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Subject:        Environmental Crisis & Despair
Date:   Sat, 1 Sep 2007 16:21:48 -0400
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http://www.zmag.org/sustainers/content/2007-08/28fletcher.cfm
Z Magazine

August 28, 2007

Environmental Crisis and Despair

By Bill Fletcher

I heard about the conversation a few months ago. It
took place between my 18 year old daughter and some of
her friends. Her friends had concluded that they would
not permit THEIR children to have children because they
believed that by that time the world would be coming to
an end.

To this day I remain stunned by that conversation.
Sure, over the years I have heard people say things
like "...I am not going to have kids because this world
is crazy...", but what was striking about the
conversation between my daughter's friends was that
this was based on an analysis. Their analysis was that
the environmental crisis would become such that human
life would probably cease to exist.

There are many people feeling that way, and I can sense
it in various discussions. It does not need to be
verbalized to be very present in our talks. It sits
there, like the proverbial elephant in the living room,
and few of us will acknowledge it. It is that sense
that maybe, just maybe, we have run out of time as a
species because the rich and infamous have pushed us
down a road to global disaster.

There was a tendency somewhat along those lines at
different moments in the Cold War. Particularly when it
seemed as if we were on the verge of nuclear
annihilation, e.g., during the Cuban Missile Crisis or
the Yom Kippur War, there was this sense that things
were completely out of control. This worked its way
into our culture through dramas such as Rod Serling's
classic series The Twilight Zone that frequently
contained stories addressing potential nuclear
disaster.

We seemed to survive that immediate threat but we have
found ourselves facing a different one with
consequences no less severe but with a longer fuse. The
changes, for many, seemed almost inconsequential for so
long until we started to notice everything from the
disappearance of honey bees to Hurricane Katrina to the
scarcity of clean, drinking water. Yes, we are in a
crisis.

For those of us on the Left, there is a significant
challenge. Insofar as despair, rather than anger and
protest, grip our constituents, we have no hope of
turning things around. Instead, much like what appears
to have taken place in the midst of the collapse of the
ancient Mayan cities or those in Europe toward the
decline of the Roman Empire, people will disperse, all
seeking their own individual solutions, or solutions in
small groups, but few people will turn toward the need
for a progressive social transformation.

That is what made the conversation between my
daughter's friends so unsettling. The potential horror
that we face is very real and cannot be denied. To that
extent it is important that we expose and ridicule
those who would deny global warming. Yet much more is
needed. In fact, the urgency of the moment necessitates
greater attention toward programmatic solutions along
with strategies and organizations to advance social
transformation.

When Rosa Luxemburg suggested that the future was one
of "socialism or barbarism" there was a tendency by
many people-even in the midst of World War I-to view
this as hyperbole. As it turns out, it was rather
prescient. This warning through juxtaposition is
critical but not enough. Understanding that we must
turn away from barbarism-in whatever form-and toward
socialism and the end of capitalist exploitation is a
critical awareness but it must be translated into
organization and action.

One immediate conclusion from all of this is that we
must act with urgency. That does not mean that we
should act stupidly. But it does mean that within the
Left we must determine what are the minimum bases of
unity that we need in order to move forward together.
While it is important that we debate our differences,
we need to be quite clear what differences can and must
be decided today vs. those that will have to await
another moment.

A second conclusion is that forms of organization and
action must be introduced that win people away from
despair and suggest that collective struggle can help
to avoid planetary disaster. That means that it is not
enough to fight the good defensive battles but that we
on the Left must be thinking in terms of offensive
strategy. In other words, we must be thinking about how
to win.

A third conclusion is that it is important to dream. By
dreaming I mean to suggest that we consider
possibilities for the future that improve the human
condition. Being a science fiction fan and a Star Trek
devotee I always remember a scene from the film Star
Trek: First Contact. Captain Piccard, having traveled
back (from the 24th century) to the middle of the 21st
century, is speaking with a scientist from that era.
She asks how much the starship Enterprise cost to
build. His response was quite interesting. In effect he
said, the economics of the 24th century are quite
different from yours. For us the acquisition of wealth
is no longer the driving force of our existence. We
seek to better ourselves. It is that notion that must
work itself into our everyday realities and serve as
the inspiration for action.

I want my daughter to have children-should she wish to
have children-and I want her children to also
reproduce, but to do so as they witness and participate
in the construction of a better world rather than
existing in the misery of someone's dystopia.

My fourth conclusion: it all starts now. To borrow and
paraphrase from a slogan of the South African movement:
socialism is the future; build it now.
________

Bill Fletcher, Jr. is a long-time labor and
international writer and activist. He is the former
past President of TransAfrica Forum and can be reached
at [EMAIL PROTECTED]

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