Another American War! Look 
		Out Earth 
		By Jim Miles
		ccun.org, April 28, 2008
		
		 
		True to the American manner of meeting challenges and desiring to 
		overcome them, a recent Time magazine cover led off with the title “How 
		to Win The War On Global Warming” [1].   Accompanying that 
		article, the UN Secretary-General demonstrated his Washington consensus 
		credentials with a commentary titled “The Right War.”[2]  If the 
		American history of war is to be considered, earth itself is in trouble.  
		The “war on drugs” has been an ongoing fiasco, with billions put into 
		various corners of the world mostly causing death and destruction 
		between different factions killing each other off and – in the homeland  
		- leading to the incarceration of millions of people – mainly black.  
		The current global war on terror is also a moral and financial fiasco, 
		expected to ultimately cost 3 – 5 trillion dollars just from Afghanistan 
		and Iraq alone.
		 
		Bryan Walsh, the ‘specialist’ who put the presentation together, starts 
		off the article with the jingoistic militancy so common to American 
		attitudes, “Americans don’t like to lose wars – which makes sense, since 
		they get so little practice with it.”  And shortly after Walsh 
		pretty much exalts in the idea that “those [shooting wars] are the kind 
		at which the U.S. excels.”   How ridiculous can one get as an 
		introduction to an article on global warming?   Oh sure, the 
		Americans whomped poor little Granada to prevent its socialist hordes 
		from attacking America, and they performed splendidly in Panama against 
		their former partner Noriega (although the estimated three thousand 
		killed would not think so).  As for the lack of practice at losing, 
		they are certainly making up for it in Iraq and Afghanistan against a 
		ragtag band of militias protecting their home territory, while at the 
		same time causing mass environmental and societal damage along with 
		hundreds of thousands of deaths.  And what of Vietnam, a war 
		resulting in an estimated three million Asian deaths, a mined and 
		polluted countryside, not to mention that it was an out and out loss?
		
		 
		The other aspect of that comment, the scarier aspect, is the amount of 
		destruction and lack of foresight into the ramifications of their 
		actions that seems to play no part in American decision-making.  As 
		an analogy, perhaps the U.S. could win the war against carbon and global 
		warming (a dubious prospect at best) but after that then what?  I 
		ask that question because global warming is not the problem, but a 
		serious symptom of an overall greater problem.  
		 
		If it is to be war, Walsh gets one thing right, that “by any measure, 
		the U.S. is losing” and “if America is fighting at all…it’s fighting on 
		the wrong side.”  To fight the war Walsh envisions technology as 
		our hero combined with the economics of carbon capping/trading.  
		While this might slow down carbon emissions, it certainly does not stop 
		it and several warnings have already been issued that we need to do much 
		more than slow the level of increase, we need to reverse it.  For 
		all his technological proposals the effect will not be “that overall 
		carbon levels fall” but perhaps the more modest gain that the rate of 
		increase will decrease.  I would be delighted if I was wrong and 
		technology saved the day but technology is simply a tool in the hands of 
		people, who besides producing too much carbon, are themselves too many 
		and consume too much.  That is the overall greater problem.
		 
		Bin Ki-Moon supports Walsh by reversing the causality of global warming.  
		He sees global warming as the problem and when solved many other 
		problems “from poverty to armed conflict” will be solved along with “a 
		more peaceful and prosperous one [planet] too.”  Darfur is used as 
		the example of climate change causing war and conflict…but then one 
		needs to ask where did the climate change come from?   Another 
		argument is that “security everywhere depends on sustainable development 
		everywhere.”  In certain respects Ki-Moon is correct, by solving 
		global warming we solve other problems.  But solving global warming 
		means eliminating one symptom created by other greater problems and a 
		simplistic technological fix of the symptom is neither sufficient nor 
		possible. 
		 
		The latter comment leads back to the real source of the problem – that 
		of too many people demanding way too much of the earth’s resources…and 
		the U.S. is by far the biggest culprit in this.  If everyone lived at 
		the economic consumptive level of the U.S., we would require up to nine 
		more earths (depending on source) in order to sustain that lifestyle.  
		Sustainable development is an oxymoron – earth is finite and can only 
		support so many people according to the consumptive demands of the 
		people, or more correctly, demands created in the people by the 
		propaganda of advertising that promotes all the consumption.  
		 
		Further tying the two articles together, Walsh refers to an April 
		International Monetary Fund study that concluded “smart carbon cutting 
		policies could contain climate change without seriously harming the 
		economy.”  Are we to trust this part of the Washington consensus 
		that through its trade laws and international agreements has produced 
		some of the worst agricultural production records in countries that have 
		been coerced into unprotected trading with the fully subsidized 
		agricultural producers of the U.S. and Europe?   Haiti is no 
		longer self-sufficient in rice thanks to the heavily subsidized American 
		imports and currently has had food riots because of the price and lack 
		of availability.  
		 
		No, as I have indicated before, that while global warming is a serious 
		problem, it is a symptom of a much greater problem, the problem of too 
		many people, too much consumption.   And it is the nature of 
		that consumption, the high-energy costs, the economic and social costs, 
		the environmental degradation caused by the extraction of resources 
		(food or raw materials) that is the base of the problem.  To truly 
		help the environment the people of world who blithely consume far more 
		than their share of it will need to minimize their consumption.  
		That ultimately would be where any American “war on global warming” will 
		fail:  the big corporations make their billions of dollars on 
		consumption;  the consumers are so immersed into their lifestyles 
		that they may not be capable of making the considerable adaptations 
		necessary to curb global warming.
		 
		The obvious leading from that is that war itself is a sign, a ways and 
		means, of this drive to control and consume resources almost as a 
		capitalist-imperialist necessity to keep the wealth flowing to the 
		heartland from the many hinterlands now under U.S. military-economic 
		control.  So the solution to global warming is not carbon 
		capping/trading/capture.   Ban Ki-Moon does get part of it 
		right at least rhetorically recognizing the relationship between the 
		economy and the environment: “if the challenges of poverty alleviation, 
		environmental stewardship and the control of climate change are not tied 
		together – any solutions…will at best be a band-aid.”  It goes even 
		further than that.  The solution to global warming is a change in 
		the culture of consumption, the culture of corporate greed and 
		propaganda (advertising) that creates the false ‘need’ for so much 
		‘stuff’.   A major part of that corporate greed is its 
		military alliance that supports it throughout the world with over eight 
		hundred military installations and hundreds of thousands of military 
		personnel serving in seventy per cent of the world’s countries [3]. 
		
		 
		Without a greater awareness of all the relationships between global 
		warming as a symptom, and environmental over-consumption and over 
		population as the underlying cause, an American “war on global warming” 
		is sure to be another fiasco.  It is a complex situation, one that 
		will not be solved by simply reducing carbon emissions, indeed one 
		cannot ‘simply’ reduce carbon emissions as there are too many other 
		parameters to the problem.  We need to solve the problem of 
		over-consumption, of wealth disparities, of wealth allocation, of using 
		the militaries to enrich corporate/political elites.  We need to 
		redesign the trade structures of the world, and eliminate the imposition 
		of unequal agreements between the consumers and the producers.  A 
		more peaceful planet will come through achieving a more equitable one, a 
		less greedy one, one in which all inhabitants can share the resources 
		and then participate more fully in through enriching cultural 
		activities.  Otherwise, another American war, another series of 
		disasters.
		 
		 Notes: 
		 
		[1]  Walsh, Bryan.  “How to Win The War On Global Warming”, 
		Time.  April 28, 2008. pp. 27-38.
		 
		[2] Ban Ki-Moon.  “The Right War – The U.N.’s chief on why a 
		greener planet would be a more peaceful one.”  . Time.   
		April 28, 2008. P. 39. 
		 
		[3] “US 'extremely concerned' over Iran,” Friday April 25, 2008. Al 
		Jazeera English.
		
		http://english.aljazeera.net/NR/exeres/2EB50C20-D8D3-4755-A0E6-141F57A91A89.htm  
		(using Pentagon sources).
		 
		Jim Miles is a Canadian educator and a regular 
		contributor/columnist of opinion pieces and book reviews for The 
		Palestine Chronicle.  Miles’ work is also presented globally 
		through other alternative websites and news publications.
		 
		
      
      
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