Weeping For The Planet: The famous "Crying Indian" advertisement, produced by Keeping America Beautiful, struck a deep chord with Americans when it first screened on "Earth Day" - 22 April 1971. It was a time when both the Left and the Right respected ecological science and were ready to take action to protect the environment. How times have changed. In 2014, right-wing politicians are unwilling to tolerate "any measures which are socialism masquerading as environmentalism".
MANY NEW ZEALANDERS are puzzled by the sudden descent of
right-wing political parties into anti-environmentalism. Forty years ago, in
the first flush of global ecological awareness, political parties of every
ideological stripe were ready to put aside their differences for the sake of
the environment. There was a strong bi-partisan agreement that, regardless of
whether they were Left or Right, every human-being had a personal vested
interest in improving the health of the planet.
It was a Republican President, Richard Nixon, who signed
into law the National Environmental Policy Act of 1969, which, for the first
time, required federal agencies to file environmental impact statements for
federally funded programmes.
Nixon who oversaw, in 1970, the creation of the
Environmental Protection Agency and signed into law the Clean Air Extension
Act, imposing strict controls on airborne pollutants known to be hazardous to
human health.
Nixon who, in 1972 offered whales, dolphins, sea otters,
polar bears and seals the protection of the US Government by signing the Marine
Mammals Protection Act.
Nixon who, likewise, presided over the passage of the 1973
Endangered Species Act and the Safe Drinking Water Act 1974.
Though a deeply conservative (and deeply flawed) politician,
Nixon was a shrewd enough politician to grasp the electoral heft of the
burgeoning environmental movement.
By the 1980s, however, political parties of the Right around
the world were rapidly distancing themselves from the “environmentally
friendly” legislative reforms of the 1970s. Ronald Reagan was no Richard Nixon.
The Right’s growing antipathy to environmentalism was
fuelled by the world-wide ideological resurgence of laissez-faire capitalism. The so-called “New Right” was hostile to
just about every kind of regulatory regime, but it was environmental regulation
that earned its special ire. This was because the much admired dynamism of “the
free market” was hugely dependent on the capitalists’ ability to “externalise”
(i.e. not have to account for or pay for) the environmental and social
consequences of their behaviour.
If capitalists were required to fully account for and pay
for their detrimental impact upon the natural and human environments, then
their profitability would be seriously (and in many cases irreversibly)
reduced.
In the 1970s, political leaders like Nixon still felt
obliged to respond to the voters’ pleas to save the planet. By the 1980s,
however, the priorities of the Right had changed. The mission of conservative
parties everywhere was now to convince voters that capitalism’s ultimate
contradiction: the extraction of infinite profits from a finite planet; wasn’t
really a contradiction at all, and that industrial capitalism’s most fearsome
externality, anthropogenic global warming, was nothing more than “green
propaganda”.
This was not an easy sell. Historically speaking, the rise
of capitalism and the rise of science had coincided, spurring one another on to
new discoveries, new applications. Persuading people to reject the science of
global warming could only be achieved at the cost of abandoning the rationalist
project itself.
But it was rationalism and science which had, ever since the
eighteenth century, imbued capitalism with its progressive economic, social and
political force. To reduce scientific knowledge to the status of exculpatory
evidence bought and paid for; and scientists to little more than the servants
of big business; would strip capitalism of its intellectual potency. It would
mean abandoning what Professor Niall Fergusson calls its “killer apps” – the
critical advantages that had enabled capitalism to see off all its ideological
rivals.
These potentially fatal dangers notwithstanding, by the second
decade of the twenty-first century it was possible for right-wing political
leaders to win public office in spite of (or even because of) their refusal to
accept the findings of environmental science.
Across the Tasman, for example, the Cabinet of the
Australian Prime Minister, Tony Abbott, has proclaimed, with a straight face,
that it is not prepared to tolerate “any measures which are socialism
masquerading as environmentalism”.
Who Speaks For The Trees? Ancient Huon Pine, Mt Read, Tasmania. These trees are among the oldest on the planet (3,000-10,000 years old).
Included among these allegedly “socialist” measures, is the
World Heritage Status of both the Tasmanian wilderness and the Great Barrier
Reef. In any stand-off between ecological science and Australia’s extractive
industrialists it’s not difficult to predict who will win the Abbott
Government’s support.
We shouldn’t feel too smug and superior, however, when it
comes to our Australian cousins. Not when the difference between their
right-wing politicians and ours is, as always, more a matter of subtlety than
substance.
Environmental destruction masquerading as economic growth.
This essay was
originally published by The Waikato Times, The Taranaki Daily News, The
Timaru Herald, The Otago Daily Times and The Greymouth Star of Friday, 22 August 2014.
4 comments:
I think a more accurate assessment Chris might have left room for the religious right, who believe that either God will not let us die out from over using his bounty, or that the end days are upon us anyway and it doesn't matter :-).
Do you see people as a threat to the planet Chris or just libertarian capitalism?
What are your thoughts on New Zealand's population? Do we really need to keep attracting skills from other ethnic and cultural groups for our well being, or is this just another ideology that places humans on the black side of the ledger?
It's happening big time in Canada too under the present conservative government
Science may be able to tell us a lot about the Tasmanian wilderness or the Great Barrier Reef, but it's absolutely silent on what we should do to them. That's politics.
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