Pacific Free Press was launched in March 2007 by Dutch-Canadian Richard
Kastelein of V.O.F. Expathos, in the Netherlands along with Chris Cook- CFUV radio journalist and Editor in Chief of Pacific Free Press. Cook is based in , Victoria, British Columbia.
The site is a sister to Atlantic Free Press and Brick Ogden an American Expatriate in Amsterdam has been a key supporter of this project.
The mission of Pacific Free Press is simple: to dig out nuggets of truth from
the slag-heap of lies, ignorance and witless diversion that has buried
public discourse today. Pacific Free Press provides a new venue for
disseminating hard news and insightful, fact-based analysis of the
harsh realities too often ignored or distorted by the mainstream press.
Who said Marx wasnt Green?
by William Bowles For some of us on the Left it appears that confusion reigns in much of whats left of the Left, caught up as it is in its own largely petty squabblings, mostly about who said what to whom and when, thus when a book comes along like Ecology Against Capitalism, I feel damn well vindicated!
For make no mistake, Fosters take on things is rooted in Classic Marx, its us who have gotten it wrong for the past 150 years. Why this is so important to our current situation is made apparent all the way through this book, whether its his analysis of the economics of capitalism, or the fundamental importance of basic values like humility, respect and justice not only for each other but for our home, the Earth.
For the first time nature becomes purely an object for
humankind, purely a matter of utility; ceases to be recognized as a
power for itself; and the theoretical discovery of its autonomous laws
appears merely as a ruse so as to subject it under human needs, whether
as an object of consumption or as a means of production.
Karl Marx, Grundrusse
An ecological approach to the economy is about having enough, not having more. John Bellamy Foster
Review: Ecology Against Capitalism by John Bellamy Foster
Its not that people value money more but that they value
everything else so much lessnot that they are more greedy but that
they have no other values to keep greed in check. Dee Hock, former
head of Visa bank card
First off, with lucid logic and prosaic
prose, Foster shows why and how the very nature of capitalism, the
genetic code of capitalism, is the source and the cause of our
current predicament, and most importantly, that no amount of
tinkering with the system will solve things and in fact, tinkering
will in all likelyhood, increase the speed of the slide toward
catastrophe through the simple expedient of delaying dealing with the
inevitable consequences of an economy that can only survive by
expanding its markets or as its euphemistically known, growth.
Its the Capitalist Economy Stupid
There
are several issues that need to be understood for anybody who cares
enough about whats happening to our world, that Foster unpacks, the
first of which is the fundamental role that economics plays, for
without understanding the nature of the capitalist economy, its
impossible not only to realise just how perilous our situation really
is or, to take the necessary steps needed to transform our world.
Foster
quotes from a confidential memo from Lawrence Summers, then chief
economist for the World Bank, written in 1991 and leaked to the
Economist and published in an article entitled Let them eat
pollution, which sums up the attitude of the class of capitalists and
those who serve them,
Just between you and me, shouldnt the
World Bank be encouraging more migration of the dirty industries to the
LDCs [Less Developed Countries]? I can think of three reasons:
1)
The costs of health-impairing pollution depends on the foregone
earnings from increased morbidity [death] and mortality. From this
point of view a given amount of health-impairing pollution should be
done in the country with the lowest cost, which will be the country
with the lowest wages. I think the economic logic behind
dumping a load of toxic waste in the lowest-wage country is impeccable
and we should face up to that.
2) Ive always thought that
under-populated countries in Africa are vastly under-polluted; their
air quality is probably vastly inefficiently low [sic] compared to Los
Angeles or Mexico City
3) The concern over an agent that
causes a one-in-a-million change in the odds of prostate cancer is
obviously going to be much higher in a country where people survive to
get prostate cancer than in a country where under-five mortality is 200
per thousand . While production is mobile the consumption of pretty
air is non-tradeable. The problem with the arguments
against all of these proposals for more pollution in LDCs (intrinsic
rights to certain goods, moral rights, social concerns, lack of
adequate markets, etc.) [is that they] could be turned around and used
more or less effectively against every Bank proposal for
liberalization. (pps. 60-61)
Too right Mr Summers! Nothing like
telling it like it is.
The Economist thought that Summers language was
objectionable but his economics was hard to answer once again
reinforcing the view that morality and ethics under capitalism are very
fluid concepts determined first and foremost by the demands for the
accumulation of capital. The Economist of course recognised that for
capitalism, Summers was stating the real deal but merely objected to
his spelling it out in such stark terms.
When the bottom line
is measured purely in terms of profit and if the victim is essentially
unable to defend herself against the ravages of international capital,
then the views of people like Summers will dominate. Note too the use
by Summers of the term liberalization, the buzzword for the
neo-liberals since the 1970s, in other words, a free-for-all.
Backing
up this view of the world is the notion, prevalent since the grossly
misnamed Age of Enlightenment in the 16th and 17th centuries is the
idea that the inhabitants of our planet are no more than cogs in a
giant wheel,
Our present social order is entrapped in a
mechanistic view of human freedom, and of the human relationship to
nature, that is directly at odds with ecological imperatives. This
mechanistic emphasis in our culture dates back to the emergence of the
modern scientific worldview, which arose along with the capitalist
world economy (p.52)
What emerges as a result, and what makes
the struggle so difficult, is a veneer of science and a view of
human nature that purports to be objective and based in fact but
Foster points out that,
Discoveries in such sciences as physics
and have ecology have undermined Newtonian mechanics, which has not yet
however been replaced by any other equivalent worldview (p.53)
Quoting the great physicist David Boehm,
Values
have significance behind them If the universe signifies mechanism
and the values implicit therein, the individuals must fend for
themselves. With mechanism, individuals are separate and have to take
of themselves first. We are all pushing against each other and everyone
is trying to win. The significance of wholeness is that everything is
related internally to everything else, and therefore, in the long run,
it has no meaning to ignore the needs of others. Similarly, if we
regard the world as made up of lots of little bits, we will try to
exploit each bit and we will end up by destroying the planet. At
present, we do not adequately realize that we are one whole with the
planet and that our whole being and substance comes out of it. (p.53)
Until such time as a wholistic and relativistic worldview replaces the outdated mechanistic interpretation of reality,
The
struggle for material welfare among the great mass of the population,
which was once understood mainly in economic terms, is increasingly
taking on a wider, more holistic environmental context. Hence, it is
the struggle for environmental justicethe struggle over the
interrelationship of race, class, gender, and imperial oppression and
the depradation of the environmentthat is likely to be the defining
feature of the twenty-first century. (p.40)
Foster makes it
demonstrably clear that an economy based upon endless production and
consumption (of mostly unwanted and unneeded) goods, is structurally
incapable of taking the necessary steps needed to stop the impending
catastrophe.
Capitalism must be regarded as an economy of unpaid costs. K. William Kapp, The Social Costs of Private Enterprise
And
in the process of unpacking the nature of the capitalist economy,
Foster explodes many of the major myths including the fallacy that
technological fixes to capitalism are a solution, for example finding
sinks for the excess carbon dioxide industry is generating or the
equally fallacious idea that that by applying the laws of the market
to nature, the market will, all on its ownsome, resolve the problem
of global warming.
Much of environmental economics thus aims at
the creation of markets to solve problems of pollution and
environmental degradation . Particularly popular among neoclassical
environmental economists and policy makers is the use of the state to
establish market-based incentives such as tradeable pollution permits.
The entire neoclassical [economic] view, it should be clear beyond any
doubt at this point, rests on turning the environment into a set of
commodities. Further, the goal is quite explicitly one of overcoming
the so-called market failures of the environment by constructing
replacement markets for environmental products. If environmental
degradation and pollution are evident, the economist reasons, it must
be because the environment has not been fully incorporated within the
market economy, and does not operate according to the laws of economic
supply and demand. Yet the faulty character of neoclassical
environmental economics becomes evident when one realizes that this
entire methodology is based on the utopian myth that the environment
can and should become part of a self-regulating market system. (pps.
29-30)
And predictably this is exactly what corporations and
governments are doing with all kinds of products and services now being
sold to us as green. But as Foster points out,
Nature is not
a commodity produced to be sold on the market . Nor is it a market
organized according to laws of individual consumer preferences the
commodification of nature.
The other myth of
classical economists, the concept of dematerialisation, that is, the
emergence of the so-called knowledge economy, what the experts call a
weightless economy is also revealed as a fantasy, for in absolute
terms, the sheer volume of production has been increasing regardless of
the fact that we can do more for less, which in any case has always
been the case for as long as the human species has been around.
[C]apitalisms
inherent anti-environmental character, drawn from the case of global
warming, stands in stark contrast to the views of those who in recent
years have advanced the notion that capitalism is not a threat but
rather contains within itself the solution to global environmental
problems. (p.22)
Thus capitalism,
represents the alienation of nature from society in order to develop a one-sided, egoistic relation to the world.(p. 31)
Foster goes on to say,
From
an ecological standpoint, insofar as the diversity of life is an
objective, the market is extremely inefficient compared with nature
itself . turning forests into commodities has led to their degradation
(i.e., extreme simplification), thereby diminishing rather than
enlarging the domains of organic nature in this sense. (pps.33-34)
Capitalism
has responded to the crisis that confronts us by attempting to
commodify everything, a process that is as old as capitalism and now
includes the human genome and human reproduction and even our brains
(what the ecological-socialist economist Martin OConnor calls the
ecological phase of capital).
Quoting OConnor further, we read,
the
relevant image is no longer of man acting on nature to produce value,
henceforth appropriated by the capitalist class. Rather, the image is
of nature (and human nature) codified as capital incarnate,
regenerating itself through time by controlled regimes of investment
around the globe, all integrated in a rational calculus of production
and exchange, through the miracle of the price system extending across
space and time. This is nature conceived in the image of capital.
There is so much more to this book than I have
referred to here but for anyone who calls him- or herself a socialist
or who is searching for explanations and an alternative, this is the
book to read. Fosters logic as is his humanity, inescapable.
There
is one final aspect of this book that I have to bring to the readers
attention, and it is perhaps this aspect that is the most relevant to
our condition, what Foster calls the global treadmill of production,
a treadmill which we are all on.
Foster breaks it down into six elements:
1. The increasing accumulation of wealth by a relatively small section of the population at the top of the social pyramid.
2.
The longer term movement of workers away from self-employment and into
wage jobs that are contingent on the continual expansion of production.
3.
The competitive struggle between businesses necessitates on pain of
extinction the allocation of accumulated wealth to new, revolutionary
technologies that serve to expand production.
4. Wants are manufactured in a manner that creates an insatiable hunger for more.
5.
Government becomes increasingly responsible for promoting national
economic development, while ensuring some degree of social security
for at least a portion of its citizens.
6. The dominant means of
communication and education are part of the treadmill, serving to
reinforce its priorities and values. (pps. 44-45)
Foster calls
it a giant squirrel cage in which most of us are imprisoned including
investors and managers who are driven to expand their scale of
operations or see their corporations die. Its a question of running
faster and faster just to stay in the same place.
Looked at in
this way, it is not individuals acting in accordance with their own
innate desires, but rather the treadmill of production on which we are
all placed that has become the main enemy of the environment. (p.45)