Untitled Document
In 1948, Henry A. Wallace, a former vice-president under Roosevelt, felt that
the United States was at a crossroads, and that it could become “the worst
hated nation of all history.” It took a while for Wallace’s prediction
to come true, in part owing to the brilliance of the American propaganda system,
in part owing to the fact that, inside their own country, ordinary white Americans
had been comparatively prosperous, tolerant, literate, and free. But now the cross-national
advantages are fading, making it harder to sell America to the world. The propaganda
system is likewise besotted by another handicap: An unabashed expansionist foreign
policy that is chillingly reminiscent of the long-lived Roman Empire and the shorter-lived
Third Reich. Neo-colonialism is on the rise, U.S. military centurions and garrisons
dot the globe, and elected officials are routinely and forcibly replaced by quislings.
We must bear in mind, however, that there is nothing new about the ongoing
brutalities against the world’s people and against the citizens of the
empire itself. Arguably, America’s ruling class has so far wreaked less
havoc on the people of Baghdad than Genghis Khan, less agonies on Cuba than
Columbus, less anguish on Latin America than Spain, less woes on its own people
than Athenian or Syracusean oligarchs inflicted on theirs. And, unsettling as
such brutalities are, they do not pose a threat to human survival. One can subsist
under them and hope that Albert Einstein was right, that the USA is going mad,
that it “is no longer receptive to reasonable suggestions,” and
that its development follows “the events in Germany since the time of
Emperor William II: through many victories to final disaster.” In other
words, one can endure the crimes of empire and still hope that one day decency,
rationality, and brotherhood triumph. Even in flattened Fallujah, in beleaguered
Santiago de Cuba, in terrified Port-au-Prince, in oligarchic Riyadh, in gloomy
Gaza, one can still dream of being free at last -- if not, perhaps, oneself,
then one’s fellow countrymen and the human family as a whole.
The most unforgivable act of terror, in my view, is the one that robs us of
that dream. And yet, the USA is doing just that. When it comes to the global
environment, the USA recklessly imperils the physical and biological foundations
of life itself. It is precisely this recklessness which may turn this former
bastion of liberty into the most hated country in history. The war against the
biosphere is carried out on a very broad front, including over-population, nuclear
and biological weaponry, nuclear power, depletion of the ozone layer, and massive
species extinctions. Here, I can only exemplify this onslaught by highlighting
the ramifications and underpinnings of just one environmental crime: the greenhouse
effect (=global warming).
Virtually alone among nations, the United States -- by far the worst
polluter on the face of this green and smoggy planet—refuses to acknowledge
the existence of a greenhouse threat -- let alone address it. The world burns,
the barons steal, and America plays its public relations fiddle.
Every day we are bombarded by yet another decontextualized news item. Carbon
dioxide levels in the global atmosphere are steadily and measurably rising,
as do the levels of other greenhouse gases. Every decade is warmer than the
preceding one. Winters are shorter and warmer; summers longer and hotter. Extraordinarily
violent storms devastate the Philippines, Japan, and the Caribbean. Some areas
of the world are overwhelmed by unprecedented draughts and wildfires while others
are deluged. Ice sheets are melting and sea levels are rising. North-African
stink bugs colonize the British isles.
Although such facts are subject to a wide margin of error, they are embraced by
the world’s independent scholars. Genuine scientific controversies (as opposed
to “controversies” concocted by Wall Street and its serfs in Madison
and Pennsylvania Avenues) only concern the future. We scientists cannot reliably
forecast future trends of such complex entities as the world’s climate (or
for that matter, the world’s economy). Instead, we must resort to experiments,
computer models, probabilities, extrapolations, and projections. Our crystal ball
-- and the scientific crystal ball, despite its flaws, is the best we have --
shows sea levels rising, with some low-lying cities joining Atlantis. Species
continue to vanish, faster than they do now. Tropical diseases move north and
migrating birds stay put. Human tragedies and deaths multiply, on a scale that
trivializes the collapse of the World Trade Center and the suffering of the Guatemalan
people.
Our crystal ball is not lacking in doomsday scenarios either. One such scenario
involves methane, which is a greenhouse gas, and which is abundant in the topsoil
of the frozen north. Global warming may release some of that methane into the
atmosphere. This in turn may raise temperatures, especially in the Arctic. Warmer
temperatures would then bring about more thawing and release of methane and
still higher temperatures, possibly culminating in a chain reaction too scary
to contemplate. A decade ago, such scenarios prompted Prof. George Woodwell
to say that “the continued habitability of the earth is clearly in question."
Apologists for the United States of America plead poverty, alleging that even
if we grant the reality of global warming, the USA cannot afford to do anything
about it. But this is a barefaced lie, and not only because the USA is willing
to spend any amounts of money to own Iraq and abolish, at home, any residues
of a progressive tax system, and not only because assured long-term survival
justifies any cost. It is a falsehood for a more straightforward reason. In
1992, in one of those rare flashes of corporate media candor, Newsweek wrote:
During the early Bush Administration, estimates batted around for greenhouse
reductions ran from $100 billion to a mind-bending $3.6 trillion. Such calculations
contained an astonishing omission. The way to control carbon emissions is to
make energy use more efficient. The big numbers took into account the capital
costs of new conservation technology, but not the value of the fuel saved. Factor
in the energy savings, the analysts Amory and Hunter Lovins showed in a landmark
1991 study, and . . . it becomes possible to imagine cutting greenhouse gases
at a profit. . . . Currently the [Bush] White House is pushing its National
Energy Strategy [which fails to see] that resource conservation, pollution control,
lower energy prices and a hedge against global warming might be achieved simultaneously
by a comprehensive commitment to improved fuel efficiency. . . . [Moreover,
seen in light of population growth and worldwide improved standards of living]
significant improvements in energy efficiency are imperative whether the thermometer
is going up, down or sideways.
Newsweek’s views are supported by numerous studies, including studies
by the most respected, conservative, and staid scientific bodies of the land,
e.g., a 1992 report by the United States National Academy of Sciences, or a
truly massive 1997 study by the United States’ own Department of Energy.
The exact annual savings from greenhouse policies are anyone’s guess,
but I am personally inclined to accept the estimate that they exceed $220 billion
a year for the USA alone.
To convince ourselves that mitigating the greenhouse problem will cost less
than nothing, let us imagine that the world’s automakers were required
to produce cars yielding 80 miles per gallon instead of, say, 25. The technology
for making such cars has been available for at least 20 years, and, with mass
production, such cars could eventually be produced for roughly the same cost
as contemporary gas guzzlers. With the more efficient vehicles, the average
American could save, let us say, $600 a year on gasoline alone. Extend similar
conservation measures to insulation, lighting, industrial plants, electric motors,
and so on, and implement them from the Redwood Forest to the New York Island,
and you tap untold riches. In addition, by conserving fossil fuels, Americans
could pocket some of the billions they spend now on such human-caused scourges
as asthma and cancer. Thus, common sense, history, economics, and ecology, all
converge in just one direction: the world can save untold billions by meaningfully
combating the greenhouse threat.
We are left with the questions: What’s going on here? Why is the USA
putting the world at risk? Why is it needlessly jeopardizing the health and
well-being of its citizens? Why is it stealing them blind? Why is it needlessly
playing Russian Roulette with the future of our species? Are American policy
makers insane? Vicious? Morons?
They are certainly short on principles, vision, and common decency, but this
by itself cannot, in my view, account for environmental terrorism. The larger
answer is that, at the moment, American politicians are the hired help of big
business, spending most of their working hours soliciting favors of all kinds,
including bribes (a.k.a. “campaign contributions”). In turn, their
corporate masters expect them to plunder the biosphere and the world’s
people and to convince ordinary Americans that fair is foul and foul is fair,
and that, in President Cleveland’s words, “the business of America
is business.” This the bribed politicians and their media allies gladly
do, deploying such shameful propaganda tools and euphemisms as “tax cuts”
(a net transfer of wealth from the poorest 80% of the population to the richest
1%), “war on terror” (whose real goal is to make ordinary people
forget whose real enemies are, duping them into voting against their convictions
and interests), and Jesus of Nazareth himself (who, it so happened, championed
pacifism and social justice).
American politicians, in other words, are victims of a thoroughly corrupt political
system. But they are not the only ones. American Croesuses,
perched on their golden pyres, are pawns of this system too. By and large, these
moguls have little time for history (Ford: “history is bunk”), little
taste for literature, zero compassion for their fellow passengers to the grave.
They are victims of a viciously competitive system which sanctimoniously “discounts”
the future and is obsessively focused on the next quarterly report. The people
who run Exxon and GM must sell ever more oil and SUVs to safeguard their career.
In the absence of meaningful regulation, the rules of the game force them to
oppose energy conservation, torpedo meaningful international agreements, undermine
the future of their own hearts, lungs, spouses, and grandchildren, and wreak
havoc on the national debt. If they wake up, and if they act on the basis of
their newly-acquired humanitarian insights, they lose their jobs, power, prestige,
and Porsches. There are no villains in this cosmic tragedy, merely a bloated
leviathan that is, conceivably, dragging the earth and its creatures to the
brink.
“History,” said Kurt Vonnegut, “read it and weep.”
If America’s crimes against nature are not checked, there will be a lot
more weeping, and hating, and gnashing of teeth, before the 21st century is
over.
Moti Nissani teaches at Wayne State University. Some of
his scholarly publications can be accessed at: www.is.wayne.edu/mnissani/.
Go to Original Article >>>
The views expressed herein are the writers' own and do not necessarily reflect those of Looking Glass News. Click the disclaimer link below for more information.
Email: editor@lookingglassnews.org.
|