Post
by Brian Peacock » Sun Sep 08, 2019 10:34 am
Indeed, and yet like many you're still kind of resistant to contemplating an alternative to Capitalism - which is quite understandable given that its the system we're all embedded in. It's like the air, it's all around us and so much a feature of our lives that we don't really notice it until, that is, the idea of its continuation is challenged. However, that continuation of Capitalism as we know it today (which is the only Capitalism that counts) stands in direct opposition to the kind of action we collectively need to take on climate and environmental issues.
It's Capitalism which sees armed corporate militias being delegated with the power of arrest and forcefully breaking up the camps of indigenous oil pipeline protestors on their own land; it's Capitalism which sees US and Dutch corporations arming both sides in the civil war in the Congo to secure the Cobalt and Coltan used in all of our computer devices at the lowest price - supplies mined with forced labour, including children; it's Capitalism which sees men and women from the corporate and finance sector parachuted into safe parliamentary seats in exchange for donations while they retain their positions on the boards of multiple companies; and it's Capitalism which subsequently sees the drafting of legislation outsourced to thinktanks and lobbyists to devise laws and regulations which directly effect the sectors they represent and are paid advocates for.
As I've said elsewhere on the board there are many forms of Capital -- are we talking about US/Uk-style neo-liberal Capitalism, German fiscally-responsible Capitalism, Chinese command-Capitalism, etc -- but a feature of global Capitalism which cuts across the board is the massive transfer of resources from the public to the private sector which followed the 2007/8 meltdown.
One can see the problem by comparing the graphs on real-terms GDP growth against those on public spending and wages for any period in the last 50 years. Where global GDP continues on a rising trend, the share of public spending and wages as a proportion of GDP continue to trend in the opposite direction. Given Capital's position in our political lives, where's the incentive for it to reform, let alone the means?
The climate crisis continues to mount along with the levels of CO2 and greenhouse gas emissions while the resources and measures that might mitigate its effect are placed ever-further beyond the reach of public influence. We're going to need those resources, and Capitalism isn't going to give them up unless it can be brought to the point where the cognitive dissonances by which Capitalists see themselves and their action as essentially existing beyond the scope of society and, significantly, beyond the influence of the environment can be banished.
XR is a consciousness-raising movement which recognises that, as a social species, we can only secure our individual well-being by securing the well-being of the societies we live in. Unchecked Capitalism will destroy itself along with the societies we all (Capitalists included) rely on for our survival. One way or another Captialism is finished.
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"It isn't necessary to imagine the world ending in fire or ice.
There are two other possibilities: one is paperwork, and the other is nostalgia."
Frank Zappa
"This is how humanity ends; bickering over the irrelevant."
Clinton Huxley » 21 Jun 2012 » 14:10:36 GMT
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