| It Ain't Easy Being Green |
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| Aragorn23 | |||
| Wednesday, 14 May 2008 | |||
![]() Although the warnings of impending environmental catastrophe were hotly contended a few years ago (most tellingly by high-paid corporate lobby groups), few people now deny that many of the essential natural systems that sustain all life on Earth are threatened by human activity.
Should we then feel guilty when we're told that none of these measures will have any noticable impact, even if every last one of us drove a Prius and had a solar geyser? The problem is threefold. First, spectacularly greedy business interests have seen a new gap in the market to exploit and have attached all sorts of green rhetoric, also known as 'greenwash' to their products and PR; second, most of the spokespeople for green 'activism' are married to the idea that market forces alone will suffice to save us, strengthening the drive of the green marketeers and illegitimating any more radical actions; third, some of our habits are so deeply entrenched that few have actually realised that they can and should be changed. All these factors combine to give us an entirely false sense of how we can really make a difference. So what can we do if we are serious about living ethically and reversing the tide of ecological devastation? The environmental movement has several different answers to this question. Light Green Environmentalism So-called 'light green environmentalists' ('LGs' for short) see protection of the environment as a personal consumer responsibility and ask us to simply make ethical, responsible choices about how we live. For instance, given the fact that the global livestock industry is the single largest cause of human-made global warming (bigger even than the entire global transport industry according to the 2006 United Nations report, 'Livestock's Long Shadow') the LG's insist that we should eat either very little meat or no meat at all as a vegetarian or (even better) vegan diet uses as little as 1/20th of the natural resources a standard meat-based Western diet does. In fact, changing to a vegan diet is probably the single most responsible consumer commitment an individual can make to saving the environment and will make much more of a dent in the average ecological footprint than almost anything else currently on the cards. LG's also advise us to use our consumer power to boycott companies (or even nations, like China) that are damaging our environment by not buying from them and instead trying to support local and eco-friendly industries wherever possible. Bright Green Environmentalism Going one step further than the LG's, BG's recognise that what we consume is important but also attempt to tackle the problem from the other end. BG's ask the important question of how we produce what is consumed; they thus tend to be enthusiastic about things like renewable energy, hybrid cars, nanotechnology and other 'small footprint' technologies. Some BG's have even proposed a novel, if somewhat hare-brained solution to the old 'methane belching cow' problem: a machine that is connected to cattle and captures their methane emissions for use as clean energy! In essence, BG's assert that through new technologies and sustainable living practices we can stem or even reverse the tide of ecological devastation. Dark Green Environmentalism Like the LG's, the DG's believe that we should consume in an ethical, responsible way and, like the BG's, they believe that innovation in the way we produce is crucial, but they take both of these positions one step further by questioning why consumerism has so fully permeated our lives and our values. DG's believe that environmental problems are caused not just by what we buy and how it is made, but also by how we live and function as a society. They see the dominant political and economic ideology of globalised industrial capitalism as fundamentally flawed in that it promotes shallow and unsustainable values based on greed, mindless consumerism, alienation from nature and rampant exploitation of resources. Not content to leave the analysis there, DG's go on to state that the basis of all this is an illogical emphasis on perpetual growth at the expense of all else. They call this drive 'growth mania' and advocate in its place an egalitarian, anarchist society with a more nuanced value system irreducible to capital, pursuing development and refinement of ideas and technologies in place of growth for its own sake. Distinct from both LG's and BG's, DG's encourage social activism, protest and radical direct action; in fact some DG's, like the philosopher and activist Dr Steve Best (www.drstevebest.org) and the writer and ecologist Derrick Jensen, eloquently defend the necessity for acting in a revolutionary manner even if this means participating in illegal activities like sabotaging logging operations (like the Earth Liberation Front) or sinking whaling ships (like the Sea Shepherd Conservation Society). While these might seem like extremist tactics, Dr Best's recent anthology, 'Igniting a Revolution' legitimates their use admirably, comparing the environmental struggle to historical justice movements and noting that revolutionary direct action has always been employed where more reformist 'light green' measures have failed. Even Darker Green Environmentalism! At the most extreme end of the DG spectrum are what can best be termed 'primitivists', people who work towards the complete abolition of industrial society, including even agriculture. On the surface this looks like a somewhat fanatical, almost escapist approach to the problems we face as a technologically advanced society but, while hardly any of us would like to go back to living in caveman times, it is worth pausing for a moment to ask the question of exactly what we want and what makes us truly happy before we dismiss the idea of living more simply as absurd right off the bat. After all, psychologists are telling us that for all our flashy gadgets and cheap sweatshop clothes we're no happier now than we were several decades ago and are in fact becoming more anxious, more self-absorbed and less capable of meaningful and fulfilling interpersonal relationships. Few of us enjoy the mundane and often meaningless slog of the five-day work week, the long and congested daily commute in our empty five-seater cars, the mad rush to spend our hard-earned pennies on shiny but ultimately unsatisfying trinkets....instead, we enjoy, almost every single one of us, leisurely time spent with family and friends, long walks through green expanse where we can marvel at the majesty and complexity of the natural world and simple time spent engaging our creative impulses not as a means to some fiscal end but as an entirely satisfying ends in itself. Conclusion So, even though we have sent camera equipment to Mars and now know enough about the quantum world to build a simple computer in a glass of water, even though we have almost perfected the artificial eye and the bionic heart, even though we can buy, if the unequal distribution of the world's resources is biased in our favour, high-definition televisions, 160gb mp3 players and phones that recognise spoken commands, perhaps we have forgotten, in our mad rush towards some fictitious goal post, how to ask some very simple questions. What is an individual human life? What could living consist in? How do we define ourselves as a species and how do we measure our worth? Is this really the best it could be? Are we really acting in the interests of ourselves and the planet? What is the value, intrinsic or otherwise, of other species? What is it that drives all of us to act in such facile and self-destructive ways and can this be changed? How? Maybe, just maybe, if enough of us are brave enough to confront these questions honestly and with all of our being, the very changes in living brought about in answering them will suffice to save us, along with all the other life on earth that we have disempowered and claimed dominion over. Until then, the old adage is surely true: our reach exceeds our grasp.
Disclaimer: Harmonious Living is written for and read by a community of individuals with strong and independent opinions. While the publishers of Harmonious Living are dedicated to providing a forum in which views can be openly expressed, those views do not necessarily reflect those of the publishers.
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