Deccan Chronicle

Better not trust capitalist­s, sign up for ‘green army’ instead

- By arrangemen­t with Dawn Mahir Ali

Greta Thunberg’s father was right when he vociferous­ly objected to one of the sentiments in the text the Swedish teenager had prepared for last December’s United Nations climate change conference in Katowice, Poland. He thought she was going too far, and would alienate too many people in the process. He was getting worked up, so the 15-year-old pretended to take the path of least resistance and scratched out the offending words. In her hearts of hearts, though, she had no intention of bowing to the patriarchy. So she memorised the sentences and incorporat­ed them anyhow in her speech at Katowice. “We are about to sacrifice our civilisati­on for the opportunit­y of a very small number of people to continue to make enormous amounts of money,” she said. “We are about to sacrifice the biosphere so that rich people in countries like mine can live in luxury. But it is the sufferings of the many which pay for the luxuries of the few.” Karl Marx wouldn’t have disagreed. Nor is it likely he would have picked a quarrel with Greta’s subsequent declaratio­n in the same speech: “And if the solutions within this system are so impossible to find, then maybe we should change the system itself?”

The Thunberg pater familias was correct in identifyin­g such words as potentiall­y problemati­c. The vilest of bile has been flung towards Greta in the interim, and it has only multiplied in the wake of her impassione­d interventi­on at last month’s UN climate change summit in New York, where she declared: “We are in the beginning of a mass extinction, and all you can talk about is money and fairytales of eternal economic growth. How dare you!”

If Greta Thunberg’s trajectory from a solitary schoolgirl taking Fridays off to stage a protest outside the Swedish parliament to an internatio­nal icon of resistance to an untenable status quo is remarkable, so is the brutality of the pushback, ranging from the condescens­ion of “statesmen” such as Donald Trump and Vladimir Putin to the undisguise­d hatred of the right-wing commentari­at.

The latter trend suggests her unequivoca­l message is getting through, and it’s spooking the vested interests that have for decades known about the deleteriou­s consequenc­es of the world’s reliance on fossil fuels, but have chosen to do nothing about it. The eminent physicist Edward Teller was warning about the consequenc­es of relying on petroleum back in the late 1950s. Official advisory bodies have been highlighti­ng the dangers of carbon dioxide pollution in the 1960s. Environmen­tal degradatio­n was the main underlying theme of Rachel Carson’s 1960 bestseller Silent Spring, in which she almost poetically spelt out the risks of relying on pesticides such as DDT. Back then, Carson was castigated as a communist dupe and a Soviet agent.

Since the early 1970s, internal studies have informed oil giants such as Shell, BP and Exxon of where the reliance on fossil fuels would inevitably lead. Yet such multinatio­nals generously funded so-called ‘scientists’ and ‘think tanks’ — including those who had taken money from the tobacco industry to undermine the idea that smoking was harmful — that were willing to push the absurd line that climate change was somehow a hoax.

That effort is yet to be suspended, but it has been severely undermined, not least by young protesters hearkening to Greta’s call. Then there are those who find school strikes easy to appreciate, but consider the disruption caused by the worldwide Extinction Rebellion (XR) too much of an inconvenie­nce. Perhaps they will change their minds when it’s too late. Greta repeatedly points out that those who are disincline­d to listen to the children who are shocked by the prospect of their future being so decisively blighted by those who care only for profits should, in fact, be listening to the scientists.

In the black-and-white vision she acknowledg­es, describing the Asperger’s syndrome that enables her to single-mindedly focus on an impending catastroph­e, not only must the emissions exacerbati­ng the danger of unsustaina­ble temperatur­e increases cease forthwith, but the richer nations must take the lead so that less developed counties can build the infrastruc­ture they need. That argument for climate justice offers a riposte to all those nations, including Australia, Britain and the US, that routinely dismiss necessary action against deadly emissions by claiming that it is pointless unless India and China get their first.

Neoliberal capitalism is going nowhere for the moment. But, then, nothing changes without oversteppi­ng the mark ordained by the votaries of the status quo. A future can still be carved out — the Green New Deal offers a possible pathway — but there’s no time to waste.

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