerated since the industrial revolution.
The capitalist system has imposed on us a logic of competition, progress and limitless growth. This regime of production and consumption seeks profit without limits, separating human beings from nature and imposing a logic of domination upon nature, transforming everything into commodities: water, earth, the human genome, ancestral cultures, biodiversity, justice, ethics, the rights of peoples, and life itself.
Under capitalism, Mother Earth is converted into a source of raw materials, and human beings into consumers and a means of production, into people that are seen as valuable only for what they own, and not for what they are.
Capitalism requires a powerful military industry for its processes of accumulation and imposition of control over territories and natural resources, suppressing the resistance of the peoples. It is an imperialist system of colonization of the planet.
Humanity confronts a great dilemma: to continue on the path of capitalism, depredation, and death, or to choose the path of harmony with nature and respect for life.”
This is by way of a companion piece: ‘Hiroyuki Hamada’s ‘In Defense of Cory Morningstar’s Manufacturing for Consent Series’, Nov. 8, 2019, Café Babylon
(cross-posted from Café Babylon)
Comments
Thanks for sharing,
I find myself torn between the two thoughts- one of being very thankful for the likes of Greta and one of always being suspicious of the likes of her.
On one hand, I do suspicion that even a fair amount of 1%ers would like to save the planet for future generations. And that they may offer her up with good intentions. And there are class traitors for sure. As there are surely poor folk who "Uncle Tom" themselves out to the rich, there are surely rich folk who actively undermine the wealth and power of fellow richy riches.
And while the rich and powerful try to co opt every true grass roots citizen driven movement to serve their agenda I think those of us who consider ourselves to be leftists must always attempt to co opt any astro turf movement.
Here is how Greta influenced me: I have taken to flying twice or thrice annually for vacation or personal enjoyment purposes. Flights to warm or scenic places are within my budget and without much thought I book a beach vacation. I have felt some inner turmoil about my carbon footprint with flying. When Greta got in that boat and headed across the big pond I was impressed. Being cooped up on a small boat tossed about in big waves for that length of trip takes some serious personal dedication. Her dedication inspired me to consider not flying at all, or at least not flying more than once a year. Baby step I know, not enough to save out planet.
I work as a hairstylist. 20-40 people sit in my chair every week. This means I have to opportunity to influence many people with 30-120 minute visits. Most of my clients travel more (some MUCH more) than I. We talk a lot about trips and travel and vacation. I have shared with several hundred people my personal story of reconsidering air flight. Asking questions like "would a stay-cation be every bit as relaxing as being on the beach in Mexico"?
I think all of the critiques of Greta are fair. But I also think that she has inspired a lot of good conversation that cracks the door open to the bigger battles that must be fought.
Baby step I know, ...
Nothing you, I, or any other individual does will ever be enough. That's what I refer to as Reality. The cold hard ("Red Pill") reality is what it is, but, we have no viable (literally) choice but to keep on trying.
I lived in Kearney, NE for almost four decades working with many others to make fundamental changes for the better. No one can remove the truth of that history even as those gains will erode over time as other people have their influence. Forgotten history is still history.
RIP
it's good to know
that she's inspired you. but as far as inspiring a lot of good conversation, where has it led?
lest i sound too cynical: to declaring climate emergencies in some venues, which mean investing in putatively Green Industies, Green Bonds, etc., and Big Green Capitalist (non)solutions? did you by chance read my link to evo morales & co.'s Peoples Agreement' at cochamaba 2010? think if the world had paid attention all those years ago to those dark-skinned indigenous! ; )
thanks, wouldsman.
Yuck mostly . . . .
Arguments about capitalism . . . yes, of course, it is killing our habitat.
But all the shit about Greta sounds like an angry old white man. Terrible!
Marilyn
"Make dirt, not war." eyo
Yeah, this is stupid.
But I'm just a stupid Millennial, I don't know anything. *eyeroll*
This shit is bananas.
Third and Second Graders
My granddaughter is in the third grade her best friend from across the street is in the second grade. Starting at the beginning of the school year my daughter overheard them planing the details of how they were going to college.
Most people that read the above would scoff and say something about a passing adolescent phase. But as a reality check: Shortly after the beginning of second grade I started going autodidactic and later that same year I was introduced to my lifelong obsession with particle physics.
RIP
lol x 2.
well, steppling's an ecosocialist in the mode of evo morales, and calls em like he sees em.
as in: you can't cure climate chaos by the same capitalist fixes that brung it. greta's also a big fan of african eugenecist david attenborough.
Thoughts
First, Steppling apparently has no solution to anthropogenic climate change except for overthrow of the capitalist system. Overthrow of the capitalist system will certainly not come before massive, irreparable damage has been done to the planet and the people, flora and fauna that inhabit it. One can make a plausible argument that halting anthropogenic climate change is impossible in a capitalist system. This may be true, but if it is true, we are screwed, pure and simple. One can also make a (probably more) plausible argument that the disruption, death and destruction that will flow from climate disruption might lead to the overthrow of capitalism. Second, Steppling shows no apparent understanding of the physics of climate disruption, a deficit shared with many. A salient point with respect to this is that the carbon dioxide in the air will continue to warm the air for hundreds of years unless it is removed. We could stop emitting carbon dioxide this afternoon and the climate would continue to warm for many decades. Climate disruption is not like other problems that the left has had to deal with, and the thought process of some leftists does not allow a rational response. If slavery could not be abolished in 1800, it could be abolished later. If unions were suppressed in 1900, they could persist and become more powerful later. If the climate of the earth is altered such that millions die and the earth becomes a grim place to live, we can't just wait a few years for it to be restored. It will never be restored fully, and it will take hundreds, perhaps thousands, of years to come back to a decent state. Noam Chomsky has stated that we should work with anyone to help to solve this existential crisis, even those that seem to be our enemies. Third, Steppling seems to throw in a lot of things that are irrelevant to Thunberg and yet tries to tie them to her in a negative way. She is a 16 year old kid that has had the courage (and single mindedness--she is on the autistic spectrum) to speak out consistently against climate change. Give her credit for that. I am sure she has sympathy for the indigenous peoples of Bolivia, but can she really be expected to overthrow the puppet government that has recently been installed? Give her credit where it is due, reject those that try to use her inappropriately, and try to fix other problems when and where we can.
Amen
Thank you!
Marilyn
"Make dirt, not war." eyo
hella lot of issues w/
no paragraph breaks. but i resist the idea that because anyone names a problem, he or she is required to know how to fix it, if it's indeed not already too late (as per each call from climate scientists that it's coming faster).
as to this:
as i'd said, it was she and her cohort who first called out morales on twitter for starting the amazon rain forest fires, and refusing to let USAD convoys and the US military in 'to help'. it's likely he'd known exactly what that help would amount to, just as nicolas maduro had discovered and...blocked them from entering VZ. the beginning of the R2P overthrow of dear Evo. my 'and now they're coming after ecosociaist evo morales' had gleaned no thumbs, but a few good comments.
i'd read recently that greta is on the autism spectrum, which is a big reason i hate seeing her being exploited so.
Thanks wendy.
Good article. At the risk of being called a right wing climate denier, or some other such pejorative because I too see some of the flaws in this whole "We Mean Business" model, the author is right to call out the false hope some of these capitalist shills spew. And it works very well for divide and conquer as one is NEVER supposed to question the Hope of Americans who wish to believe that this time the capitalists really DO care. It's almost akin to the Impeachment true believers who still, despite all known evidence, somehow fully BELIEVE that this time things will change, damnit! Just rid ourselves of the Orange Goon and all will be well America! And if you do not agree, well then you're either a Trumper or a Putin Stooge or whatever todays current insult might be, America hater perhaps....
When I read about some of the details of the GND the thing that gave me a big pause was the idea of some "independent" coalition who will decide who is Green and who is not, and that group will be supposedly non partisan and non biased against science. Since when is that possible in this country? Is that even possible ANYWHERE else in the world? Capitalists will not be denied any profits while they save the world. What constitutes saving it? Who gets to decide that? I for one highly doubt that those decisions will be any more "democratic" than they have ever been.
Personally, I had never thought about what he says on Greta's looks or on the pictures we see splashed all over the media, but he makes a very good point. While some will probably say I am being like an angry white man to agree with the points he made, I think there is some truth in using a virginal image to perhaps not only make the entire agenda seem pure and above reproach, but it also reinforces the patriarchal nature of the good, pure, non threatening female that we all should be, versus an opinionated and perhaps threatening female who calls out the whole farce - that is not allowed of American womanhood. One must never be too negative in America, that means you're a hope killer and we simply can't have that, no matter what false pretenses that hope may be built on. Do not look behind the curtain, just believe and all will be well...
Only a fool lets someone else tell him who his enemy is. Assata Shakur
; ), and thank you, amiga.
i may have to add ore on edit later, but for now:
i've watched the global oligarchs and PTB genuflect before her and kiss her ring on twitter, & the pope offer his ring to her to kiss, and so on. lol, i haven't seen her with Bono (champion of GMOs, but i may have missed that spectacle.
but 'we mean bidness' is only one part of the New Green Profiteers: give us your money, we'll take care of the planet 4 you!
has any UK or amerikan green new deal even acknowledged that american war, inc. has the largest carbon footprint on the planet? well, except howie klein, but his 'close how many bases' may have degraded, but let's hope it's "for defense of the US, not amerikan Imperialism!
the chokehold, of course, of all the 'renewable energy' electric car and solar panel panels is lithium ()& some other rare metal i can't recall is in chile, bolivia, brazil (iirc) and the rest is down to imperialist Africom to 'secure'
trade for with puppet govts.oh, tiddly pom; i need some rest. i don't sleep much at night in my dotage.... ; ) more later, lizzy, and thank you.
i really had meaant to add further
to your excellent comment, but my new 'war on iran' in two venues takes supremacy.
peace (when you can manage it), and solidarity,
wd
Thanks Wendy
When the same political forces and media that have spent decades ignoring or paying the barest lip service to climate issues and those working to do something about them suddenly rally behind someone like Greta, it makes me more than a little curious as to why. I have no reason to doubt Greta's sincerity nor do I believe she is intentionally part of some conspiracy or whatever. And I do appreciate that she's getting people talking about these issues, for whatever that's worth.
But I just can't believe the powers that be are giving her a platform out of the kindness of their hearts. I don't claim to understand why they're doing it, but I can't just accept it at face value either.
Idolizing a politician is like believing the stripper really likes you.
You may notice the platform being proffered
by the milk screen media is not without
future traps
reel them in , get the hook imbedded
when landed, cut the gills
sort of like fishing for the minds
the bait is hope
youth have a future worth
fighting for
question everything
thanks for weighing in,
amigo. i also believe in her sincerity, but you've caused me to wonder if given the long duration of her having led the (once graassroots) movement hasn't changed her over time. the imprecation to 'allow the youth to lead' is a pretty heady one, especially added to the 'it's the world we'll inherit'.
there are several first americans being touted as parallels now, and i confess that big bill mcKibben's funding foundations loved to pay for many indigenous airfares to the climate conferences to lead the parades in their native splendor, which vexxed me, too. i know they were sincere, too, and proud to be so honored...at long, long, last.
it just seems that the time for conversation has long since passed, and now it's all but baked in, save for miracles. nothing left but for capitalist profiteers to do what they do best: commodify everything that once was in 'the commons', such as mother nature's bounty, and not just in the US, but most especially subsaharan africa.
here in colorado, of course, water is king, and the smart attorneys are all studying and practicing water law. corporations are buying up sub-surface water rights in secret, and filing on river water that's already been over-sold.
but the same capitalist machines that keep 'war everlasting' funded is the same Imperialism that goes in search of resources to grab, isn't it? and there's no alternative but to sash our social safety nets...again. if greta, AOC, ed markey, et.al., ever said anything about the horror of US military's carbon footprint, i'v never heard about it.
At least Ms. Thunberg is trying.
What's the alternative, meditate quietly for 6 months and when we open our eyes the world will have been converted to socialism.
Never light a candle when it's such a warm, bonding experience to gather together and curse the darkness.
@FuturePassed Good point FP. Imagine if
Especially grading based on age, I would say very very few would be allowed to critique her. Surely not I.
It would be nice if
This shit is bananas.
while i realize that you find your
commnent worthy as prose and rebuttal, it really has nothing to do with steppling's essay. as i said earlier, it's hard seeing how many comments seem to willfully disregard what he's written.
i'd meant to be back last night after i'd posted a new
round-up on the War on Iran, but as joss would have it, i've just posted it and need to yield to RL chores and other 'honeydews'.
i will say that even though i thought this post would be tank, i'm a bit surprised at the many misinterpretations of what steppling is trying to convey, including the 'fake Marxists' he's mentioned.
back as i'm able.
So now we're saying Thunberg is part of the problem?
Really? I think maybe the author of this Op-Ed might want to turn the cynicism lever down a little. She's a 16 year old girl asking the adults in the room what they're going to do.
There is always Music amongst the trees in the Garden, but our hearts must be very quiet to hear it. ~ Minnie Aumonier
thank you for weighing in.