Polish Humour: To stage a critical conference on Climate Change in the heart of Poland’s coalfields just has to be a joke. Right?
KATOWICE, SILESIA. Polish humour, no? To stage a critical
conference on Climate Change in the heart of Poland’s coalfields just has to be
a joke. Right?
Wrong. Not when the Polish Government is seriously advancing
the idea of a “just transition” from coal. Just transition? That’s code for: “Nothing
will be done which threatens the job security of the thousands of Polish miners
who constitute the electoral heart of the ruling Law & Justice Party.” No
one in Polish politics has forgotten that it was the shipyard workers and the coal
miners who gave the anti-communist Solidarity movement its economic and
political heft back in the early 1980s. If the Commies could crack these guys,
what chance do the Greenies have?
The bad news isn’t confined to the coalfields of Eastern
Europe. In France an embattled Emmanuel Macron has been forced to back away from
his Climate Change-inspired fuel price hikes.
With the furious “Yellow Vests” threatening to launch
another nationwide assault on the institutions and symbols of French state
authority; and with his Police chiefs warning him that their men, close to
exhaustion, may not be equal to the task of preserving law and order; what
choice did the French President have? It was either concede the Yellow Vests’
key demand, or, bring in the armed forces to quell their nationwide
insurrection against oppressive taxes and “Parisian arrogance”. But, setting
the French army against the French people has only ever ended in tyranny,
revolution, or both.
This is the world we live in now. A world where the
desperate pleading of Sir David Attenborough and the UN Secretary General fails.
Their words falling not so much on deaf ears as ears filled with the subtle
whispers of fossil fuel lobbyists or the angry protests of workers and
consumers. Vice-President Richard Cheney knew exactly what he was talking about
when he warned the American political class that: “The American way of life is
not negotiable.” Nope, and not the French or Polish ways of life, either.
It really is the perfect political storm. At precisely the
time when trust and confidence in the world’s decision-makers is most needed,
it is plummeting. Those whom Sir David enjoined, on behalf the world’s peoples,
to “lead” the planet to safety simply cannot count on more than a tiny fraction
of the global population accepting the massive and radical changes that would
require.
Perhaps, if people could be persuaded that the costs of
transitioning away from our fossil fuel-based civilisation would be equally
shared, then there might be some hope. But who believes that is even remotely
likely? Who can see the “loose affiliation of millionaires and billionaires” (thank
you Paul Simon) who rule this world voluntarily relinquishing their wealth and
privilege? Who would put their faith in the political classes that service those
millionaires and billionaires ever deciding to treat Climate Change as the
moral equivalent of war?
The disconnect between the rulers and the ruled is just too
profound. In the current political environment it is much more likely that any
Climate Change measures inflicting genuine hardship on the mass of the
population would be met not with stoical acceptance but, as we have seen in
France, with rage and denial. One has only to listen to the bitterness and
contempt in the voices of the Polish miners interviewed by the press corps at
Katowice. Rather than accept that the coal they dig out of the ground is
warming the planet catastrophically, they preferred to pour scorn upon the
scientists’ and economists’ warnings. “Who knows more about coal,” they scoff,
“them or us?”
And that marvel of the last quarter-century – the Internet –
rather than acting as the perfect instrument for informing the whole world about
the dangers that lie ahead has, instead, facilitated the world’s division into
a multitude of mutually hostile cultural and political enclaves. There are as
many truths today as there are audiences. People are willing to believe only
what they have already been convinced of. Like addresses like exclusively – and
everyone else can go to hell.
New Zealanders are no different in this respect from the
rest of humanity. We should be thankful that the price of oil has fallen
precipitately over the past few weeks because, had it not, rising petrol prices
combined with increased fuel taxes would almost certainly have sparked a
full-scale truckers’ revolt. Considerably less than one hundred large trucks,
strategically stalled, could reduce Auckland to angry chaos in less than
half-an-hour.
Now imagine those truckers joining forces with thousands of
angry farmers protesting against the imposition of Climate Change-driven
reforms on the agricultural sector. The French are not the only people who know
how to cause trouble!
Sir David Attenborough has spent his entire adult life
bringing the wonders of the natural world to appreciative global audiences. Few
people on Earth have a more profound understanding of the immense damage being
inflicted on the planet’s fragile biosphere by our fossil-fuel based
civilisation. One can only imagine his distress at the near certainty of so
much wonder and beauty being driven to extinction by anthropogenic global
warming.
In the dark watches of the night, I wonder, does even as
big-hearted a man as Sir David Attenborough not comfort himself with the
thought that the authors of this global tragedy will, in the not too distant
future, and along with all other living things, be forced to pay the price. The
people of the world may not be interested in responding to Climate Change, but
Climate Change is, most certainly, responding to them.
This essay was
originally posted on The Daily Blog
of Thursday, 6 December 2018.
I had thought that the 'yellow vests' were protesting about petrol tax but also because it was at the expense of ordinary people while taxes on the rich were lowered? Makes a bit of a nonsense of Charles's idea that all the French people want is a centrist though right? Because AFAIK they have quite a lot of sympathy in France even though they are destructive. And Macron's approval rating is somewhere south of trumps now I believe.
ReplyDelete
ReplyDelete"Will to live" ... MIA.
We are/are we? then ... DOOMED?
Any "denial" still abroad, should be reserved now whilst awaiting credible evidence that humans ... can do a blind thing about it.
Would not compulsory solar panels for all housing make a difference for reducing the current climate warming rate ?
ReplyDeleteCertain countries won't give up their coal usage, job losses.
ReplyDeleteJens, from what I can gather painting everyone's roof white would make a difference. Such a simple solution but can you imagine the cries of "nanny state" if something like this were imposed from above.
ReplyDeleteA forceful, talking social-democratic party not compromised by its vile history would help. We've always been full of nonsense but now it matters. The psychological reality in full force against the objective one. Guess which trumps which?
ReplyDeleteHelen Clarke's pol.sci influence on this govt is deleterious. Mortally. Time sometimes ends.
On two fronts we can't make progress, this nitwit supposedly rational govt and religiously subjectivist individuals.
The seedbed of 1935 Labour produced the Rogernomes and they produced atomised individualists. But that just makes a good background for our heroes. Tho' sometimes it seems like you are Republicans in the Augustan era where he humoured them.