.
By Chris Hedges
Clive Hamilton in his
“Requiem for a Species: Why We Resist the Truth About Climate Change”
describes a dark relief that comes from accepting that “catastrophic climate
change is virtually certain.” This obliteration of “false hopes,” he says,
requires an intellectual knowledge and an emotional knowledge. The first is
attainable. The second, because it means that those we love, including our
children, are almost certainly doomed to insecurity, misery and suffering within
a few decades, if not a few years, is much harder to acquire. To emotionally
accept impending disaster, to attain the gut-level understanding that the power
elite will not respond rationally to the devastation of the ecosystem, is as
difficult to accept as our own mortality. The most daunting existential struggle
of our time is to ingest this awful truth—intellectually and emotionally—and
continue to resist the forces that are destroying us.
The human species, led by white Europeans and Euro-Americans,
has been on a 500-year-long planetwide rampage of conquering, plundering,
looting, exploiting and polluting the Earth—as well as killing the indigenous
communities that stood in the way. But the game is up. The technical and
scientific forces that created a life of unparalleled luxury—as well as
unrivaled military and economic power—for the industrial elites are the forces
that now doom us. The mania for ceaseless economic expansion and exploitation
has become a curse, a death sentence. But even as our economic and environmental
systems unravel, after the hottest year in the contiguous 48 states since record
keeping began 107 years ago, we lack the emotional and intellectual creativity
to shut down the engine of global capitalism. We have bound ourselves to a
doomsday machine that grinds forward, as the draft report of the N
ational
Climate Assessment and Development Advisory Committee
illustrates.Illustration by Mr. Fish
Complex civilizations have a bad habit of destroying
themselves. Anthropologists including Joseph Tainter in
“The Collapse of Complex Societies,” Charles L. Redman in
“Human Impact on Ancient Environments” and Ronald Wright in
“A Short History of Progress” have laid out the familiar
patterns that lead to systems breakdown. The difference this time is that when
we go down the whole planet will go with us. There will, with this final
collapse, be no new lands left to exploit, no new civilizations to conquer, no
new peoples to subjugate. The long struggle between the human species and the
Earth will conclude with the remnants of the human species learning a painful
lesson about unrestrained greed and self-worship.
“There is a pattern in the past of civilization after
civilization wearing out its welcome from nature, overexploiting its
environment, overexpanding, overpopulating,”
Wright said when I reached him by phone at his home in
British Columbia, Canada. “They tend to collapse quite soon after they reach
their period of greatest magnificence and prosperity. That pattern holds good
for a lot of societies, among them the Romans, the ancient Maya and the
Sumerians of what is now southern Iraq. There are many other examples, including
smaller-scale societies such as Easter Island. The very things that cause
societies to prosper in the short run, especially new ways to exploit the
environment such as the invention of irrigation, lead to disaster in the long
run because of unforeseen complications. This is what I called in ‘A Short
History of Progress’ the ‘progress trap.’ We have set in motion an industrial
machine of such complexity and such dependence on expansion that we do not know
how to make do with less or move to a steady state in terms of our demands on
nature. We have failed to control human numbers. They have tripled in my
lifetime. And the problem is made much worse by the widening gap between rich
and poor, the upward concentration of wealth, which ensures there can never be
enough to go around. The number of people in dire poverty today—about 2
billion—is greater than the world’s entire population in the early 1900s. That’s
not progress.”
“If we continue to refuse to deal with things in an orderly
and rational way, we will head into some sort of major catastrophe, sooner or
later,” he said. “If we are lucky it will be big enough to wake us up worldwide
but not big enough to wipe us out. That is the best we can hope for. We must
transcend our evolutionary history. We’re Ice Age hunters with a shave and a
suit. We are not good long-term thinkers. We would much rather gorge ourselves
on dead mammoths by driving a herd over a cliff than figure out how to conserve
the herd so it can feed us and our children forever. That is the transition our
civilization has to make. And we’re not doing that.”
Wright, who in his dystopian novel
“A Scientific Romance” paints a picture of a future world
devastated by human stupidity, cites “entrenched political and economic
interests” and a failure of the human imagination as the two biggest impediments
to radical change. And all of us who use fossil fuels, who sustain ourselves
through the formal economy, he says, are at fault.
Modern capitalist societies, Wright argues in his book
“What Is America?: A Short History of the New World Order,”
derive from European invaders’ plundering of the indigenous cultures in the
Americas from the 16th to the 19th centuries, coupled with the use of African
slaves as a workforce to replace the natives. The numbers of those natives fell
by more than 90 percent because of smallpox and other plagues they hadn’t had
before. The Spaniards did not conquer any of the major societies until smallpox
had crippled them; in fact the Aztecs beat them the first time around. If Europe
had not been able to seize the gold of the Aztec and Inca civilizations, if it
had not been able to occupy the land and adopt highly productive New World crops
for use on European farms, the growth of industrial society in Europe would have
been much slower. Karl Marx and Adam Smith both pointed to the influx of wealth
from the Americas as having made possible the Industrial Revolution and the
start of modern capitalism. It was the rape of the Americas, Wright points out,
that triggered the orgy of European expansion. The Industrial Revolution also
equipped the Europeans with technologically advanced weapons systems, making
further subjugation, plundering and expansion possible.
“The experience of a relatively easy 500 years of expansion
and colonization, the constant taking over of new lands, led to the modern
capitalist myth that you can expand forever,” Wright said. “It is an absurd
myth. We live on this planet. We can’t leave it and go somewhere else. We have
to bring our economies and demands on nature within natural limits, but we have
had a 500-year run where Europeans, Euro-Americans and other colonists have
overrun the world and taken it over. This 500-year run made it not only seem
easy but normal. We believe things will always get bigger and better. We have to
understand that this long period of expansion and prosperity was an anomaly. It
has rarely happened in history and will never happen again. We have to readjust
our entire civilization to live in a finite world. But we are not doing it,
because we are carrying far too much baggage, too many mythical versions of
deliberately distorted history and a deeply ingrained feeling that what being
modern is all about is having more. This is what anthropologists call an
ideological pathology, a self-destructive belief that causes societies to crash
and burn. These societies go on doing things that are really stupid because they
can’t change their way of thinking. And that is where we are.”
And as the collapse becomes palpable, if human history is any
guide, we like past societies in distress will retreat into what anthropologists
call “crisis cults.” The powerlessness we will feel in the face of ecological
and economic chaos will unleash further collective delusions, such as
fundamentalist belief in a god or gods who will come back to earth and save us.
“Societies in collapse often fall prey to the belief that if
certain rituals are performed all the bad stuff will go away,” Wright said.
“There are many examples of that throughout history. In the past these crisis
cults took hold among people who had been colonized, attacked and slaughtered by
outsiders, who had lost control of their lives. They see in these rituals the
ability to bring back the past world, which they look at as a kind of paradise.
They seek to return to the way things were. Crisis cults spread rapidly among
Native American societies in the 19th century, when the buffalo and the Indians
were being slaughtered by repeating rifles and finally machine guns. People came
to believe, as happened in the Ghost Dance, that if they did the right things
the modern world that was intolerable—the barbed wire, the railways, the white
man, the machine gun—would disappear.”
“We all have the same, basic psychological hard wiring,”
Wright said. “It makes us quite bad at long-range planning and leads us to cling
to irrational delusions when faced with a serious threat. Look at the extreme
right’s belief that if government got out of the way, the lost paradise of the
1950s would return. Look at the way we are letting oil and gas exploration rip
when we know that expanding the carbon economy is suicidal for our children and
grandchildren. The results can already be felt. When it gets to the point where
large parts of the Earth experience crop failure at the same time then we will
have mass starvation and a breakdown in order. That is what lies ahead if we do
not deal with climate change.”
“If we fail in this great experiment, this experiment of apes
becoming intelligent enough to take charge of their own destiny, nature will
shrug and say it was fun for a while to let the apes run the laboratory, but in
the end it was a bad idea,” Wright said.
****
Chris Hedges writes a regular column for
Truthdig.com. Hedges graduated from Harvard Divinity School and was for nearly
two decades a foreign correspondent for The New York Times. He is the author of
many books, including: War Is A Force That Gives Us Meaning, What Every Person
Should Know About War, and American Fascists: The Christian Right and the War on
America. His most recent book is Empire of Illusion: The End of Literacy and the
Triumph of Spectacle.
http://www.truthdig.com/report/item/the_myth_of_human_progress_20130113/
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