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marmar

(77,056 posts)
Thu Aug 21, 2014, 12:20 PM Aug 2014

Naomi Klein's new book explains the connections between capitalism and climate change





(In These Times) In her previous books The Shock Doctrine (2007) and No Logo (2000), Canadian author and activist Naomi Klein took on topics like neoliberal “shock therapy,” consumerism, globalization and “disaster capitalism,” extensively documenting the forces behind the dramatic rise in economic inequality and environmental degradation over the past 50 years. But in her new book, This Changes Everything: Capitalism vs. The Climate (due in stores Sept. 16), Klein casts her gaze toward the future, arguing that the dangers of climate change demand radical action now to ward off catastrophe. She certainly isn’t alone in pointing out the urgency of the threat, but what sets Klein apart is her argument that it is capitalism—not carbon—that is at the root of climate change, inexorably driving us toward an environmental Armageddon in the pursuit of profit. This Changes Everything is well worth a read (or two) in full, but we’ve distilled some of its key points here.

1. Band-Aid solutions don’t work.

“Only mass social movements can save us now. Because we know where the current system, left unchecked, is headed.”

Much of the conversation surrounding climate change focuses on what Klein dismisses as “Band-Aid solutions”: profit-friendly fixes like whizz-bang technological innovations, cap-and-trade schemes and supposedly “clean” alternatives like natural gas. To Klein, such strategies are too little, too late. In her drawn-out critique of corporate involvement in climate change prevention, she demonstrates how profitable “solutions” put forward by many think-tanks (and their corporate backers) actually end up making the problem worse. For instance, Klein argues that carbon trading programs create perverse incentives, allowing manufacturers to produce more harmful greenhouse gases, just to be paid to reduce them. In the process, carbon trading schemes have helped corporations make billions—allowing them to directly profit off the degradation of the planet. Instead, Klein argues, we need to break free of market fundamentalism and implement long-term planning, strict regulation of business, more taxation, more government spending and reversals of privatization to return key infrastructure to public control.

2. We need to fix ourselves, not fix the world.

“The earth is not our prisoner, our patient, our machine, or, indeed, our monster. It is our entire world. And the solution to global warming is not to fix the world, it is to fix ourselves.”

Klein devotes a full chapter of the book to geoengineering: the field of research, championed by a niche group of scientists, funders and media figures, that aims to fight global warming by altering the earth itself—say, by covering deserts with reflective material to send sunlight back to space or even dimming the sun to decrease the amount of heat reaching the planet. However, politicians and much of the global public have raised environmental, health and ethical concerns regarding these proposed science experiments with the planet, and Klein warns of the unknown consequences of creating “a Frankenstein’s world,” with multiple countries launching projects simultaneously. Instead of restoring an environmental equilibrium, Klein argues these “techno-fixes” will only further upset the earth’s balance, each one creating a host of new problems, requiring an endless chain of further “fixes.” She writes, “The earth—our life support system—would itself be put on life support, hooked up to machines 24/7 to prevent it from going full-tilt monster on us.”

3. We can’t rely on “well-intentioned” corporate funding.

“A great many progressives have opted out of the climate change debate in part because they thought that the Big Green groups, flush with philanthropic dollars, had this issue covered. That, it turns out, was a grave mistake.”

Klein strongly critiques partnerships between corporations and major environmental groups, along with attempts by “green billionaires” such as Bill Gates and Virgin Group’s Richard Branson to use capitalism to fighting global warming. When capitalism itself is a principal cause of climate change, Klein argues, it doesn’t make sense to expect corporations and billionaires to put the planet before profit. For example, though the Gates Foundation funds many major environmental groups dedicated to combating climate change, as of December 2013, it had at least $1.2 billion invested in BP and ExxonMobil. In addition, when Big Greens become dependent on corporate funding, they start to push a corporate agenda. For instance, organizations such as the Nature Conservancy and the Environmental Defense Fund, which have taken millions of dollars from pro-fracking corporate funders, such as Shell, Chevron and JP Morgan, are pitching natural gas as a cleaner alternative to oil and coal. ....................(more)

The complete piece is at: http://inthesetimes.com/article/17079/this_changes_everything_naomi_klein_lessons



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Naomi Klein's new book explains the connections between capitalism and climate change (Original Post) marmar Aug 2014 OP
thanks for the clear summary pleinair Aug 2014 #1
I can't f-ing WAIT for this book. arcane1 Aug 2014 #2
Kicking. Thank you. nt littlemissmartypants Aug 2014 #3
Naomi Klein - my hero nt Bigmack Aug 2014 #4
Huge K&R. Can't wait to read it! raouldukelives Aug 2014 #5
 

arcane1

(38,613 posts)
2. I can't f-ing WAIT for this book.
Thu Aug 21, 2014, 12:38 PM
Aug 2014

I even delayed my visit back home to see family by one day, so I can buy this book for the trip

raouldukelives

(5,178 posts)
5. Huge K&R. Can't wait to read it!
Fri Aug 22, 2014, 02:50 PM
Aug 2014

Sounds like what I've been babbling about on these boards for years now. Nice to see someone I admire so much echoing similar sentiments.

More of the same ain't gonna cut the mustard. Bowing and scraping at the feet of Wall St and those who serve it will only ensure more destruction. Every dollar in the markets is a little extra weight on that foot stamping on our necks.

My mom used to say "If everyone jumped off a cliff would you jump too?" Make no mistake, everyone in the markets is jumping off that cliff in the biggest way possible. Nazi's were bad, slavery was a horrible evil, they all pale in comparison to the damage unregulated corporate dominance of our natural world has caused. Darn it Mom! Why'd you ever teach me I couldn't play nice with bullies? Sure would be easier to pull the Wall St wool over my eyes and go to sleep like so many have chosen to do.

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