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Weekly Worker 620 Thursday April 13 2006
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Contours of green thought
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I
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Greenism is hobbled by two fundamental faults. It cannot tame capitalism,
nor does it offer a realistic way of superseding capitalism. Jack Conrad
explores its limitations
Like every socially significant ideological current, greenism contains
many rival factions, eddies, pressure groups and schools of thought. Eg,
The Ecologist, Mother Earth, Forum for the Future,
Greenpeace, Friends of the Earth, Women’s Environmental Network, Green
Party, Green Revolution, Earth First, Alliance for Green Socialism, Green
Anarchist. In other words greenism comes in countless shades and with
not a few additional ideological signposts.
Greens, the officially registered Green Party of England and Wales included,
have the great merit of being in the forefront of those who brought the
question of ecological degradation back to public attention after many
decades of almost total neglect. The environmental damage caused by capitalism
was comprehensively detailed. Destruction of habitats, extinction of species,
pollution of air, seas and rivers. Timely warnings are still issued. A
sustainable balance between human society and nature has to be re-established
before it is too late.
However, the programme of the Green Party hinges on a domesticated capitalism,
a capitalism restricted to the ‘safe’ borders of the nation-state. Under
a green economy a refashioned Bank of England is to be retained for regulatory
purposes, but the whole system of clearing banks “brought under democratic
control”.1 While wage slavery would remain the norm for the majority,
small enterprises, home and self-employment are paraded as the lofty ideal.
European integration, globalisation and the transnational division of
labour have to be firmly put aside as ecologically destructive. Trade
should continue, but on a much reduced scale. The slogan of the Green
Party is ‘localism not globalism’.
It should be emphasised, however, that capital began as an international
relationship. Capitalism is a global system of many, rival, capitals.
Having captured the state, capital uses it as a salient to aggressively
expand outwards. That was true even for the period 1939-79 - the heyday
of state capitalism in Britain.
Boxing capital into the nation-state is manifestly retrogressive. Productivity
would sharply decline alongside a massive destruction of value. There
would certainly be a flight of capital and collapse of the pound sterling
on international money markets. A green government would be faced with
the unenviable choice of either screwing up rates of exploitation or administering
poverty. Unfazed, the Green Party pledges to maintain living standards.
Greenism as self-deception.
Resolutions on constitutional reform, local self-sufficiency, fair trade,
the US-UK invasion of Iraq, etc, are passed at the Green Party’s annual
conference. Candidates stand in elections on a radical manifesto and campaigns
are conducted against third world debt and climate change. But the party’s
anti-capitalism is transparently Platonic. Like their German sister party,
the leadership - Caroline Lucas, Darren Johnson, Keith Taylor, Jean Lambert,
Richard Mellender - overwhelmingly consist of realos, not fundies. They
would responsibly administer capitalism, not fight it. That helps explain
why green opponents condescendingly label them pale greens.
Elitist pressure groups like Greenpeace and Friends of the Earth - for
the price of their annual subscription the paper membership get a vicarious
thrill from TV stunts and other high profile actions - also take capitalism
as a given. Albeit, once again in the imagination, downsized and made
eco-friendly. The same goes for multi-millionaire Zac Goldsmith - editor
of The Ecologist and new darling of David Cameron’s all-things-to-all-people
outfit.
Tory greenism is, of course, nothing new. In October 1988 Margaret Thatcher
made her famous ‘green’ conference speech: “No generation has a freehold
on this earth. All we have is a life tenancy - with full repairing lease.
This government intends to meet the terms of that lease in full”.2
Indeed ever since the dawn of industrial capitalism a strand of aristocratic
conservatism has protested against the despoliation of nature. The Young
England movement of the early 1840s comes to mind. Born on the playing
fields of Eton and Cambridge, it loosely grouped together an aristocratic
membership - George Smythe, Lord John Manners, Henry Hope, Alexander Baillie-Cochrane,
but most notably, Benjamin Disraeli.
To gain a wider audience these gentlemen were obliged to appear indifferent
to their own class interests. Nostalgically they put the case for a rural
idyll of snug hamlets, independent artisans and upright yeomen farmers.
Everyone has their place and everyone knows their place: “The rich man
in his castle, the poor man by his gate.”
Even in our times protests against the damage wrought by capitalism can
go hand in hand with barely concealed plans for a return to the feudal
past. Edward Goldsmith, uncle of Zac, argues for cutting the population
by 50%, repatriating immigrants … and establishing a green social order
based on the patriarchal family, small-scale communities and something
resembling the Indian caste system.
Young England had not the least interest in, or wish for, demoracy. Dreamy
poems lauded absolute monarchy and the medieval church, along with benevolent
alms-giving to the poor - patronising sentiments which were the subject
of much wicked mockery at the time. Young England accused industrialists
of subordinating all moral scruples to the balance sheet. Utilitarianism
excused greed. The rich and powerful had abdicated their responsibilities
to the weak and vulnerable. Capitalism threatened to destroy everything
tried and tested, everything sacrosanct, everything that rooted people
in the well-regulated soil of past generations.
Unless halted, such vandalism, it was darkly prophesised, would inexorably
lead to a revolutionary explosion and plunge the country into unimaginable
chaos. Memories of 1789 and Jacobinism were seared onto ruling class brains.
Swift action had to be taken to rescue what little remained of the national
heritage - historical monuments, ancient woodlands and time-honoured rural
ways.
We hear the same old tune from the Countryside Alliance - a melange of
aristocratic landowners, plebeian retainers and the rightwing of the middle
classes. Foxhunting is dressed up in the garb of timeless tradition; the
2004 Hunting Act condemned as the politics of townie envy and Blairite
opportunism.
Reality is different. Those who run the Countryside Alliance - ermined
Labour supporters included - are the very people responsible for degrading
rural Britain. They ripped up the hedgerows. They are addicted to state
handouts and subsidies. They preside over and profit from monoculture
and the wanton use of chemicals.
The origins of our denatured system of agriculture lie in the enclosure
acts of the 17th and 18th century which expropriated the mass of Britain’s
peasant farmers. Huge tracts of moorland were turned over to killing ‘wildlife’:
grouse, partridge and fatted deer. An aristocratic playground. A small
army of gamekeepers were employed to keep out the hoy poloy. Wolf, polecat,
eagle, hawk and otter were all categorised as vermin and systematically
exterminated. Foxhunting was invented only in the 19th century. Horses
and dogs had by then been bred to the point where they had the speed and
stamina needed to chase foxes down to a kill.
Today 0.28% of families own 64% of the land in Britain. Hunting foxes
symbolises that landed wealth, class domination and inherited privilege.
Here is what the Countryside Alliance’s rural values amount to. This is
what they want to conserve.
Monopoly capitalism
There are pale greens who unapologetically promote monopoly capitalism.
A small clique; but well connected and therefore disproportionately influential.
Jonathon Porritt’s book Capitalism, as if the world matters (2005)
serves as a kind of manifesto. Porritt is the government’s chief adviser
on the environment and a friend and confidant of Charles Windsor. His
undeservedly acclaimed, intellectually threadbare solution to the planet’s
mounting ecological problems is to legally, financially and linguistically
repackage capitalism - “the only real economic game in town”.
With the dawning light of liberal governance and long-term corporate
self-interest spreading across the face of the globe, Porritt’s greened
capitalism proceeds to deliver a sustainable and prosperous living for
all. Wishful thinking. Either that or smoke and mirrors.
Ecological responsibility and egalitarianism cannot replace accumulation
for its own sake as the ruling criterion of success and the mainspring
of capital’s laws of motion. Capitalism presupposes exploitation and uneven
development. For Marxists, ABC. Imperialism is declining capitalism reinforced
by direct military force, a system which ensures the structural oppression
of the vast majority of humanity by the core countries, today first and
foremost the USA. While such a global pecking order remains in place -
whether dominated by Britain, the USA or the EU - poverty is inevitable.
Equality while capitalism lasts is therefore chimerical.
In 1996 Porritt and Sara Parkin founded the Forum for the Future. After
a simmering civil war they had both resigned from the Green Party’s executive,
just a few weeks prior to the 1992 autumn conference. A well-healed charity
- 60 staff and an annual income of £4 million - Forum for the Future has
singlemindedly courted big business and its chequebooks. It is not a one-way
street though. Forum for the Future magnanimously bestows green credentials
and translates sustainable development into the language of share price,
cash flow, cost-cutting, efficiency and profit - and vice versa.
The Forum’s 50-plus corporate sponsors and partners have, we are reassuringly
told, a “proven commitment” to the environment.3
Only the naive will be surprised to learn that listed amongst the virtuous
are: BP, ICI, Calor Gas, GlaxoSmithKline, J Sainsbury, Royal Bank of Scotland,
Unilever, Wessex Water, Barclays plc, Cadbury Schweppes, Philips Electronics,
Marks and Spencer, Tetley Group, etc, etc.
Obviously, being green is considered good public relations and therefore
good business. Saving on inputs such as energy and other raw materials
can certainly be marketed in a way that enhances green credentials. Motivated
not by the intrinsic capitalist drive to minimise costs, but worries about
the environment.
Green taxes, emissions trading and CO2
sequestration all chime with manufactured public opinion. However, these
green capitalist panaceas legitimise pollution, favour the most powerful
concentrations of capital, threaten to pass on additional costs to the
consumer or simply lead to offloading dirty industries to less developed
parts of the world.
Old technologies can be abandoned or superseded, but individual capitalists
personify, are in thrall to, a mode of production which relies on constant
growth. Hence they go to any lengths to find novel ways to pass through
the eye of awkward laws. In the words of Marx’s Grundrisse, all
limits placed on the growth of capital turn out to be a “barrier to be
overcome”.4 Money
is certainly used to purchase state guardians, to open up loopholes and,
failing that, to bulldoze down legislation ... essentially allowing the
fundamental laws of capital to reassert themselves.
Capital aims to expand capital. Not cherish the environment or promote
human wellbeing. Neoliberalism exacerbates what is a general characteristic.
Capital and state interweave as never before. Corruption becomes institutionalised,
normalised and, except in its most overt forms, nowadays goes hardly noticed.
Environmental regulations are not only subject to outrageous abuse and
constant string-pulling. Governments are also quite willing to slough
them off if sufficient pressure is applied or the bribes are lucrative
enough - the US plutocracy being an obvious case in point.
Since September 11 2001, the Bush administration has serially invoked
‘national security’ to justify the abandonment of environmental protection
measures, including granting permission for drilling oil in wildlife refuges.
Richard Nixon’s environmental chief, Russell Train, voiced rightwing
outrage: “I think this administration is not a conservative administration.
I think it’s a radical administration. It represents a radical rollback
of environmental policy going back to a period many, many years ago. It’s
backward”.5
Blind to the systemic decline of ‘actually existing’ capitalism - all
too visible to the trained eye - Forum for the Future holds out the entirely
spurious prospect of finance capital - one of Porritt’s so-called five
capitals - “giving value” not just to industrial capital, but “social,
human and natural capital” too. But lions do not lie down with lambs.
They devour them.
Legally trained proponents of green capitalism seriously - at least according
to their own warped precepts - want to extend property rights to cover
almost every conceivable use-value, including the very air we breath.
Their crazy notion is that this would stop exploitation. History,
to put it mildly, fails to support such a contention. Capital treats what
is bought and sold, what is property, in a purely instrumental (slave-like)
fashion. Necessarily that entails mistreatment as a means to an
end. Labour is thereby exploited. So too is nature.
Do the innate laws of capital mean that the system cannot partially curb
its metabolic appetite and moderate its behaviour? Of course, it can.
Capitalism as a total system has never moved according to the exclusive
interests of capital. There exists another ought. There is the political
economy which constantly pushes in the opposite direction. There is the
class struggle conducted by workers and, nowadays, an emerging socialism.
History is stacking up more and more examples not only of capitalist
decay, but of the becoming of socialism: legal restrictions on working
hours, universal suffrage, compulsory primary and secondary education,
free health provision, unemployment and housing benefit, clean air acts,
health and safety, countryside access, public transport, minimum pay levels,
etc - all negative anticipations, because socialism is emerging within,
remains unseperated from, capitalism. It is what Hegel called a “double
determination” which is both “being and nothingness”.6
Unsurprisingly, all such state-enforced measures cause their own problems:
a hybrid system is a malfunctioning system. As incisively explained by
Hillel Ticktin, the law of value and state organisation interfere
with the workings of each other; they “conflict”, and produce completely
irrational results.7 Chronic waste, ballooning and alienating
bureaucracy, a stream of time-consuming and essentially meaningless tick-box
targets.
Capital limits its inherent drive to maximise exploitation, not least,
given our present line of discussion, the exploitation of nature, for
one overriding reason: self-preservation. But attempts to organise what
is decay actually compound existing contradictions and add new ones besides.
The system becomes uncontrollable even for its controllers; hence the
greater likelihood of nature suddenly exacting revenge.
Critiques
Prostituted apologetics of the type coming from the Forum for the Future
notwithstanding, there are those greens who offer forthright critiques
of monopoly capitalism. Overconsumption, third world indebtedness, advertising
and the degradation of nature are all subjected to snarling polemic and
on occasion biting analysis. Many radical ecological theorists fondly
cite Gerald Winstanley, William Morris and Peter Kropotkin and their spicy
inspiration. Others prefer the milder flavours of St Francis of Assisi,
Leo Tolstoy and Mahatma Gandhi.
Obviously, anti-capitalism is a many-headed beast. Before examining the
deep greens, I shall briefly discuss Ernst Schumacher, George Monbiot
and Murray Bookchin. Between the three of them they cover the spectrum
of ecological thought that stretches from green christianity by way of
neo-Proudhonism to social anarchism. Besides a burning desire for global
change, the thread that joins them is that small is beautiful.
The future must be non-capitalist, but also decentralised, self-reliant
and non-hierarchical. However, the social agent capable of bringing about
such an outcome remains totally unconvincing in each account. For Schumacher
it is enlightened aid workers and third world bureaucrats. Monbiot talks
of collective action by “poor countries”, while Bookchin looks to “libertarian
municipalism”. All shrink from the necessary task of organising the working
class into a revolutionary party.
Ernst Schumacher (1911-1977) considered unrestrained industrialisation
to be the cause of “unlimited sorrows”, especially in the former colonial
countries. Schumacher advocated ‘appropriate technology’ and criticised
the ‘bigger is better’ ethos characteristic of the 1950s-60s long boom.
He located this ethos not in the concentration of capital enforced under
circumstances of a declining system, rather in six leading ideas inherited
from the 19th century.
These were: Darwinism and “natural selection”; the “idea of competition”
and “the survival of the fittest”; Marx’s observation that all “higher
manifestations” of human life - religion, philosophy, art, etc - are nothing
but “necessary supplements of the material life process”; the “Freudian
interpretation which reduces human life to “the dark stirrings of the
human subconscious”; relativism and “denying all absolutes”; positivism
and the claim that “no knowledge is valid unless it is based on generally
observable facts” and therefore denies the possibility of objective knowledge
of purpose and meaning.8
These ideas, which “claimed to do away with metaphysics,” were in fact,
intoned Schumacher, “bad metaphysics and bad ethics”.9
Bundling together natural selection and historical materialism with positivism
and scientism is not as absurd as might first appear. Ideologically the
post-World War II period was under the hypnotic spell of positivism -
the official ‘Marxism’ of the Stalinites on the one side and social democracy
and mainstream liberalism on the other. In both cold war camps the seductive
promise was made that technological Promethianism would soon shrink
necessary working time to somewhere near zero, while simultaneously delivering
unimaginable abundance. During the 1950s both John Kenneth Galbraith and
Nikita Khrushchev heralded the leisure society. As it turned out, a permanently
delayed utopia.
Though manifestly failing to locate the real causes, Schumacher exposed
the anti-ecological results of both capitalist and Stalinite development
to full public gaze. As an alternative he famously opted for what he called
‘buddhist economics’ (though he himself converted to catholicism). His
model was post-independence Burma. Enough said.
A regular columnist on The Guardian, George Monbiot has issued
a bold rallying cry for a “democratic revolution.” His case is fully elaborated
in The age of consent (2003), which skilfully reveals the
inner workings of the “global dictatorship of vested interests”. Clearly
a welcome revolt against 21st century capitalism; but just as clearly
a reinvention of pre-Marxist utopian socialism.
Monbiot wants to “harness” globalisation in order to eventually extinguish
capitalism. Down the road of his democratic revolution, when at last some
preset programmatic milepost is reached, the transnationals will finally
be broken up and production radically decentralised. Once a confirmed
localist, he now espouses globalism - at least in terms of strategy. His
democratic revolution begins at the global level.
Anarchism and green capitalism are rightly rejected. But Monbiot suffers
from what can only be described as a Pavlovian reaction when it comes
to Karl Marx. To use a phrase, he sees red. The merest mention of Marxism
sends his brain into delirium. Monbiot runs around in ridiculous circles,
yappingly blaming Marx for Stalin’s gulags, Maoism and Pol Pot. Bureaucratic
socialism is put down to the Communist manifesto. His “pathological”
Stowe public school education seems to have conditioned him all too well.10
Monbiot has generously gone to the trouble of drawing up a detailed blueprint
for tomorrow’s world. There will be a 600-seat global parliament - one
MP for every 10 million people. Parliamentary voting will be weighed according
to a sliding democratic scale - once again courtesy of our clever friend.
However, the authority of his body would be purely moral. National states
continue to exist. It is just that they would now be under pressure to
do the right thing. The world ‘government’ would have no law courts, no
army. Nonetheless, a fair trade organisation ensures that transnationals
retract the claws of exploitation and bend to popular environmental causes.
How such a one person-one vote global institution is supposed to arise
while national states and the transnationals still constitute the ruling
global power is lightly skated over. Does anyone really expect the US
administration to facilitate its citizenry voting in Monbiot’s elections?
Would Washington shoulder the considerable costs involved? And what of
China, Iran and North Korea? Though Monbiot gives a passing nod in the
direction of existing campaigning organisations, his elaborate schema
is built on nothing more substantial than the clouds of fantasy.
Bookchin presents a much more rigorous, far more satisfying account.
Describing himself as a libertarian communist - a former official communist
and former Trotskyite - he has always taken theory seriously. His impressive
body of work contains much that is valuable.
Bookchin particularly targets domination and hierarchy in class society.
This has produced humanity’s imbalance with nature. He has no time for
pro-capitalist greenism, overpopulation panics or technophobia - all have
inbuilt reactionary implications. A progressive social revolution is needed.
Bookchin’s unwillingness to embrace the means, the revolutionary party,
is perfectly understandable, especially given his location in the US radical
milieu. The leftwing sects which commonly pass themselves off as parties,
even those which more modestly say they aspire to that aim, pathetically
reproduce the structures and much of the attending egotism of capitalism
itself. Central committees behave as boards of directors, the rank and
file are treated as mere speaking tools. Then there are the proprietorial
general secretaries.
Fleeing from this madness, Bookchin finds refuge in little communes,
municipalities, which consist to begin with of a putative hardcore cadre.
Somehow these bacillus survive within the decaying body of capitalist
society and steadily grow into organs of dual power.
Momentarily suspending our disbelief at the chances of this happening,
we are still left with a fundamental problem. If for some reason these
households managed not to succumb to the antibodies of coercion,
the pressures and the lures of capitalist society, no matter how powerful
they became, would mean they still come to grief. By their very nature
they would articulate sectional, not universal, interests and therefore
quickly fall into bickering rivalry. The fate of soviets as soviets. Without
the coordination, discipline and theory provided by the highest form of
working class organisation, that is bound to happen.
Deep greens
Schumacher, Monbiot and Bookchin are clearly motivated by a heartfelt
desire to improve the lot of the world’s population. That cannot be so
readily said of deep greens. Yes, they savage consumerism, industrial
effluent, monocrop agriculture and the whole cult of economic growth.
However, for them, the adverse effects all of this has on humanity is
secondary. Nature comes first. We have many responsibilities to nature,
but few definite claims on it.
Arne Naess, the Norwegian mountineer and sage, began laying the theoretical
foundations as far back as the early 1950s - at least to the degree that
deep greenism can be considered a theory. He attacked the short-termism,
the irrationality of neo-classical economics and sought to displace anthropocentric
modes of thinking with what he and his followers call biocentrism.
Anthropocentrism - which I take as meaning that humans alone have intrinsic
value - dates back, he argues, to the Neolithic revolution, around 10,000
years ago. The adoption of anthropocentric modes of thought is collectively
remembered in the story of Yehovah’s expulsion of Adam and Eve from the
garden of Eden and other such myths.
The long and the short of it is that once human beings stopped venerating
nature and started to treat it as a thing to be subdued, fit only for
exploitation, then they fell from grace and condemned themselves to the
endless drudgery of labour. Civilization thereby becomes a terrible mistake,
a dangerous detour. Suffice to say, deep greenism lacks anything resembling
an adequate account of history.
Deep greenism amounts to a retrogressive plea for humanity to adapt to
nature, to give up on all hope of progressive social change and return
to a lost innocence of childhood. But just as no adult can perform such
a feat, nor can the human species. The door to the past is permanently
closed. The only door open to us is to the future.
According to Naess there is no moral hierarchy of life. He rejected all
paradigms whereby species are ranked according to whether they have a
soul or posses consciousness. Naess says, “the right of all forms [of
life] to live is a universal right which cannot be quantified. No single
species of living being has more of this particular right to live and
unfold than any other species”.11
This is not the self-denying ordinance it might first appear to be. Despite
the insistence on non-hierarchy, elementary biological necessities have
to be recognised. “Except to satisfy vital human needs” there is no sanction
to kill. But there is a “vital human need” for food that must be constantly
satisfied. People have to consume fellow life forms … and thankfully they
can do so with the sanction of the deep greens. In point of fact there
is a deep green macho minority which actually revels in hunting, shooting
and fishing as a means of rediscovering their natural human essence -
nature being red in tooth and claw.
Meanwhile, socially orientated deep greens energetically campaign against
third world debt, motorways, waste incinerators, nuclear power, climate
change … and blood sports. A direct action aristocracy live out the ideal
as eco-warriors, travelling from squat to squat and from protest to protest.
Nor is Aids viewed neutrally, as another wonderful addition to life’s
rich tapestry. It should be fought, and if at all possible, eliminated.
Yet sadly, revealingly, there are a few prominent deep greens who gleefully
welcome the HIV/Aids virus. Celebrating authenticity, fragility and destiny,
these ecobrutalists decry anti-Aids drugs and the entire health infrastruture.
Nature knows best. Via the Aids pandemic, alienated humanity is being
culled. When that task is finally completed deep green survivalists inherit
the earth.
Almost in the same culpable spirit one finds green thinkers of the stature
of James Lovelock expressing a scornful disregard for fellow human beings:
“Our humanist solicitude towards the poor living in the impoverished suburbs
of the big cities of the third world, and our almost obscene obsession
with death, suffering and pain - as if these were harmful in themselves
- all these thoughts deflect our attention from the problem of our harsh
and excessive domination of the natural world”.12
Most deep greens disavow such overt examples of misanthorphy. They simply
refuse to put humans above nature, both being accorded equal rights. Either
way, paradoxically, all such viewpoints smack of anthropomorphism. Nature
is given human attibutes. Hence we find the American naturalist Aldo Leonard
telling us to “think like a mountain” and Christopher Stone asking “do
trees have rights?” A rhetorical question. Forests, mountains and other
natural objects should be given the same legal status as corporations,
he suggests.13
Nature exists objectively, but right, like politics, art and morality,
is obviously a human construct. Nor does nature, as nature, have interests.
Human beings have an interest in nature, its preservation, its variety,
its health - because nature supports human life and enhances humanity
materially, culturally and spiritually.
Biocentrism, to state another obvious truth, is a human-created ideology.
If it means recognising that humans are part of nature - the uniquely
conscious part - that human society should cease fetishistically worshipping
production, that we should start looking after nature by first reordering
arrangements between ourselves, then no communist would disagree. We call
it Marxism. On the other hand, if biocentrism means placing the interests
of humanity against nature, diminishing the human and depicting it as
a malignant cancer, then we must disagree.
Deep greenism comes ‘unencumbered’ by a fully debated and democratically
agreed programme. It is a loose conglomeration and ideologically very
pick and mix. Deep greenism often blurs over into New Ageism and its self-realisation
and lifestyle obsessions. Consequentially deep greens are prone to navel-gazing
individualism and to falling under the spell of charismatic charlatans.
Exponents frequently hold completely juxtaposed positions and easily lurch
from elation to despair and vice-versa.
One celebrated exponent of deep green irrationalism is the physicist
Fritjof Capra, founding director of the Center for Ecoliteracy in Berkeley,
USA. According to his official website, he “frequently gives management
seminars for top executives”.14 After touring Germany in the early
1980s, Capra co-authored Green politics (1984) with ecofeminist
Charlene Spretnak. In The tao of physics (1975) and later books
such as The web of life (1996) and The hidden connections (2002)
he details why he believes physics and metaphysics are both inexorably
leading to the same stunning conclusion: “there are hidden connections
between everything”.15
As is standard deep green fare, Capra dismisses as outdated the mechanical
‘Cartesian-Newtonian paradigm’; in justification he cites 20th century
developments in sub-atomic physics and systems theory. But instead of
taking on board the scientific theory of Marxism, he calls for a delving
back to the truths that can be discovered in the ancient eastern outlook
- ie, hinduism, buddhism and taoism - which maintain a mystical holism.
Of course, the truths Capra finds in these religions/philosophies are
a primitive form of dialectics.
Take Loa Tzu, the 6th century BC Chinese teacher and thinker. Brilliantly,
he grasped the fact that all things are changing and changing into their
opposites; they do so by following their own natural way (toa).
Loa Tzu eschewed the gods and instead emphasised the unity of nature.
Humanity must learn to quietly accept its laws. Other deep greens find
similar truths in classical Greece. Heraclitus (circa 544-483 BC) also
said that there is nothing certain in the world except change. He too
concluded that things turn into their opposites. Properties of the real
world were captured in the minds of these outstanding philosophers and
turned into various modes of dialectical expression.
Deep greens believe they have discovered the highway to social transformation
through mentally shunning western scientism and embracing what they consider
to be the esoteric secrets of ancient wisdom. Others, society at large,
are urged to follow their individual path to enlightenment.
Primitive dialectics is one-sided. Developed by members of the exploiting
classes, specifically those isolated intellectuals who possessed the free
time needed to study, contemplate and debate. However, their dialectics
were quietist, a means of interpreting, not decisively engaging with the
world. That was the great advance brought about by the Marx-Engels team.
Marxism is the world outlook of the revolutionary working class.
Taking the best from previous philosophies, Marxism continues, but leaves
behind, philosophy. Marxism is quintessentially practice; investigation
is for the purposes of overthrowing all existing social conditions through
uninterruptedly pursuing the class war.
The political economy of the working class points far beyond the narrow
confines of mere trade unionism. It is based on need. A few hours off
the working week here, a bit more pay at the end of the month there, cannot
remotely satisfy the constantly expanding needs of the working class.
The working class needs to become fully human. That necessitates
establishing genuinely human relationships within society and, through
that, a human relationship with nature.
So the only consistent defender of nature is the working class.
Every other social agent is illusory. Nothing else can conceivably organise
itself into an alternative material force capable of positively
transcending capital. To be ecological, therefore, requires more than
being anti-capitalist. It is necessary to be a partisan of the working
class, an undiluted red, a Marxist.
1. policy.greenparty.org.uk/mfss/economy.html.
2. R Harris (ed) The collected speeches of Margaret Thatcher London
1997, p341.
3. www.forumforthefuture.org.uk.
4. K Marx and F Engels CW Vol 28, Moscow 1986, p335.
5. Quoted in www.wilderness.org/Library/Documents/BushRecord.cfm.
6. AV Miller (trans) Hegel’s science of logic New York 1999, p105.
7. Weekly Worker October 13 2005.
8. EF Schumacher Small is beautiful London 1993, pp68-69.
9. ibid p72.
10. www.thisislimitededition.co.uk/item.asp?category=People&ID=408.
11. Quoted in wikipedia.org/wiki/Deep_Ecology.
12. Quoted in www.dsp.org.au/dsp/ECS/Chapter4.htm.
13. See CD Stone Should trees have standing? Los Angeles 1974.
14. www.fritjofcapra.net.
15. wikipedia.org/wiki/Fritjof_Capra.
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