Climate Chaos and its Origins in Slavery and Capitalism
By Reva Blau and Judith Blau
()
About this ebook
Climate Chaos provides readers the latest consensus among international scientists on the cascading impacts of climate change and the tipping points that today threaten to irreversibly destroy the delicate balance of the Earth’s ecosystems. The book covers some controversial topics: that slavery in the American South is the origin of capitalism; the indigenous perspective on the environment (“Mother Earth” movement), international debates about the response to accelerating climate change, and the failure of the U.S. government to be part of the international effort to slow climate change.
The book argues that deregulation and an expansion of fossil fuel extraction have already tipped the planet towards a climate that is out of control. This crisis will cause massive human suffering when extreme weather, pollution and disease lead to displacement, food and water shortages, war, and possibly species extinction.
The repression of science creates an existential crisis for humanity that has reached crisis proportions in the twentieth-first century. The scale of the crisis has prompted a call for geoengineering, large interventions into the climate by technological innovation. However, the history of colonialism and slavery make the technological and monetary elites untrustworthy to solve this humanitarian and planetary crisis. While the elites have always cast certain groups of humanity as expendable, the climate crisis makes a true humanist and egalitarian movement based in human rights and dignity not only aspirational but also existentially mandatory. The crisis demands that we remake the world into a more just and safe place for all the world’s people.
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Climate Chaos and its Origins in Slavery and Capitalism - Reva Blau
CLIMATE CHAOS AND ITS ORIGINS IN SLAVERY AND CAPITALISM
Climate Chaos and Its Origins in Slavery and Capitalism
REVA BLAU AND JUDITH BLAU
Anthem Press
An imprint of Wimbledon Publishing Company
www.anthempress.com
This edition first published in UK and USA 2020
by ANTHEM PRESS
75–76 Blackfriars Road, London SE1 8HA, UK
or PO Box 9779, London SW19 7ZG, UK
and
244 Madison Ave #116, New York, NY 10016, USA
Copyright © Judith Blau and Reva Blau 2020
The author asserts the moral right to be identified as the author of this work. All rights reserved. Without limiting the rights under copyright reserved above, no part of this publication may be reproduced, stored or introduced into a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form or by any means (electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording or otherwise), without the prior written permission of both the copyright owner and the above publisher of this book.
British Library Cataloguing-in-Publication Data
A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library.
Library of Congress Control Number: 2020941009
ISBN-13: 978-1-78527-527-2 (Hbk)
ISBN-10: 1-78527-527-5 (Hbk)
This title is also available as an e-book.
To Greta Thunberg and the Juliana Plaintiffs, and to Dashiell and Siena, the young people we love the most.
CONTENTS
Preface
1. Background: Early Signs of Warming into the Present
2. Extraction: Slavery and Capitalism
3. Are We Helpless? Or Empowered?
4. What Replaces Capitalism? The Circular Economy? Blockchain?
5. Geoengineering
6. Hands off Mother Earth
7. The Millennium Development Goals, the Sustainable Development Goals, and the Paris Agreement
8. The SDGs and COVID-19
9. Turning the Page
10. Conclusions: To End Capitalism
Glossary: Terms Relevant for (1) Global Warming, and (2) COVID-19
Index
PREFACE
Judith is the mother of Reva who is the mother to Dashiell age 15 and Siena age 8. Together, we wonder if it is even ethical for future generations to reproduce when children today will undoubtedly face significant challenges wrought by the climate crisis. The COVID-19 crisis underlines this existential dilemma even more starkly.
Like climate change, the pandemic requires the kind of global cooperation and solidarity that matches the speed of global, late-stage capitalism. Instead, countries were left on their own to respond to the crisis weeks after it had already taken hold in some of the most advanced societies of the world—China, Italy, Spain, and the United States. Within the United States, the far-right policies of Donald Trump prevented any type of preparation. In fact, while members of the Intelligence Community warned last year of a pandemic on the scale we are seeing today, the administration systematically cut off the epidemiology, which forewarned the crisis.
Notably, at the dawn of the crisis, Donald Trump systematically contradicted Dr. Anthony Fauci, the well-respected physician and immunologist, who emerged as the nation’s expert on the control of infectious diseases.
The White House continues to silence and contradict epidemiologists, allowing states to chart their own course with social distancing protocols. In a bizarre Faustian bargain, states that were slow to test, slow to quarantine, slow to discourage travel and shopping are now being awarded with more medical equipment to respond to the spikes they are seeing in cases, hospitalization, and patients needing acute care. These are the same red states who voted for Trump creating a bizarre Faustian bargain with the president of the United States.
The Trump administration to this day has also refused to federalize the response to the crisis, even while, at the time of writing, 135,000 Americans have died, and well over three million people are infected. States and localities are left on their own to respond to the crisis by bidding against each other for ventilators and PPEs and begging for volunteers with nursing experience, either in school or retired, to join the ranks of healthcare professionals. The response has been so fragmented that even trace testing and reporting across the United States are titanic tasks.
Clearly and tragically, it is the death count that lights up a litmus test in orange neon the brutality of capitalism as a system for organizing society when faced with a pandemic. Countries with early, federalized coordinated responses have fared well. Those without such responses, largely due to the fears of the effects of social distancing on the marketplace, have not. As the Washington Post reported it, as of April 8, South Korea had suffered 200 deaths due to the virus (4 per 1 million of population) and the number of new cases has slowed, while the United States had suffered 13,000 deaths (39 per 1 million population) with new cases continuing to grow quickly
(Washington Post, April 10, 2020).
Climate change presents the same challenge logistically and morally to a system created almost solely for profit. We have yet to arrive at the apex of the COVID-19 crisis. One can only hope that in the wake of this tragedy we will learn that we must work together to save lives.
Dash was born a year before Al Gore published his 2006 seminal book, An Inconvenient Truth: The Planetary Emergency of Global Warming and What We Can Do about It. Having taken a freshman class on Earth Science with Wallace Broecker at Columbia, I (Reva) knew of human-caused climate change in the late 80s. I remember distinctly the graphs he had created showing the climate fluctuations from the Pleistocene era. I also remember distinctly the more recent graphs and the point at which (around 1980) CO2 emissions and average global temperatures began their steep, unfathomable ascent in red pen, creating an upward arc that seemed, even then, to risk ascending ever upward toward a vertical future off the graph.
Yet, I still viewed climate change, and even its catastrophic effects, as unfolding somewhere out there beyond the confines of my existence in Paris, New York, and Massachusetts. It was the stuff of science and it occurred in nature, which I saw as unfolding well outside my life on the Upper West side and in various other places. I felt greater fears, I must confess, for the flora and fauna, which I presumed would suffer the most.
Reading Gore’s book when Dash was just a year old awakened in me the sense that climate change could be a crisis. I probably would have been keener in producing another child if it had not been for Gore’s book and movie. Instead, Dash’s dad, Joe, and I decided to adopt a child. Some people thought that the concept of recycling
was a strange way of coming into parenting; but I thought it made all the sense in the world.
I also am a middle school teacher. The Monday after the Climate Strike, a sixth-grade student raised her hand and, echoing Greta Thunberg’s speech at the UN, said, We have eight and a half years to halt climate change and save ourselves. Do you think we will?
She was referring to the amount of emissions that could still be emitted without passing the 1.5 degree limit. At the current rate of emissions, the world is predicted to reach it in eight-and-a-half years. I had to be honest with her and I said, I don’t know.
But I do hope that this book, if it does anything, contributes to the enormous push—primarily from people between her age and the age I was when I first saw Wallace Broecker’s graphs on the projector, to demand from governments the type of changes that could, indeed, halt climate change and avoid the most disastrous effects from wreaking suffering, or even death, of the billions of people who call Earth their home.
Global warming is happening faster and with more devastating consequences than predicted even a year ago. We are entering a true carbon-fueled crisis, one that will have devastating effects on all future generations and could well make the Earth permanently uninhabitable by the century’s end. By the time today’s children are adults, it is almost a given that the world will look completely different than today, and it will be reshaped by climate change. By the time of our grandchildren’s adulthood, the Earth very well might be unlivable.
In December 2015, the Paris Agreement, named after the city in which it was adopted, brought 186 countries together to strengthen the global response to climate change. More ambitious than its predecessors, the Paris Agreement’s goal was to keep warming to well below two degrees Celsius, which would halve the trajectory of warming that scientists predict through the projection models using the rate of emissions today. Initially the world’s biggest emitters, China and the United States, who had not participated in the Kyoto Protocol, joined the Agreement to significantly reduce emissions, and help developing countries reduce theirs. However, when Trump took office, he announced that the United States would withdraw. That decision had—and continues to have—cruel and global significance since the United States has such high carbon dioxide emissions that it harms the world’s peoples. Judith had written a hopeful book—The Paris Agreement: Climate Change, Solidarity, and Human—which was published in 2017. Yet one of the first things Trump did when becoming president of the United States was to withdraw from the Paris Agreement. The world’s scientists were horrified, knowing the consequences for the planet and the people who inhabit it. In response, Judith wrote and published, Crimes against Humanity: Climate Change and Trump’s Legacy of Planetary Destruction (2019).
Today, scientists are concerned that the Paris Agreement did not go far enough or that countries are not meeting their targets. Even by limiting warming to one-and-a-half degrees from pre-industrial levels, the goals of the Paris Agreement, human civilization will be gravely threatened by extreme heat waves and drought, pestilence, fires, and species extinction. A band around the Earth closest to the equator will become unlivable—sending millions of