Showing posts with label capitalism. Show all posts
Showing posts with label capitalism. Show all posts

Friday, March 8, 2019

School Strikes - Is it a Generational ‘War’ over Climate Change Action?

An anxious generation

School strikes over the lack of climate change actions are shaking the conscience of the world![1] [2] The new generation is obviously terrified by the news of climate change, loss of biodiversity and by lack of action to restore our (their) ecosystems. Some have paternally criticized those strikes for being, easy to manipulate, lacking vision in addition to being a health and safety hazard. School children must be in school, learning, not protesting on the streets, they say. Others realize the emergency that forced those children out of their safety and comfort zone to protest what they perceive as a threat to their future and the future of life on earth as we know it.

One of the young protesters stated ''I'm missing a class to save the planet". But why aren't politicians responding?

Generational war?


Between supporting the strike and condemning it, the outcome is still negative: No Action. The strike issue has been discussed over and over again so were the reason behind the strike or the demands for change.

It's easy to slide into the generation-blame game when it comes to climate change and the future of humanity, but the reality is that the whole world's population - except for very few individuals, are under economic siege and the power is no longer in the hand of politicians! Neoliberalism has stripped the real power of governments off to place it in the hands of 'entrepreneurs' for good.

It's really as simple as that: Who owns the capital is in control!

Industrial-scale food production has correlated with a population boom that our planetary boundaries can no longer sustain without further enslavements to business tycoons. GM crops and monoculture industrial-scale production of 'human fooders' have been messing up our food system, killing our soils and destroying the atmosphere in addition to disintegrating rural communities which are not able to compete with the superficially cheap mass food production. The unwanted 'extra carbon'  in the atmosphere does not only represent fossil fuel emission but is actually carbon (and biodiversity) loss from the soil and oceans as well as synergy loss in our rural communities.

To add insult to injuries, a new 'philanthropic' initiative 'to end starvation in Africa' using GM crops has resulted in pumping millions of dollars into another GMO 'mass feeding' project instead of global partnership and developmental solutions - in total disregard of the environmental, ecological, and cultural factors related of food production and consumption.

The real war is against toxic capitalism and monopoly

Toxic capitalism is a concentration of wealth/power in the hands of few individuals while the rest of the population are just able to survive to serve the purposes of those few; people's worth only what they produce and consume. When the capital concentration was once with governments, people needed national heroes to liberate them from the political dictators but when the concentration of capital - and therefore the power, shifted to a few transnational individuals through Neoliberalism, the battle of liberation is now of the whole humanity to fight regardless of age, colour, and gender.

Neoliberalism is the illegitimate son of Darwinism which hypothesized that cut-throat competition among and within species for survival is the natural mechanism for life complexification. While the human knowledge shifted away from the traditional understanding of Darwinism [1][2] over decades, Social Darwinism ideologies continued mushrooming into an extremely complex ecosystem from which there seems to be no obvious escape. Almost every country in the world today is in debt; some of more than double their GDP.

While governments are trapped in vicious circles of debt to each other and to supranational bodies, and when the international laws allow multinationals to sue governments, what is really in the power of politicians to do when we demand change?


Neoliberalists claim the Malthus was wrong when he predicted that the population growth will exceed our ability to produce food and is only leveled out by disasters. They argue that technology has enabled mass production of food and that further intensification is eminently possible through genetic manipulation. Malthus was definitely wrong as he underestimated the human intelligence and ability to create technological solutions but didn't he have a point by considering nature's boundaries as our limit for expansion given other values that are as important to us as the mere survival?

The current scale of food production is definitely not sustainable from a holistic point of view. It's destroying the soil, wildlife, and the atmosphere and apocalyptically 'enslaves' populations to the provider(s) of 'cheap food' - which proved to be more expensive than life itself.

In their quest for nutrients, plants form associations with other organisms by sending molecular signals through the soil and air so as facilitate nutrients exchange and develop defence mechanisms against diseases and predators. Plants that are genetically manipulated and/or synthetically fertilized might be safe to eat, but as they experience no distress in finding nutrients wouldn't need to communicate with soil organisms for nutrients exchange. The result is the ultimate disintegration of biological cycles developed over billions of years, and the need to use more harmful chemicals to sustain an unsustainable system for only a bit longer[1].

 The ultimate outcome is obviously the long-term loss of soil biodiversity, loss of pollinators, and unhealthy human population growth based on the fake abundance of cheap food. Industrial food production has proved to be the assailant, not the saviour.

Young and old generations alike must step up in the face of industrial agriculture including GMO and revert to 'permaculture'. Permaculture principles and practices are capable of neutralizing the toxicity of Capitalism as we discover the power of 'togetherness' with each other and with nature.
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At Paramaethu Cymru Permaculture gathering 2018 - photo credit @Graham Wood

Fossil-fuel carbon emissions and industrial monoculture are two sides of the same coin

Most activists have set a target for carbon emission they demand their governments to reach. However, the carbon cycle is a balance between the level of carbon in the air and the level of carbon in soils and oceans. If we only focus on lowering carbon emission while disregarding carbon storage and sequestration, it will be too late when we turn around to try to save our soils and the atmosphere from the carbon imbalance that is not fossil fuel related. Carbon emission, food production, and healthy soils have to be treated as one item and must be addressed together.

'Feeding the poor' between philanthropy and enslavement

Unless in relief at times of conflict and war, 'feeding the poor' in disregard of all ecological, cultural and social aspects of food production is actually disrespectful and rather colonial. The humanitarian obligation towards the poor and vulnerable must take the form of global partnership and sustainable developmental solutions as the SDGs advise. Otherwise, it's only a game of power!

The power of people!




There is no generational war over climate change action. Except for few who think they're above vulnerability, we're all in the same boat - young and old, overpowered by bad economics once thought to be the best of human knowledge and practice. It still is in the power of the people to stand up for themselves and for the planet until they've lost the last battle for food sovereignty to business tycoons. It's now the time to take control of our food production system as the other face of the carbon-emission-reduction coin to save our magnificent planet, ourselves, and our children.

Two bright children making clay models of mushroom during the Harvest Festival - October 2018

As an educator, I see no alternative to giving space to the children to contribute to the transition for sustainable communities. School projects can extend to invoke design-solutions towards sustainable cities and communities. Permaculture social gatherings provide opportunities for connecting, raising awareness, exchanging skills, and initiating debates while being elevated by spirituality, music, synergy, and harmony with nature.






Monday, July 20, 2015

A Utopia? No, thanks!

Review:

Overwhelmed by reading the Guardian's The End of Capitalism Has Begun" (17/07/2015).

I couldn't but to compare it to my Education and Sustainable Development Goals - Notes on the HLPF published a week earlier. (10/07/2015).

Between my Note and the Guardian's article there are some common keywords such as;
  • Utopia/Utopic (goals)
  • Neoliberalism
  • Evolutionary
and key ideas such as;
  • The power shift from politicians to entrepreneurs through neoliberalism and;
  • the beginning of a new global era of sharing, solidarity, ..etc.
However, I see that declaring the "end of capitalism" and the arrival of a "Utopia" as pretty much naive and erratic. My idea - in spite of the apparent similarity, is that we are not there yet, and might never be there - in spite of the hard work and the good intentions, til we've managed to "align objectives" among stakeholders.

It is true that the sharing economy is on the rise, however, if this is necessarily an introduction to a Utopia, is dubious. Here is the paradox of a Utopia: You cannot expect to respect all people, all freedoms, all rights, all wishes, all cultures, and all needs of all people yet avoid conflict. Freedoms and rights MUST conflict at certain points and this is where priorities must be set.

So how can you have a Utopia without ultimate peace? Fear is that justice may be compromised - assuming that such ultimate peace is attainable.

The other paradox is that development is part of the sustainable development package. Development requires mobilization of resources. Mobilizing resources involves innovation. Innovation requires capital management. Capital management adheres to the dynamics of the free-market (neoliberalism)*. Unless capital management has been actually - and realistically, re-arranged to work for equality; that the poor and vulnerable don't get crushed by the powerful and the ultra-rich, declaring an "end of Capitalism" would only be a joke!

The Guardian's author states the Capitalism "will be abolished by creating something more dynamic that exists, at first, almost unseen within the old system, but which will break through, reshaping the economy around new values and behaviors. I call this postcapitalism".

So what exactly is this 'postcapitalism' which has already begun but will actually begin in the future and isn't anything that we really know or can define?!! It will come to "reshape and create" but it does not even exist?This is one of the most self-contradictory proposals I've ever encountered.

Anyway, he calls this transformation "post-capitalism" while I - based on the recent UN global convention in New York (The High Level Political Forum for Sustainable Development 2015 - HLPF), proposed the declaration of an era of global solidarity for conservation of life and survival of our human kind. The transformation in the horizon (global solidarity as described hereinabove), does not have to conflict with neoliberalism - in principle (even if it currently does). Neo-liberalism involves value exchange. When values change the game dynamics change subsequently. The breakthrough, then, begins by the successful philanthropic pressures of the masses, enlightened consumerism, social entrepreneurship and political will, in a fierce battle against hatred, discrimination and greed.

This proposal carries in it the justification, value and mechanism of transformation, but " The end of capitalism has begun" one, unjustifiably, celebrates what has not been yet attained - if ever.

Also, there is a difference between Utopic goals (i.e. as set of ambitious goals to reach equality, good health, freedom, peace for all), and the actual achievement of such goals. While goals must be ambitious, the designated means of implementation must be practical, rational and realistic, which why I proposed the Sustainable Development Goalsneeded to have been interlinked more coherently. The more we explore such interlinks, the more we hit areas of conflict and the easier it is to set priorities for implementation - based on mutual benefits (if possible) and the values we cherish the most.

There is still much work to do, and much hope in humanity, but it'll be all up to the people to get together and work for a better future.

*Please read the original notes for further explanation.

RELATED:
Education and Sustainable Development Goals - Notes on the HLPF
Justice between humans and animals - study