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maandag 22 november 2021

#WORLD #WORLDWIDE #UK #ANARCHISM #News #Journal #Update - (en) UK, North East ANARCHIST COMMUNIST: Thoughts on #climate and #communism, BY AAA

 We are in a unique and challenging period within the history of humanity, as well

as within the epoch of capitalism. With the increased production capacity broughton by human ingenuity, innovation and science, fueled by capitalism's constantdrive towards reconfiguring the production process, we have been able to produceenough to globally meet everyone's needs for the last 150 years but ourproduction capacities, not freeing us from toil, work and suffering, have onlyserved to make the ruling class richer and more powerful. Not only have we beenable to ensure that everyone is housed, fed and clothed but we have had thecapacity to dramatically alter the way we labour and fulfil that fundamentalhuman need for leisure, play and free time. Time that we could spend more withour loved ones, to develop ourselves as creative and passionate human beings andto innovate freely. The progression of our industrial capacities since theindustrial revolution however has not only subjugated people to misery andexploitation it has also been an immense burden on our environment and theanimals and ecosystems that we share this world with. We are now faced withirreversible climate change caused predominantly by the wasteful and unrelentingaggression of the capitalist socio-economic system.One thing is certain, our current system is unsustainable.Anton Pannekoek, a Dutch Marxist, in 1909 described capitalism as a ‘headlesseconomy which cannot regulate its acts by an understanding of their consequences'and that ‘society under capitalism can be compared to a gigantic unintelligentbody; while capitalism develops its power without limit, it is at the same timesenselessly devastating more and more the environment from which itlives'.[1]This was 112 years ago. That unintelligent body is essentially themarket, with its metabolic price signals, its considerations for production andexchange being purely based on valorisation - the turning of money into moremoney. It only cares for capital accumulation, growth, and the increases inlabour productivity that enable that goal, all else is ultimately expendable.It's this internal movement, capitalism's central tenet, which means it cannotadequately address the climate crisis but will only serve to further exacerbateit. By its very essence capitalism's social and economic considerations are toolimited. Commodities do not appear out of thin air. They are built from theproducts of nature and by the labour of the masses who interact with it. Thepursuit of endless growth and profit within the capitalist system relies on theever expanding exploitation of the natural world and those who inhabit it. In theextraction of raw materials, in the waste (agricultural runoff, transportationand production fumes, disposable and short-lived commodities) produced and in theproduction of our energy, where the continuing reliance on fossil fuels, backedand violently protected by the State, contributes not only to the destruction ofthe planet via its extraction and processing but also to imperialist wars thatare fought and communities that are dispossessed for control of these evermorevaluable resources.Green capitalism is considered a realistic possibility by many, even those on theLeft. And while us anarchists and libertarians are regularly denounced as theutopians by most, green capitalism appears to be the most utopian demand of themall. Green capitalism, like industrial capitalism, must not only abide bycapitalism's central tenet but at its core, relies on the technologicalreconfiguration of the production process. It believes if it is able to produceclean energy, refine the production process to reduce waste and createcommodities with a lessened footprint that it will brute force a solution intoplace without addressing the underlying social and economic conditions.It expectsnation-states and companies to willingly move from fossil fuel consumption tomore expensive forms of energy despite the structural incentives of the system tocreate ever cheaper commodities, in ever greater quantities, that allows them toundercut their competitors and turn money into more money. When fossil fuels areso cheap there is virtually no chance in a commodity producing society to seecompanies or nation-states accept a mandate that will essentially decrease theirpower and we can see this in the reluctance to transition away from fossil fuels.Money after all, is power. COP26 has shown the inadequacy of the current strataof political, economic and social leaders to formulate long lasting andsustainable solutions. The competitiveness of the market and the drive forvalorisation and accumulation limits the available (and correct) responses fromeven being considered. The bankruptcy of a potential green capitalism is now onshow as many face the realities of the prevailing system. Australia has vowed tocontinue exporting coal as long as demand exists, Volkswagen (of emissionsscandal fame) and Toyota, the world's largest car manufacturers haven't pledgedto anything regarding zero carbon transportation and nation states are tocontinue their fossil fuel subsidies along with a host of other pointlessgreenwashing pledges that are nothing but smoke. All solutions are not only stuckwithin the paradigm of commodity production but uncreatively so.There has been a dramatic and welcome shift in the use of renewable energysources globally and renewed efforts to increase energy efficiency andconservation but new technology and methods is not enough. Any potential gainsmade by science, as always, will be lost when put to the dictates of capital (asimilar story to our potential shorter working week that was predicted by thearrival of automation). Cheaper (in a monetary sense) energy inputs will alwaysbe welcome to the capitalist, as noted above, but even when efficiency gains aremade and we have begun to see parity in the costs between green and fossil energythis will only allow companies and States to continue to make more commoditiesand for cheaper, ultimately expanding the absolute mass of products (and waste,and energy) available counteracting any gains made (see Jevons Paradox). Theessential process of capitalist innovation for capital accumulation continuesunabated.It is clear that capitalism cannot coexist peacefully with the natural world.Without the subordination of nature, as without the subordination of workers, toconstantly revolutionise the production process, to constantly produce ever morecommodities for sale, to turn money into more money, capitalism will falter andcrash. The same drive that forces it to constantly impoverish workers, to suckdry our natural resources and pollute the earth is the same processes at theheart of its fundamental movements. Without growth you will be eaten up,swallowed by those that do. The body cannot be wrestled into submission.Politicians, industrialists and the new leftist politico-pundit vanguard appearincapable of looking at the problem objectively and addressing the root cause ofthe problem. To do so would upturn their lives and uproot their power. Manycontinue to believe in the Keynesian myth (even if they won't admit it) that theState can mitigate the destructive and alienating effects of capitalism andcontrol class antagonisms. During the 20th century British economist John MaynardKeynes, and the subsequent governments all over the world who followed his advice(one-nation conservatism, old Labour here in the UK), believed that fiscal andmonetary policy changes, nationalisation of failing or ‘rogue' industry and therule of law would hold back these effects. The goal was to save capitalism fromit's own inevitable internal crises, crises that continue to have devastatingeffects on individuals, both capitalist and worker alike, that ricochet throughsociety in uncontrollable and unforeseeable directions. This did not work forlong and its partial successes, which were based on undesirable conditions suchas the domination of the ‘developing' world and of course, our naturalenvironment, began to crack. The death knell of the mixed economy sounded withthe oil crisis of 1973 and the house of cards tumbled. We are now expected tobelieve that State intervention and safeguards on capital will be able to handlethe external crisis of runaway climate change? Even if there was a politicalwill, which there isn't, capital is power. It seems to me that there is anulterior motive here beyond ensuring the wellbeing of all and the safeguarding ofthe planet. That of securing privileged positions.The death of Keynesianism brought us an entirely different but familiar beast inthe attempted renewal of liberalism and a pseudo-laissez-faire capitalism (pseudobecause state intervention never left. We will never return to the pre-war periodof unchecked capitalism. Capital crises must be tamed else class struggle berenewed to greater intensity. The ruling class has learnt its lessons fromhistory. See 2008 bank bailouts, Covid-19 response, the nationalisation on theEast Coast mainline etc.). The neoliberal era, initiated in the West by Thatcherand Reagan, which saw increasing privatisation, social atomisation anddegradation/abolition of regulations on capitals' worst excesses, suffice to say,has been an unmitigated disaster in terms of natural destruction, inequality andworkers rights.The neoliberal period has added over half the extra human carbon dioxide to theatmosphere.Extending the consumerism and social atomisation caused by what CorneliusCastoriadis calls ‘the crisis of socialisation' that began during the 1950s and1960s as part of capitalism's golden age, the neoliberal period has had profoundeffects on the natural world, on our social relations and in the way, we ashumans perceive and interact with the world. We've become defined as humans, notby our actions but increasingly by the things we own and that now mediate ourrelations. As Castoriadis explained in the 1960s, "At the personal level thecrisis manifests itself as a sort of radical crisis in the meaning of life and ofhuman motives ... There is practically no community life, ties become extremelydisrupted and so on. .. But socialization in the more general sense, that is thefeeling that what is going on at large is, after all, our own affair, that we dohave to do something about it, that we ought to be responsible, all this, isdeeply disrupted. This disruption contributes to a vicious circle. It increasesapathy and multiplies its effects."[2]Community has been effectively destroyed and an abstract individual reignssupreme (naturally within the confines of modern industrial capitalism and themodern State and its ‘rights', that inherently absolve us of any responsibility),which leads us to the other side of the dichotomy. One which proposes atomistic,individuated solutions to the holistic problems that we encounter in the modernworld in particular that of climate change. We see it in the useless journalismand point-scoring campaigns that want to show the foibles of individuals who takeare less than eco-perfect and in State and corporations telling us that we mustsacrifice this and that, that we must use less water, recycle more etc. Itcreates a holier than thou scenario which significantly favours the middle classand the rich and induces guilt on the behalf of the working class who areincreasingly burdened. This focus on abstract individuals, as consumers and itbeing our ‘choice', seeks to hide the structural issues and incentives inherentwithin capitalism that is the driving motor of climate change and shift the blamefrom those who are primarily responsible. It seeks to hide that our built world(towns, cities, homes, road networks and other public infrastructure - that werebuilt to sell us cars, individual properties), our social relations to oneanother and our relationship with the natural world are fundamentallyantagonistic to climate renewal, sustainable stewardship and interaction andfoster an illusion that our consumer actions are in any way meaningful. It's anideology that has undermined community, collective solidarity and has put in itsplace privatisation (in both a social and economic sense). The solutions it putsforward now are unsurprising. Things such as electric cars (which when consideredover the full life cycle, from production to end of life, have only been shown tobe marginally better than combustion engine cars) instead of free and revitalisedpublic transport, the replacement of individual gas boilers with individualelectric boilers rather than combined district heating, demands we take the biketo work without grasping at the geography of work and that many are unable to getthere without a car due to suburbanisation and poor local job opportunities, thatasks us... to use paper straws. It's too perfect for them.Tesla electrical charging stations flooded.It is not that our choices in consumption don't matter. They do and they willmatter much more in the future. It's that they aren't the choices of our ownmaking. They've been manipulated and continue to be manipulated by historicalforces. As Karl Marx said ‘Men make their own history, but they do not make it asthey please; they do not make it under self-selected circumstances, but undercircumstances existing already, given and transmitted from the past.'[3]Ourchoices are shaped by our social, geographical and economic positions and byindividualising and ‘flattening' the problem we can't expect to tackle a problemas totalising as ecological destruction.We should be increasingly concerned as internationalists of this ‘flattening'. Wemust understand that the West is disproportionately responsible for this climatecatastrophe so far. The excessive consumption of the vast majority of people inthe global North, as part of the historically Western consumerist drive to secureaccumulation, has been at the cost of the people, animals and ecosystems of theglobal South. While we appear to have ‘deindustrialised', a process ourcommunities certainly felt the brunt of as capital was exported overseas, when welook globally, holistically and not on a nation by nation basis, that is far fromthe truth. We have just exported the worst excesses of industrial capitalism tothe global South and it's our excessive consumption that drives global warmingand in the process deprives those in the global south of their own resources andof developing their own independence, putting them at the whims of westerncapitalist interests, and increasingly their own regional bourgeoisie. Throughthe wholesale destruction, theft and exploitation of their land, resources andcommunities, they are subject to the devastating consequences of climate changefirst hand, whose results are often disastrous and fatal.As this area of theworld becomes increasingly uninhabitable, we will begin to see an increase incapitalist crises as industrial production begins to stagnate. Climate refugeeswill be forced to flee their homes and move to safer, less devastated areas ofthe world and we must be ready to act in the interest of all individuals acrossthe world.So what is to be done? It's a big question and none of us has all the answers.The future movements of society will dictate how and when we should react but weneed to understand that we must react, that it is our responsibility. We cannotvote and delegate this responsibility away for the fate of the world to bedebated in back rooms by oligarchs, industrialists and conservatives. As we'veseen time and again those who hold power are beholden to their own interests andto the interests of capital. We must lift the veil that has been pulled over oureyes that has concealed our power as a class. That is the first step. Nature willfight back. As the other component in the capitalist death machine, we must too.As anarchists and communists, we believe the answer lies in direct democracy inthe community, decentralisation and self-management in the workplace. In a word,communism. It is only outside of the confines of the bureaucratic State thatseeks to decree from above and within our communities and workplaces where eachindividual can regain and enact their power.German anarchist Gustav Landauer called communism ‘the immediate communication oftrue interests' and I believe this is the first and foremost condition if we areto tackle the crisis ahead of us.[4]Class society, due to its hierarchicalnature, isn't very good at communication, at least not true and transparentcommunication.We need that transparent communication. A concerted and demystifiedsocial effort. It will only be when we, as individuals, have all the facts, arein control and have power over our own lives, that we can make the best and, mostimportantly, informed decisions.There is no one road to obtaining that power. It will be difficult. Capitalismconstantly creates and recreates the sites of class struggle and we believe thatit is through this struggle that the power can be wrested away from those whocontinue to dominate individuals and the environment and who are unwilling totake action against climate change, inequality and oppression. It is through thisstruggle that we can enact the positive socialisation[5]required not only tocombat climate change but to create a truly human community."Since human nature is the true community of men, by manifesting their nature mencreate, produce the human community, the social entity, which is no abstractuniversal power opposed to the particular individual, but is the essential natureof each individual, his own activity, his own life, his own spirit, his ownwealth." Marx[6]It is through this creation of the human community, communism, in the classstruggle, where we can begin to undermine existing and create new socialrealities and lay the seeds for a more sustainable world. Through co-ops,grassroots unions, wildcat strikes, factory occupations, radical education,protest and socialist cultural events, mutual aid organisations, and themultitude of other forms that the struggle takes outside and against the State.Fiat factory occupation in the 1920s by workers as part of the ‘Biennio Rosso' atthe height of global working-class power.We need to fundamentally change our social, economic and political system byincreasing localism and autonomy within production, working towards economicindependence and political freedom for the workers in the global south andaddressing our current crises of social alienation and our culture of massconsumption and waste. We can implement sustainable automation to massivelyreduce the working week, use the technological gains to improve our lives withoutthe feedback loop of capital accumulation. We can decide as communities not topollute our rivers and our seas, to not manufacture cancer causing materials, orpoison our air and create full accountability for those who seek to harm othersand the environment. We can ensure that the human cost of the coming crisis ismitigated by extending our space and resources in solidarity with the refugeeswhose lives will be turned upside down by rising sea levels and extreme weather.The responsibilities that we were absolved of under modern industrial capitalismbecomes each and everyone's responsibility, and it'll essentially boil down towhat you, me and everyone else decide to make of it. The State and thecapitalists they serve have continuously shown themselves to be incapable ofacting in a responsible and unbiased manner and why would they?Another world is possible. A world of expanded considerations. No longer will itbe about growth and profit. We will redefine what it means to live, to love, whatit means to be wealthy as well as our relationship to each other, to the animalswe share this world with and the ecosystems that support us."We are going to inherit the earth. There is not the slightest doubt about that.The bourgeoisie may blast and burn its own world before it finally leaves thestage of history. We are not afraid of ruins. We carry a new world, here in ourhearts. That world is growing this minute."- Buenaventura Durrutihttps://libcom.org/library/destruction-nature-anton-pannekoekhttp://libcom.org/library/crisis-modern-societyhttps://www.marxists.org/archive/marx/works/1852/18th-brumaire/ch01.htmhttps://www.marxists.org/archive/marx/works/1844/james-mill/More on the crisis of socialisation and positive socialisation can be found inthis great essay by Cornelius Castoriadis. Paticularly the section ‘The Crisis ofSocialisation' https://libcom.org/library/modern-capitalism-revolution-paul-cardanhttps://theanarchistlibrary.org/library/gustav-landauer-weak-statesmen-weaker-peoplehttps://northeastanarchistgroup.org/2021/11/14/thoughts-on-climate-and-communism/_________________________________________A - I N F O S  N E W S  S E R V I C EBy, For, and About AnarchistsSend news reports to A-infos-en mailing listA-infos-en@ainfos.ca

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