Further exploration of social revolution as the solution, to the apparent 
exclusion of technology including GE, by influential Naomi Klein.
"...there is still time to avoid catastrophic warming, but not within the rules 
of capitalism as they are currently constructed."
While I might agree that a revolution (in thinking and behaviour) is needed, in 
my opinion social revolution minus technology revolution still equals f**ked.
Greg

Published on Tuesday, October 29, 2013 by New Statesman
How Science Is Telling Us All To Revolt
by Naomi Klein
In December 2012, a pink-haired complex systems researcher named Brad Werner 
made his way through the throng of 24,000 earth and space scientists at the 
Fall Meeting of the American Geophysical Union, held annually in San Francisco. 
This year’s conference had some big-name participants, from Ed Stone of Nasa’s 
Voyager project, explaining a new milestone on the path to interstellar space, 
to the film-maker James Cameron, discussing his adventures in deep-sea 
submersibles.
But it was Werner’s own session that was attracting much of the buzz. It was 
titled “Is Earth F**ked?” (full title: “Is Earth F**ked? Dynamical Futility of 
Global Environmental Management and Possibilities for Sustainability via Direct 
Action Activism”).
What scientists and experts are saying, says Klein, is "that there is still 
time to avoid catastrophic warming, but not within the rules of capitalism as 
they are currently constructed. Which may be the best argument we have ever had 
for changing those rules."
Standing at the front of the conference room, the geophysicist from the 
University of California, San Diego walked the crowd through the advanced 
computer model he was using to answer that question. He talked about system 
boundaries, perturbations, dissipation, attractors, bifurcations and a whole 
bunch of other stuff largely incomprehensible to those of us uninitiated in 
complex systems theory. But the bottom line was clear enough: global capitalism 
has made the depletion of resources so rapid, convenient and barrier-free that 
“earth-human systems” are becoming dangerously unstable in response. When 
pressed by a journalist for a clear answer on the “are we f**ked” question, 
Werner set the jargon aside and replied, “More or less."
There was one dynamic in the model, however, that offered some hope. Werner 
termed it “resistance” – movements of “people or groups of people” who “adopt a 
certain set of dynamics that does not fit within the capitalist culture”. 
According to the abstract for his presentation, this includes “environmental 
direct action, resistance taken from outside the dominant culture, as in 
protests, blockades and sabotage by indigenous peoples, workers, anarchists and 
other activist groups”.
Serious scientific gatherings don’t usually feature calls for mass political 
resistance, much less direct action and sabotage. But then again, Werner wasn’t 
exactly calling for those things. He was merely observing that mass uprisings 
of people – along the lines of the abolition movement, the civil rights 
movement or Occupy Wall Street – represent the likeliest source of “friction” 
to slow down an economic machine that is careening out of control. We know that 
past social movements have “had tremendous influence on . . . how the dominant 
culture evolved”, he pointed out. So it stands to reason that, “if we’re 
thinking about the future of the earth, and the future of our coupling to the 
environment, we have to include resistance as part of that dynamics”. And that, 
Werner argued, is not a matter of opinion, but “really a geophysics problem”.
Plenty of scientists have been moved by their research findings to take action 
in the streets. Physicists, astronomers, medical doctors and biologists have 
been at the forefront of movements against nuclear weapons, nuclear power, war, 
chemical contamination and creationism. And in November 2012, Nature published 
a commentary by the financier and environmental philanthropist Jeremy Grantham 
urging scientists to join this tradition and “be arrested if necessary”, 
because climate change “is not only the crisis of your lives – it is also the 
crisis of our species’ existence”.
Some scientists need no convincing. The godfather of modern climate science, 
James Hansen, is a formidable activist, having been arrested some half-dozen 
times for resisting mountain-top removal coal mining and tar sands pipelines 
(he even left his job at Nasa this year in part to have more time for 
campaigning). Two years ago, when I was arrested outside the White House at a 
mass action against the Keystone XL tar sands pipeline, one of the 166 people 
in cuffs that day was a glaciologist named Jason Box, a world-renowned expert 
on Greenland’s melting ice sheet.
“I couldn’t maintain my self-respect if I didn’t go,” Box said at the time, 
adding that “just voting doesn’t seem to be enough in this case. I need to be a 
citizen also.”
This is laudable, but what Werner is doing with his modelling is different. He 
isn’t saying that his research drove him to take action to stop a particular 
policy; he is saying that his research shows that our entire economic paradigm 
is a threat to ecological stability. And indeed that challenging this economic 
paradigm – through mass-movement counter-pressure – is humanity’s best shot at 
avoiding catastrophe.
That’s heavy stuff. But he’s not alone. Werner is part of a small but 
increasingly influential group of scientists whose research into the 
destabilisation of natural systems – particularly the climate system – is 
leading them to similarly transformative, even revolutionary, conclusions. And 
for any closet revolutionary who has ever dreamed of overthrowing the present 
economic order in favour of one a little less likely to cause Italian 
pensioners to hang themselves in their homes, this work should be of particular 
interest. Because it makes the ditching of that cruel system in favour of 
something new (and perhaps, with lots of work, better) no longer a matter of 
mere ideological preference but rather one of species-wide existential 
necessity.
Leading the pack of these new scientific revolutionaries is one of Britain’s 
top climate experts, Kevin Anderson, the deputy director of the Tyndall Centre 
for Climate Change Research, which has quickly established itself as one of the 
UK’s premier climate research institutions. Addressing everyone from the 
Department for International Development to Manchester City Council, Anderson 
has spent more than a decade patiently translating the implications of the 
latest climate science to politicians, economists and campaigners. In clear and 
understandable language, he lays out a rigorous road map for emissions 
reduction, one that provides a decent shot at keeping global temperature rise 
below 2° Celsius, a target that most governments have determined would stave 
off catastrophe.
"The fact that the business-as-usual pursuit of profits and growth is 
destabilising life on earth is no longer something we need to read about in 
scientific journals. The early signs are unfolding before our eyes."
But in recent years Anderson’s papers and slide shows have become more 
alarming. Under titles such as “Climate Change: Going Beyond Dangerous . . . 
Brutal Numbers and Tenuous Hope”, he points out that the chances of staying 
within anything like safe temperature levels are diminishing fast.
With his colleague Alice Bows, a climate mitigation expert at the Tyndall 
Centre, Anderson points out that we have lost so much time to political 
stalling and weak climate policies – all while global consumption (and 
emissions) ballooned – that we are now facing cuts so drastic that they 
challenge the fundamental logic of prioritising GDP growth above all else.
Anderson and Bows inform us that the often-cited long-term mitigation target – 
an 80 per cent emissions cut below 1990 levels by 2050 – has been selected 
purely for reasons of political expediency and has “no scientific basis”. 
That’s because climate impacts come not just from what we emit today and 
tomorrow, but from the cumulative emissions that build up in the atmosphere 
over time. And they warn that by focusing on targets three and a half decades 
into the future – rather than on what we can do to cut carbon sharply and 
immediately – there is a serious risk that we will allow our emissions to 
continue to soar for years to come, thereby blowing through far too much of our 
2° “carbon budget” and putting ourselves in an impossible position later in the 
century.
Which is why Anderson and Bows argue that, if the governments of developed 
countries are serious about hitting the agreedupon international target of 
keeping warming below 2° Celsius, and if reductions are to respect any kind of 
equity principle (basically that the countries that have been spewing carbon 
for the better part of two centuries need to cut before the countries where 
more than a billion people still don’t have electricity), then the reductions 
need to be a lot deeper, and they need to come a lot sooner.
To have even a 50/50 chance of hitting the 2° target (which, they and many 
others warn, already involves facing an array of hugely damaging climate 
impacts), the industrialised countries need to start cutting their 
greenhouse-gas emissions by something like 10 per cent a year – and they need 
to start right now. But Anderson and Bows go further, pointing out that this 
target cannot be met with the array of modest carbonpricing or green-tech 
solutions usually advocated by big green groups. These measures will certainly 
help, to be sure, but they are simply not enough: a 10 per cent drop in 
emissions, year after year, is virtually unprecedented since we started 
powering our economies with coal. In fact, cuts above 1 per cent per year “have 
historically been associated only with economic recession or upheaval”, as the 
economist Nicholas Stern put it in his 2006 report for the British government.
 Even after the Soviet Union collapsed, reductions of this duration and depth 
did not happen (the former Soviet countries experienced average annual 
reductions of roughly 5 per cent over a period of ten years). They did not 
happen after Wall Street crashed in 2008 (wealthy countries experienced about a 
7 per cent drop between 2008 and 2009, but their CO2 emissions rebounded with 
gusto in 2010 and emissions in China and India had continued to rise). Only in 
the immediate aftermath of the great market crash of 1929 did the United 
States, for instance, see emissions drop for several consecutive years by more 
than 10 per cent annually, according to historical data from the Carbon Dioxide 
Information Analysis Centre. But that was the worst economic crisis of modern 
times.
If we are to avoid that kind of carnage while meeting our science-based 
emissions targets, carbon reduction must be managed carefully through what 
Anderson and Bows describe as “radical and immediate de-growth strategies in 
the US, EU and other wealthy nations”. Which is fine, except that we happen to 
have an economic system that fetishises GDP growth above all else, regardless 
of the human or ecological consequences, and in which the neoliberal political 
class has utterly abdicated its responsibility to manage anything (since the 
market is the invisible genius to which everything must be entrusted).
So what Anderson and Bows are really saying is that there is still time to 
avoid catastrophic warming, but not within the rules of capitalism as they are 
currently constructed. Which may be the best argument we have ever had for 
changing those rules.
In a 2012 essay that appeared in the influential scientific journal Nature 
Climate Change, Anderson and Bows laid down something of a gauntlet, accusing 
many of their fellow scientists of failing to come clean about the kind of 
changes that climate change demands of humanity. On this it is worth quoting 
the pair at length:
 . . . in developing emission scenarios scientists repeatedly and severely 
underplay the implications of their analyses. When it comes to avoiding a 2°C 
rise, “impossible” is translated into “difficult but doable”, whereas “urgent 
and radical” emerge as “challenging” – all to appease the god of economics (or, 
more precisely, finance). For example, to avoid exceeding the maximum rate of 
emission reduction dictated by economists, “impossibly” early peaks in 
emissions are assumed, together with naive notions about “big” engineering and 
the deployment rates of low-carbon infrastructure. More disturbingly, as 
emissions budgets dwindle, so geoengineering is increasingly proposed to ensure 
that the diktat of economists remains unquestioned.
In other words, in order to appear reasonable within neoliberal economic 
circles, scientists have been dramatically soft-peddling the implications of 
their research. By August 2013, Anderson was willing to be even more blunt, 
writing that the boat had sailed on gradual change. “Perhaps at the time of the 
1992 Earth Summit, or even at the turn of the millennium, 2°C levels of 
mitigation could have been achieved through significant evolutionary changes 
within the political and economic hegemony. But climate change is a cumulative 
issue! Now, in 2013, we in high-emitting (post-)industrial nations face a very 
different prospect. Our ongoing and collective carbon profligacy has squandered 
any opportunity for the ‘evolutionary change’ afforded by our earlier (and 
larger) 2°C carbon budget. Today, after two decades of bluff and lies, the 
remaining 2°C budget demandsrevolutionary change to the political and economic 
hegemony” (his emphasis).
We probably shouldn’t be surprised that some climate scientists are a little 
spooked by the radical implications of even their own research. Most of them 
were just quietly doing their work measuring ice cores, running global climate 
models and studying ocean acidification, only to discover, as the Australian 
climate expert and author Clive Hamilton puts it, that they “were unwittingly 
destabilising the political and social order”.
But there are many people who are well aware of the revolutionary nature of 
climate science. It’s why some of the governments that decided to chuck their 
climate commitments in favour of digging up more carbon have had to find ever 
more thuggish ways to silence and intimidate their nations’ scientists. In 
Britain, this strategy is becoming more overt, with Ian Boyd, the chief 
scientific adviser at the Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs, 
writing recently that scientists should avoid “suggesting that policies are 
either right or wrong” and should express their views “by working with embedded 
advisers (such as myself), and by being the voice of reason, rather than 
dissent, in the public arena”.
If you want to know where this leads, check out what’s happening in Canada, 
where I live. The Conservative government of Stephen Harper has done such an 
effective job of gagging scientists and shutting down critical research 
projects that, in July 2012, a couple thousand scientists and supporters held a 
mock-funeral on Parliament Hill in Ottawa, mourning “the death of evidence”. 
Their placards said, “No Science, No Evidence, No Truth”.
But the truth is getting out anyway. The fact that the business-as-usual 
pursuit of profits and growth is destabilising life on earth is no longer 
something we need to read about in scientific journals. The early signs are 
unfolding before our eyes. And increasing numbers of us are responding 
accordingly: blockading fracking activity in Balcombe; interfering with Arctic 
drilling preparations in Russian waters (at tremendous personal cost); taking 
tar sands operators to court for violating indigenous sovereignty; and 
countless other acts of resistance large and small. In Brad Werner’s computer 
model, this is the “friction” needed to slow down the forces of 
destabilisation; the great climate campaigner Bill McKibben calls it the 
“antibodies” rising up to fight the planet’s “spiking fever”.

It’s not a revolution, but it’s a start. And it might just buy us enough time 
to figure out a way to live on this planet that is distinctly less f**ked.

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