(Earth's environment as no longer cyclical in restoring itself but linear, like human history)
"Sir Gawain and the Green Knight" (where the knight cheerfully picks up his severed head) no longer captures the nature of life.
The
population growth curve.
The Malthusian
assumption:
Complicating the message of the Malthusians: Population growth is not the only factor in environmental degradation. Consumption patterns. (Consider golf courses, suburban lawns, etc.) The ecological footprint.
The categorical imperative of mainstream environmental ethics: "Reduce your ecological footprint" (or at least live within your ecological means). The ecological footprint of different nations.
The main argument: justice (in
consideration of people in the future).
Criticism
of democratic approach:
There is (reprehensible) systemic anthropocentrism in public policy (penguins don't vote).
What is the non-moral good
(considered abstractly)?
Human happiness?
Value
= degree of organic unity
Example: the spotted owl (an endangered species)
Question: What is the value of the spotted owl?
to HUMAN HAPPINESS? vs. as an ORGANIC REALITY? (usefulness to human
welfare vs.
intrinsic value)
Is a utilitarian calculation adequate with respect to environmental
issues?
NB. Not only do radical environmentalists (the
"deep
ecologists") say no but also many who
are less radical. On the right, there are
libertarians,
who want maximum liberty for individuals and minimal government.
On the left, there are socialists and
communitarians who are, like
utilitarians, anthropocentric with respect to
environmental policy. Among middle
positions are those of some developmental economists and philosophers,
for
example, the Noble-Prize-winning economist Amartya Sen ("progressives"). Nutrition,
says Sen,
is not just a matter of the availability
of food
but includes, among other factors, knowledge of nutrition.
Consider the latest development in Cuba: pinto beans
and papaya
replaced by buttered popcorn and Wrigley's gum.
Some relevant
facts:
1. The end of nature (cyclical time replaced by human, linear time)
3. Technological and industrial explosion (pollution visible from outer space)
The
mainstream environmentalist (the "liberals")
analysis:
CONTROL: (i) population growth and (ii) pollution (which is mainly the
result
of industry and the burning of fossil fuels)
Here
we find
a
"tragedy of the commons" with the
logic of "prisoners' dilemma," i.e., lack of cooperative effort with
non-optimal results.
PrisonerŐs
Dilemma
|
|
B confesses |
B does not confess |
|
|
|
|
|
|
A 30 yrs, B 5 |
|
Tragedy of the Commons
|
|
A acting alone |
A cooperating |
|
|
|
|
|
|
advantage to A --> depletion |
|
PROTECT: biological
diversity (restrict logging, development; protect
wilderness; try to restore damaged wetlands, etc.)
DO IT NOW
The internationalist theses:
A. Many (the worst) environmental problems are global.
B. Global problems require global solutions.
(Liberals usually favor international law and international and "multilateral" institutions.)
Complication: enormous difference in human prosperity North and South.
Possible
environmentalist tools:
A.
The iron hand of government and appropriate public policies
B. The technological fix.
An alternative approach:
"Small is beautiful"
Local
empowerment movements (advocated by the authors of the Ecologist in
WHOSE
COMMON
FUTURE):
(We'll
call this camp that of the "devolutionists''
(or, "pluralist
communitarians"). Their
views are different from those of old-style communitarians--also known
as "socialists.")
Local groups to assume control over local environments and to resist development (the NIMBY attitude exalted to a moral virtue).
DEVELOPMENT IS BAD (see p. 20) BECAUSE IT FUELS ENCLOSURES OF COMMONS (transferring power away from local communities).
Promote appropriate technologies, e.g., those that have evolved in a local "habitat" (the spinning wheel vs. the textiles plant)
Problem: Don't people like "living like Americans," i.e., as rootless individuals?
Answer: No. Even in the control center of world capitalism, NYC, there is the example of Jane Jacobs vs. Robert Moses, determined mother and populist defeating the Goliath of neighborhood-destroying expressways. The Bronx was hurt by Moses' Cross-Bronx Expressway but Jacobs saved the neighborhoods of Lower Manhattan.
Problem:
Small may be beautiful but capital is scarce for subsidy of endangered
lifestyles,
and vested interests are powerful, e.g., large utilities who want to
build
dams. Your vision is unrealistic.
Answer: Democratic government subsidies should be re-directed away from
big
business to help communities sustain themselves by promoting, for
example,
small-scale energy production (windmills, solar panels, etc.), OR
government
should simply stop all subsidies altogether. It
should not empower big business. These are examples of items on a
realistic political agenda.
Problem: The issues raised amount to questions of authority and power. This vision of local power seems "romantic" (utopian and nostalgic) in our age of State power and organization.
Answer: We also have the "techniques of the weak" (moral argument, grassroots organization, protest, civil disobedience).
The Ecologist editors are anti-globalization and are alarmed by the power of big business, both international corporations and local "enclosers of the commons."Implied message: it is right to join community actions to resist development and to support others who are resisting.
Ecologist editors: We have no public-policy recommendations because we believe that all solutions must be local.
The
free-market approach (of the "mainstream
conservatives"):
Set up
market mechanisms to check pollution, etc. (Compare
to the carrot-and-stick approach to population control of China.)
INEFFICIENCY OF GOVERNMENT BUREAUROCRACIES thesis:
Markets are
better
in controlling pollution than government regulations.
Why?
1. Congress has no incentive to weigh a piece of legislation's costs.
2. Successful lobbying by vested interests creates distortions in
legislative
analyses.
3. Congress is prey to false universalism: e.g., air pollution is not a
problem
in Montana.
NB. Many economists of this "market-solution" camp do not favor
a policy of no
State intervention but rather of a certain kind of State intervention,
for
instance, the creation of markets of pollution warrants to fight
pollution. And so on.