http://www.countercurrents.org/ewoldt120411.htm

<http://www.countercurrents.org/ewoldt120411.htm>

Monbiot Goes Strangelove

*By Dave Ewoldt*

12 April, 2011
*Natural Systems
Solutions*<http://naturalsystems.blogspot.com/2011/04/monbiot-goes-strangelove.html>

A number of people have already commented on environmental writer George
Monbiot's recent coming-out for the captains of industry with his fresh and
exciting love affair with nuclear energy. So, I don't want this to seem like
piling on, but this issue isn't going to go away as long as we (Western
industrial humans) continue to cling to the growth myth, or even continue
with the assumptions that "economic recovery," "increasing energy demands"
and a "return to normal" are even in our best interests--either short or
long term.

In his article, *Seven Double
Standards*<http://www.monbiot.com/2011/03/31/seven-double-standards/>
,
Monbiot starts by asking why we don't hold other forms of energy to the same
standard we're trying to impose on nuclear. So, let me start by giving the
short answer--because they don't produce thousands of tons of radioactive
waste for which we still don't have a feasible method of disposal. Low level
radiation is not the issue. While most of his seven points are good ones,
especially why we unquestioningly accept deaths as a matter of course in the
coal industry, they are mainly a distraction from the questions we should be
asking.

Monbiot is within the environmental majority in seeing the benefits of
greatly reducing our overall ecofootprint. I believe he genuinely cares
about the welfare and well-being of people, other species, and Earth itself
both now and for the future. He believes that anthropogenic global warming
and the reasonable probability for disastrous consequences accurately
describes reality and that the status quo response is wholly inadequate.

But, like so many others today, he frames his response to life threatening
crises in the terms and with the assumptions of the dominate paradigm that
created these crises.
It is taken as a given that human ingenuity will rescue us and we can go on
with livin' large in a green economy using clean renewable energy--never
mind those pesky little concepts like entropy, conservation, and finitude.

While more accurate than many over the years in his description of the
damage being done and the sure likelihood of further increases in
destruction and suffering by staying the course of business as usual,
Monbiot doesn't seem willing to lay the blame on Enlightenment thinking, let
alone examine the deeper roots from which this mindset emerged and is being
nourished. He falls rather firmly in line with Maggie Thatcher in claiming
"There Is No Alternative." Even though Monbiot insists this isn't what he's
saying, he pulls in references from others who also claim abandoning nuclear
power will surely result in increasing greenhouse gas emissions.

Monbiot believes in a false dichotomy that comes straight from industry PR
when saying the only two possible options to increasing nuclear energy
capacity are to either burn more fossil fuels (and we agree that's a
singularly bad idea), or "To add even more weight to the burden that must be
carried by renewables."

Now, there is no doubt that industrialism is a burden on renewables. But,
surprise, industrialism is a burden on humanity and Earth. There is also no
doubt that human ingenuity must be pressed into service, and starting to do
so sooner rather than later would be a singularly good idea. However,
stating these are the only two possible paths for humanity's energy future
is a case study for the opposite of ingenuity.

We don't need the majority of the stuff that's being produced (let alone new
versions every six months), and we don't need wars of empire. Dealing with
those two issues alone would remove the need for any new nuclear power
capacity, remove the need to replace reactors ready to be decommissioned,
and remove well over half of the need for fossil fuels. If we were to start
producing what we do need to last and be easily repairable, implement some
sensible conservation measures (like not keeping our cities lit up like a
cheap Nevada whorehouse at night), and decentralize (but remain standardized
and safety regulated) the energy grid, we'd be just about down to an energy
demand that renewables are already producing today and well within their
ability to pick up any additional slack if needed.

Then there's building our homes and businesses to require less heating and
cooling instead of using the cheap ticky-tack construction approach, and all
the other low-hanging fruit options everyone is already familiar with.
Estimates are that these will get us 23% of the way down to where we need to
be just on greenhouse gas emissions, so they're a good idea regardless of
their additional energy savings.

If we also factor in the high percentage of people leading lives of quiet
desperation (Thoreau) (without which the travel industry couldn't sell
"getting away" and would become a mere shell of itself)--those 50% of
Americans who take at least one prescription drug per day, and which led to
America being ranked 149th out of 150 countries on the UN happiness
scale--we start to see even more clearly and completely how much less energy
we actually "need". Because if what we're doing now isn't making us happy,
will doing even more of it make us happy, or just a whole lot unhappier?
After all, it is not a sign of good health to be well adjusted to a sick
society. (Krishnamurti)

When is the environmental left going to become willing to start supporting
organizations and electing representatives who are willing to speak this
truth and begin implementing the
*relocalization*<http://naturalsystems.blogspot.com/p/relocalization.html>
alternative
that can be shown to improve quality of life? To help people understand
that *sustainability*<http://naturalsystems.blogspot.com/p/sustainability.html>
has
real meaning and that it is within the capabilities of humans to decide to
start moving in that direction. One thing I can pretty much guarantee is
that we won't develop a sustainable future as long as people who should know
better keep insisting that it either can't happen or isn't necessary.

Mainstream editorial writers are starting to talk about the need to at least
switch fuel sources "without either bankrupting or enslaving the citizenry."
(*M.D. Harmon, Portland Press
Herald*<http://pressherald.mainetoday.com/viewpoints/harmon/070223harmon.html>
)
They realize that biofuels are too expensive to produce without government
subsidies, but then the logic flys out the window. We don't need Saudi oil,
we just need to lift the ban on drilling off-shore and in ANWR. We need more
nuclear power plants, lots of them, really fast. Our demand for energy must
be met, and this demand must continue to grow for the sake of the
economy--often coupled with the myth this is the only way to lift the
developing world out of poverty, with poverty narrowly defined against a
Western consumerist model. Sanity seeps back in slightly when they admit we
sure can't look to the government to solve this problem, but disappears even
quicker with thinking that capitalism can be counted on to solve our energy
problem, as long as all regulatory and environmental fetters are removed.

The willful ignorance of the supposedly educated and well informed never
ceases to amaze, and mortify, me. Don't call for conservation, don't call
for efficiency increases (in the product, its manufacture, and its use), and
don't insist on using the Precautionary Principle. Don't think about any of
the other factors I mentioned above, and definitely don't call for ways to
do more with less. And whatever you do, don't dare mention that the problems
we're facing with rising energy costs, shrinking supplies, and increasing
biospheric toxicity are a direct result of capitalism's growth economy in
support of Industrialism. This is economic cannibalism. Its only logical
consequence is ecocide while material wealth continues its upward
consolidation into fewer hands until it finally catastrophically implodes.

The only unknown is which will occur first. The implosion or a biosphere
inhospitable to life.

It's time to honestly look at the damage our energy demands are doing to the
environment and to our spirits. And then to examine the implementation of a
rational alternative.

It's time to shift the foundation of the debate. It's time to discover the
dynamic resiliency and increased opportunities in steady-state local living
economies. It's time to start strategizing to power down, instead of sucking
up every last iota of fossil fuels--or shifting even a fraction of the
"demand" to the more potentially destructive nuclear industry--in order to
support overly consumptive and wasteful lifestyles which require an economic
model of infinite growth to service debt that has absolutely no basis in
reality. It contravenes the laws of physics. It's not just loss of habitat
and species being driven to the brink of extinction, but the ability of the
biosphere to support life as we know it that's being lost as we keep
breaking links in the food chain simply to continue corporate profits, keep
the GNP graph on a positive slope, and the ruling elite firmly in control as
they continue to successfully carry out class warfare.

The degree of madness that underlies this frenetic activity is approaching
the unfathomable. And it seems to have terminally infected even the best
minds of the environmental left.




-- 
Peace Is Doable

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