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Noam Chomsky: Can Civilization Survive Capitalism?
 AMERICAN STUDIES, BATTLE OF COMMUNICATIONS, CAPITALISM & SOCIALISM, CITIZEN 
TOOLS, CLASS STRUGGLE, FASCISM, IMPERIALISM  Add comments 
Mar 062013
  

AlterNet [1] / By Noam Chomsky [2]

 
Americans demonstrate in Washington, DC. Their voices and actions go unheeded. 
The government does not respond to the people because America is now a 
plutocracy..

There is “capitalism” and then there is “really existing capitalism.”

The term “capitalism” is commonly used to refer to the U.S. economic system, 
with substantial state intervention ranging from subsidies for creative 
innovation to the “too-big-to-fail” government insurance policy for banks.

The system is highly monopolized, further limiting reliance on the market, and 
increasingly so: In the past 20 years the share of profits of the 200 largest 
enterprises has risen sharply, reports scholar Robert W. McChesney in his new 
book “Digital Disconnect.”

“Capitalism” is a term now commonly used to describe systems in which there are 
no capitalists: for example, the worker-owned Mondragon conglomerate in the 
Basque region of Spain, or the worker-owned enterprises expanding in northern 
Ohio, often with conservative support – both are discussed in important work by 
the scholar Gar Alperovitz.

Some might even use the term “capitalism” to refer to the industrial democracy 
advocated by John Dewey, America’s leading social philosopher, in the late 19th 
century and early 20th century.

Dewey called for workers to be “masters of their own industrial fate” and for 
all institutions to be brought under public control, including the means of 
production, exchange, publicity, transportation and communication. Short of 
this, Dewey argued, politics will remain “the shadow cast on society by big 
business.”

The truncated democracy that Dewey condemned has been left in tatters in recent 
years. Now control of government is narrowly concentrated at the peak of the 
income scale, while the large majority “down below” has been virtually 
disenfranchised. The current political-economic system is a form of plutocracy, 
diverging sharply from democracy, if by that concept we mean political 
arrangements in which policy is significantly influenced by the public will.

There have been serious debates over the years about whether capitalism is 
compatible with democracy. If we keep to really existing capitalist democracy – 
RECD for short – the question is effectively answered: They are radically 
incompatible.

It seems to me unlikely that civilization can survive RECD and the sharply 
attenuated democracy that goes along with it. But could functioning democracy 
make a difference?

Let’s keep to the most critical immediate problem that civilization faces: 
environmental catastrophe. Policies and public attitudes diverge sharply, as is 
often the case under RECD. The nature of the gap is examined in several 
articles in the current issue of Daedalus, the journal of the American Academy 
of Arts and Sciences.

Researcher Kelly Sims Gallagher finds that “One hundred and nine countries have 
enacted some form of policy regarding renewable power, and 118 countries have 
set targets for renewable energy. In contrast, the United States has not 
adopted any consistent and stable set of policies at the national level to 
foster the use of renewable energy.”

It is not public opinion that drives American policy off the international 
spectrum. Quite the opposite. Opinion is much closer to the global norm than 
the U.S. government’s policies reflect, and much more supportive of actions 
needed to confront the likely environmental disaster predicted by an 
overwhelming scientific consensus – and one that’s not too far off; affecting 
the lives of our grandchildren, very likely.

As Jon A. Krosnick and Bo MacInnis report in Daedalus: “Huge majorities have 
favored steps by the federal government to reduce the amount of greenhouse gas 
emissions generated when utilities produce electricity. In 2006, 86 percent of 
respondents favored requiring utilities, or encouraging them with tax breaks, 
to reduce the amount of greenhouse gases they emit. Also in that year, 87 
percent favored tax breaks for utilities that produce more electricity from 
water, wind or sunlight  [ These majorities were maintained between 2006 and 
2010 and shrank somewhat after that.

The fact that the public is influenced by science is deeply troubling to those 
who dominate the economy and state policy.

One current illustration of their concern is the “Environmental Literacy 
Improvement Act” proposed to state legislatures by ALEC, the American 
Legislative Exchange Council, a corporate-funded lobby that designs legislation 
to serve the needs of the corporate sector and extreme wealth.

The ALEC Act mandates “balanced teaching” of climate science in K-12 
classrooms. “Balanced teaching” is a code phrase that refers to teaching 
climate-change denial, to “balance” mainstream climate science. It is analogous 
to the “balanced teaching” advocated by creationists to enable the teaching of 
“creation science” in public schools. Legislation based on ALEC models has 
already been introduced in several states.

Of course, all of this is dressed up in rhetoric about teaching critical 
thinking – a fine idea, no doubt, but it’s easy to think up far better examples 
than an issue that threatens our survival and has been selected because of its 
importance in terms of corporate profits.

Media reports commonly present a controversy between two sides on climate 
change.

One side consists of the overwhelming majority of scientists, the world’s major 
national academies of science, the professional science journals and the 
Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change.

They agree that global warming is taking place, that there is a substantial 
human component, that the situation is serious and perhaps dire, and that very 
soon, maybe within decades, the world might reach a tipping point where the 
process will escalate sharply and will be irreversible, with severe social and 
economic effects. It is rare to find such consensus on complex scientific 
issues.

The other side consists of skeptics, including a few respected scientists who 
caution that much is unknown – which means that things might not be as bad as 
thought, or they might be worse.

Omitted from the contrived debate is a much larger group of skeptics: highly 
regarded climate scientists who see the IPCC’s regular reports as much too 
conservative. And these scientists have repeatedly been proven correct, 
unfortunately.

The propaganda campaign has apparently had some effect on U.S. public opinion, 
which is more skeptical than the global norm. But the effect is not significant 
enough to satisfy the masters. That is presumably why sectors of the corporate 
world are launching their attack on the educational system, in an effort to 
counter the public’s dangerous tendency to pay attention to the conclusions of 
scientific research.

At the Republican National Committee’s Winter Meeting a few weeks ago, 
Louisiana Gov. Bobby Jindal warned the leadership that “We must stop being the 
stupid party ... We must stop insulting the intelligence of voters.”

Within the RECD system it is of extreme importance that we become the stupid 
nation, not misled by science and rationality, in the interests of the 
short-term gains of the masters of the economy and political system, and damn 
the consequences.

These commitments are deeply rooted in the fundamentalist market doctrines that 
are preached within RECD, though observed in a highly selective manner, so as 
to sustain a powerful state that serves wealth and power.

The official doctrines suffer from a number of familiar “market 
inefficiencies,” among them the failure to take into account the effects on 
others in market transactions. The consequences of these “externalities” can be 
substantial. The current financial crisis is an illustration. It is partly 
traceable to the major banks and investment firms’ ignoring “systemic risk” – 
the possibility that the whole system would collapse – when they undertook 
risky transactions.

Environmental catastrophe is far more serious: The externality that is being 
ignored is the fate of the species. And there is nowhere to run, cap in hand, 
for a bailout.

In future, historians (if there are any) will look back on this curious 
spectacle taking shape in the early 21st century. For the first time in human 
history, humans are facing the significant prospect of severe calamity as a 
result of their actions – actions that are battering our prospects of decent 
survival.

Those historians will observe that the richest and most powerful country in 
history, which enjoys incomparable advantages, is leading the effort to 
intensify the likely disaster. Leading the effort to preserve conditions in 
which our immediate descendants might have a decent life are the so-called 
“primitive” societies: First Nations, tribal, indigenous, aboriginal.

The countries with large and influential indigenous populations are well in the 
lead in seeking to preserve the planet. The countries that have driven 
indigenous populations to extinction or extreme marginalization are racing 
toward destruction.

Thus Ecuador, with its large indigenous population, is seeking aid from the 
rich countries to allow it to keep its substantial oil reserves underground, 
where they should be.

Meanwhile the U.S. and Canada are seeking to burn fossil fuels, including the 
extremely dangerous Canadian tar sands, and to do so as quickly and fully as 
possible, while they hail the wonders of a century of (largely meaningless) 
energy independence without a side glance at what the world might look like 
after this extravagant commitment to self-destruction.

This observation generalizes: Throughout the world, indigenous societies are 
struggling to protect what they sometimes call “the rights of nature,” while 
the civilized and sophisticated scoff at this silliness.

This is all exactly the opposite of what rationality would predict – unless it 
is the skewed form of reason that passes through the filter of RECD.

(Noam Chomsky's new book is ``Power Systems: Conversations on Global Democratic 
Uprisings and the New Challenges to U.S. Empire. Conversations with David 
Barsamian.'' Chomsky is emeritus professor of linguistics and philosophy at the 
Massachusetts Institute of Technology in Cambridge, Mass.)

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