Emphasizing what most of us already know about
climate change...
First, it’s the greatest threat to human civilization ever, as far as we can tell.
Second, it’s not an external threat but something we are doing to ourselves.
Third, our collective response remains very far from adequate.
Climate breakdown is only part of a much larger eco-crisis.
We cannot blame the degradation of nature simply on increases of carbon.
We must address our long-standing degradation of the natural world in all its forms.
Humanity has been exploiting the natural world for most of its existence.
Today, however, business as usual has become a threat to our very survival.
This extinction events is one caused by the activity of one particular species: us.
The crisis of nature is, at heart, a crisis of civilization.
Our collective preoccupation with never-ending economic growth.
Meaningless production and consumerism.
Take a look at one particularly revealing example: Bluefin Tuna.
The Japanese love sashimi, and their favorite variety is bluefin tuna.
Unfortunately, bluefin tuna is also one of the world’s most endangered fish.
Mitsubishi conglomerate, a large corporate empire, has an ingenious response:
Corner close to half the world market by buying up as many bluefin tuna as it can.
As the worldwide population plummets toward extinction.
The tuna are imported and frozen at -60°C in Mitsubishi’s massive freezers.
They will command astronomical prices when bluefin tuna go extinct.
As tuna fleets try to satisfy an insatiable demand—primarily Mitsubishi’s.
From an ecological standpoint, this response is immoral, obscene.
From a narrow economic standpoint, however, it’s quite logical, even clever.
Because the fewer bluefin tuna in the ocean ...
The more valuable Mitsubishi’s frozen stock becomes.
That is the nature of economic competition for corporations like Mitsubishi.
Encouraged or “forced” by : if you don’t do it, someone else probably will.
That’s how the “tragedy of the commons” plays out on a global scale.
The example above is one of many that point to a fundamental perversity built into economic systems motivated by profit, which tend to devalue the natural world into a means, subordinated to the goal of expanding the economy in order to maximize profits.
This focus often overshadows our appreciation of the natural world, which means that we end up destroying real wealth—a flourishing biosphere with healthy forests and topsoil, oceans full of marine life, and so on—in order to increase numbers in the bank accounts.
As the enormous gap between rich and poor continues to widen worldwide, most of that increase goes into a very small number of accounts.
Such perverse logic ensures that sooner or later our collective focus on endless growth—on ever-increasing production and consumption, which requires ever more exploitation of our natural resources—must inevitably run up against the limits of the planet, and it just so happens that’s happening now.
We consider ourselves and others to be separate entities, pursuing our own well-being at the cost of theirs in ways that the eco-crisis repudiates.
As earth-dwellers, we’re all in this together.
When China burns coal, that pollution doesn’t just stay above Chinese skies.
Nor does nuclear radioactivity from Fukushima stay only in Japanese coastal waters.
The same is true generally for humankind and the rest of the natural world:
When the ecosystems of the earth become sick, we become sick.
What the earth seems to be telling us is
Wake up or get out of the way.
Facing seemingly intractable political and economic systems, we could easily despair.
Where to start?
Those who control our current economy and political systems also profit the most from them (in the narrow sense), so they tend to be little inclined to make the systemic changes necessary—and are often incapable of doing so.
We can see that institutional change can only come from the grassroots, and signs are growing that more and more people are fed up with waiting for economic and political elites to take action.
But while the necessary response has begun, it’s easy to overlook what’s happening, because the mainstream media are not interested in publicizing or encouraging that transformation.
Six megacorporations now control 90 percent of the media in the United States, and they make their profits not from informing us but from advertising.
Their perspective inevitably tends to normalize consumerism, including the political system that aids and abets it.
Unsurprisingly, they promote “green consumerism” as the solution to the eco-crisis—personal lifestyle changes such as buying hybrid or electric cars, installing solar panels, eating locally, and so on.
However, even if many of us do everything we can to reduce our individual carbon footprints, “the trajectory of our climate horror stays about the same.”
Most problematic are economic and political structures ...
Institutionalized greed, is deeply implicated in the eco-crisis.