‘There will be a time when we will look back and ask ourselves what we did right now. How do we want to be remembered? This is an emergency. People are already suffering and dying from the consequences… but it will get worse.’
So said Greta Thunberg recently in Bristol. The emergency she was referring to was, of course, climate change. Although this has now been overtaken by the far more imminent threat posed by COVID-19.
One reason the virus has spread so far so fast is that the modern world is so interconnected. Globalized supply chains have been disrupted and non-essential travel has been curtailed. The largest-ever experiment in remote working is also now underway.
Many environmental campaigners, including Extinction Rebellion activists, have welcomed the lower levels of CO2 emissions that have resulted from the steep drop in industrial production, shipping, and air travel.
It is fair to assume that a return of Extinction Rebellion’s disruptive, melodramatic tactics in the near future would exhaust the public’s tolerance for any further unnecessary disruption to normal life.
Besides, the climate catastrophism championed by Greta and Extinction Rebellion is actually not much concerned with stewardship and conservation of the natural world.
The promotion of these alarmist figures by politicians, business leaders, and the media largely acts as a fig-leaf behind which an anti-democratic and increasingly paranoid establishment is trying to cling on to political relevance after being gut-punched by the two populist revolts of 2016: the votes for Brexit and Trump.
The illiberalism of the demands makes this clear.
Millions of people care about the natural world. But to be a true climate ‘rebel’ you must accept that aspects of your private life – such as your diet, mode of transportation and even the size of your family – have to be drastically altered and curtailed.
Rebels are also strongly urged to trust ‘The Science’. The Science declares humans to be the malefactors in the imminent destruction of the Earth’s biosphere.
And if push should ever come to shove, we are told we must be prepared to sacrifice our democratic agency for the cause.
According to Greta, the situation is now so urgent that it is ‘beyond party politics’. The desire to put the climate ‘beyond party politics’ is the biggest red flag of all.
Donald Trump, although he often comes across as a hammy troll, is absolutely right to resist the push for ever-more stringent international agreements on carbon emissions.
Not because it is wrong to reduce emissions per se. But the inevitable upshot of these regulations is the advance of unaccountable technocratic power over democratically elected governments.
The link between the fever pitch of Greta and Extinction Rebellion’s environmentalism and technocratic managerialism has a longer history than many might expect.
It goes back to 1986, to the year of the Chernobyl disaster, and the publication of Risk Society by German sociologist Ulrich Beck.
Beck’s influential thesis was that ‘large-scale risks cut through the self-sufficiency of cultures, languages, religions, and systems as much as the national and international agenda of politics’.
And that the ‘anticipation of catastrophe’ had superseded class conflict as the dynamic agent of progressive, even revolutionary, change.
The type of catastrophes Beck had in mind were nuclear disasters, weapons of mass destruction, financial crises and environmental degradation.
These crises are all man-made and their consequences are unconstrained by national borders. And while several such events have taken place since the book was published, Beck’s emphasis was not on actual crises themselves, but the anticipation of a crisis.
For him, the ever-present risk of catastrophe was no longer one of many facts of life — it had become the fact of life. And this had created a new type of society: the risk society.
Beck portrayed humanity as being ‘trapped in a shared global space of threat without exit’. As a result, the nation-state – alongside the political adversarialism inherent to national democratic life – was deemed to be no longer capable of negotiating the risks of transnational catastrophe.
To replace the nation, Beck envisaged a ‘cosmopolitan moment’ and ‘the creation of a dense network of transnational interdependency’ to bring together ‘people who otherwise do not want to have anything to do with one another’.
Beck’s observations have been used as a pretext for a Faustian bargain – sacrifice democracy and the nation-state in exchange for post-democratic cosmopolitanism. His thesis has aided and abetted the advancement of a globalist agenda ever since.
This proposition entered the British mainstream in 1997 when New Labour adopted it as part of its Third Way framework.
Internationally, it has influenced how politicians justify supranational, technocratic bodies like the EU.
Guy Verhofstadt’s speech during the rubber-stamping of Britain’s departure from the EU demonstrates the bloc’s continuing reliance on Risk Society tropes to justify itself:
‘In a world where we have to challenge transnational problems like climate change and digital supremacy… the cruel reality that we have to consider today in this debate is that European countries have lost their sovereignty already a long time ago and that [the EU] is just the way to regain that sovereignty in the coming years. ’
The cosmopolitan moment never quite acquired the political capital to make itself truly hegemonic.
The off-shoring of sovereignty (and consequent hollowing-out of national democratic institutions) was conducted largely by stealth rather than by popular consent.
European citizens still have the right to vote, even if they have been offered little in the way of substantive choice at the ballot box over the past few decades.
So when the British electorate was invited to vote on a binary issue of direct and immediate consequence – whether to leave or remain in the EU – it was as though a long-forgotten trapdoor, deep below Ulrich Beck’s towering Risk Society edifice, had been unbolted.
By challenging the elitist catastrophizing of Project Fear, British voters kickstarted the process of reclaiming their own political agency from distant and unaccountable centers of power and reasserted the critical role that the nation plays as the crucible of democracy.
The individual voter, rather than the technocrat’s impending crisis, is now back as the agent of political change.
Read rest at Spiked Online
“St Greta of Ikea” (nothing implied with that organisation) or somewhere in Sweden is a descendant of Arrhenius who proposed that CO2 caused warming by radiative forcing. He welcomed this idea, as it would help make cold Sweden warmer, and trees grow better. He was a leading founder of the Swedish Institute of Racial Hygiene, its aim to “cleanse the race” of impurities such as the Sami, Jews in the 1930s coming from Germany had to have passports stamped with a “J”. Maybe St Greta seeks to have passports stamped with a “D” if you not not agree with her ideas (Denier)?
The enviromental Movements been taken over by the radicals the Deep Ecologissts the one who d call for the Demolision of Dams and the Wildlands ,Buffalo Commons,returning millions of acres of Farmland to Wilderness and use of the ESA as w ell we are seeing the results of Deep Ecology and radicals like Al Gore the Bore and Bruce (Babbling) Babbit Clinton’s Interior Secretary the Global Warming/Climate Change is just another Lie and excuse they will use and Brainwashed kids like Greta Thungberg