the guardian
George Monbiot's Blog
 

Nov  20, 2012
 
Why libertarians must deny climate change, in one  short take
 
 
 
Over the Christmas break I read what I believe is the most important  
environmental essay of the past 12 months. Though it begins with a mildly 
unfair  
criticism of _a  column of mine_ 
(http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/2011/dec/19/bastardised-libertarianism-makes-freedom-oppression)
 , I won't 
hold it against the author. In a simple and very  short tract, _Matt  Bruenig 
presents_ 
(http://mattbruenig.com/2011/12/21/environmentalism-poses-a-problem-for-libertarian-ideology/)
  a devastating challenge to those who call 
themselves  libertarians, and explains why they have no choice but to deny 
_climate change_ (http://www.guardian.co.uk/environment/climate-change)   and 
other environmental problems. 
Bruenig explains what is now the core argument used by conservatives and  
libertarians: the procedural justice account of property rights. In brief, 
this  means that if the process by which property was acquired was just, those 
who  have acquired it should be free to use it as they wish, without social 
 restraints or obligations to other people. 
Their property rights are absolute and cannot be intruded upon by the state 
 or by anyone else. Any interference with, or damage to, the value of their 
 property without their consent – even by taxation – is an unwarranted  
infringement. This, with local variations, is the basic _philosophy_ 
(http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/philosophy)  of the  Republican candidates, 
the Tea 
Party movement, the lobby groups that call  themselves "free market 
thinktanks" and much of the new right in the UK. 
It is a pitiless, one-sided, mechanical view of the world, which elevates 
the  rights of property over everything else, meaning that those who possess 
the most  property end up with great power over others. Dressed up as 
freedom, it is a  formula for oppression and bondage. It does nothing to 
address 
inequality,  hardship or social exclusion. A transparently self-serving 
vision, it seeks to  justify the greedy and selfish behaviour of those with 
wealth and power. 
But, for the sake of argument, Bruenig says, let us accept it. Let us 
accept  the idea that damage to the value of property without the owner's 
consent 
is an  unwarranted intrusion upon the owner's freedoms. What this means is 
that as soon  as libertarians encounter environmental issues, they're 
stuffed. 
Climate change, industrial pollution, ozone depletion, damage to the 
physical  beauty of the area surrounding people's homes (and therefore their 
value) – all  these, if libertarians did not possess a shocking set of double 
standards, would  be denounced by them as infringements on other people's 
property. 
The owners of coal-burning power stations in the UK have not obtained the  
consent of everyone who owns a lake or a forest in Sweden to deposit acid 
rain  there. So their emissions, in the libertarian worldview, should be 
regarded as a  form of trespass on the property of Swedish landowners. Nor have 
they received  the consent of the people of this country to allow mercury and 
other heavy  metals to enter our bloodstreams, which means that they are 
intruding upon our  property in the form of our bodies. 
Nor have they – or airports, oil companies or car manufacturers – obtained 
 the consent of all those it will affect to release carbon dioxide into the 
 atmosphere, altering global temperatures and – through rising sea levels,  
droughts, storms and other impacts – damaging the property of many people. 
As  Bruenig says: 
"Almost all uses of land will entail some infringement on some other piece  
of land that is owned by someone else. So how can that ever be permitted? 
No  story about freedom and property rights can ever justify the pollution of 
the  air or the burning of fuels, because those things affect the freedom 
and  property rights of others. Those actions ultimately cause damage to  
surrounding property and people without getting any consent from those  
affected. They are the ethical equivalent – for honest libertarians – of  
punching 
someone in the face or breaking someone else's  window."
So here we have a simple and coherent explanation of why libertarianism is 
so  often associated with climate change denial, and the playing down or 
dismissal  of other environmental issues. It would be impossible for the owner 
of a power  station, steel plant, quarry, farm or any large enterprise to 
obtain consent for  all the trespasses he commits against other people's 
property – including their  bodies. 
This is the point at which libertarianism smacks into the wall of gritty  
reality and crumples like a Coke can. Any honest and thorough application of  
this philosophy would run counter to its aim: which is to allow the owners 
of  capital to expand their interests without taxation, regulation or 
recognition of  the rights of other people. 
Libertarianism becomes self-defeating as soon as it recognises the 
existence  of environmental issues. So they must be denied.

-- 
Centroids: The Center of the Radical Centrist Community 
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