December
30, 2023
Capitalism,
especially U.S. militarized capitalism, is a structural extinction force we
need to confront foremost.
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Capitalism
is killing us. That’s the unequivocal message of a new book, Dying for
Capitalism: How Big Money Fuels Extinction and What We Can Do About It by
Charles Derber and Suren Moodliar. The authors draw critical links between
capitalism, militarism and environmental destruction to show how nothing short
of radical change is required to shift the deadly course humanity as a whole is
now on. The book blends historical and contemporary analysis with a concluding
interview from 2062 based on speculative fiction.
Derber
and Moodliar call for a “new abolitionism” that draws wisdom and inspiration
from the movement to abolish slavery and for a deep understanding of how our
most critical problems are intertwined.
Derber,
a professor of sociology at Boston College, has written 26 books — on politics,
democracy, fascism, corporations, war, capitalism, climate change, the culture
wars and social change. Some of his other recent books include Welcome to the
Revolution, Moving Beyond Fear, and Capitalism: Should You Buy It? In this
exclusive interview with Truthout, Derber discusses how the myth of American
exceptionalism undermines the solutions to the existential threats we face
today, why “green capitalism” is an oxymoron, and the need to confront a
“triangle of extinction.”
Peter
Handel: In your new book, Dying for Capitalism, you write “a ‘triangle of
extinction’ that connects capitalism, environmental death and war creates an
emergency that humanity-as-a-whole has never faced before.” How are these
things interlinked?
Charles
Derber: Americans are normalizing what is truly the greatest emergency ever
faced by humanity — one threatening to doom all life species. In an earlier
2010 book, Greed to Green, I argued that President Obama should declare a
national emergency to stop impending climate extinction and wake up Americans.
Obama did not declare the emergency, and millions of Americans didn’t wake up.
Dying
for Capitalism shows the existential threat has grown faster than I had
imagined. This is not simply because of the acceleration of climate tipping
points but the escalating risk of nuclear war arising from an increasingly
unstable and militarized international and American world order. Witness not
just Ukraine after U.S.-driven NATO expansion to the Russian border but the
bipartisan new Cold War with China and today’s erupting wars in the Middle
East.
As
people are dying for capitalism in the sense that they want ever more of it,
they are also literally dying for the consequences of craving a literal death
system. The “triangle of extinction” exposes what many on the left have
suspected but never fully understood. U.S. capitalism fuels both climate change
and militarism for five core reasons: 1) elevating profit over all other aims;
2) commitment to unfettered economic growth; 3) expanding to control markets
and resources domestically and internationally; 4) producing commodities for
sale on the market rather than public goods; and 5) concentrating political
power among corporate elites, notably the military-industrial complex and the
carbon-industrial complex. All of these forces lead capitalist elites and the
market to ignore the existential risks and treat them as what economists call
“externalities” — which include the ultimate costs externalized from producers
and paid by the general public.
How
climate and military threats fuel each other is a major neglected subject.
Ironically, the Pentagon itself annually reports that climate change is the
biggest national security threat, with environmental disasters and sea rise
driving people from endangered residences toward inhabitable land. Such
migrations — along with intensifying floods, droughts and extreme temperatures
— set up violent competition among people desperate for land and resources.
Moreover, many U.S. wars have been fought to secure more oil. Protecting the
U.S. right to create climate change is thus fueling “forever” wars.
The
Pentagon also does not tell us that it is the world’s biggest institutional
creator of carbon emissions. While climate change drives war, militarism drives
climate change. This is not just about the obvious environmental destruction
wrought by war. The modern military is a monster carbon producer, with massive
carbon burned every day in training and wartime military flights; in fueling
huge naval carriers, submarines and tanks; in producing planes and munitions;
and in running more than a thousand military bases.
Most
of us realize that the fossil fuel industry makes massive amounts of money
while destroying the environment, but you show how the development of the
fossil fuel industry is inextricable from the advent of modern capitalism. Tell
us about this.
While
fossil fuels were central to capitalist development, it didn’t have to be that
way. Early industrial capitalism could have developed without fossil fuels.
Indeed, 19th century British factories initially used water-powered steam
engines but shifted away toward coal and oil.
This
had less to do with technological efficiency than social and political factors.
Owners were worried that water would be viewed as part of the commons and
subject to public controls or appropriation, threatening profits. Coal and oil
were less likely to be viewed as part of the commons, since they were not as
historically central to public use and well-being as water.
The
long historical shift from coal toward oil was also driven by social and
political interests rather than technological advantages. Coal miners were
rebellious at an early stage, mobilized by communities formed working under
adverse and dangerous conditions. Fear of unions helped shift industrial
capitalism in the late 19th and 20th centuries toward oil.
Oil
became the central energy source of U.S. 20th century capitalism largely
because of wars, especially World War I and World War II. Tank warfare and the
new importance of planes in World War I was a major catalyst for the 20th
century shift toward oil. World War II sealed the deal. Enormous amounts of oil
were needed to power the planes and produce the arms to win this huge
conflagration. And U.S. interests in both securing and selling oil in Asia were
a major factor fueling U.S. interest in war in the Pacific.
The
Bulletin of Atomic Scientists has set the Doomsday Clock at 90 seconds to
midnight, the closest it has ever been. Why has the risk of nuclear catastrophe
become so heightened?
The
Bulletin issued a statement saying the change was “largely but not exclusively”
due to Russia’s invasion of Ukraine. They also now connect nuclear doomsday
with environmental doomsday, noting that climate change and other
environmental-linked threats such as COVID-19 played a role in resetting the
clock. They are pulling the curtain back to reveal some of the “triangle of
extinction.”
The
Doomsday Clock is an important symbol, recognized around the world as a crucial
indicator of potential imminent extinction. Founded in Chicago after the U.S.
development of the nuclear bomb — a subject popularized in the film Oppenheimer
— the Bulletin’s scientists, despite their major contributions, have their own
limitations. They are not political economists or social theorists, and their
U.S. roots have shaped their thinking. This may explain why they have not
portrayed the full “triangle of extinction,” nor focused on the unique U.S.
role in supercharging the race to extinction.
This
goes beyond their relative lack of attention to the historical role of the U.S.
and NATO in leading up to the Ukraine war. They have not offered a strong
critique of the extinction risks inherent in building U.S. hegemony throughout
the nuclear era. Nor have they highlighted the U.S. role in catalyzing Middle
Eastern wars for oil and now heating up the new Cold War with both Russia and
China, as well as playing a role in the current Israel-Hamas-Iran-U.S. military
crisis, all intensifying extinction perils.
Nor
does the Bulletin highlight how capitalist economies, and especially U.S.
militarized capitalism, are crucial structural extinction forces. We hope that
the Bulletin’s scientists will read Dying for Capitalism. If the nuclear
scientists were to discuss the need to transform U.S. militarized capitalism,
it would expose more of the “triangle of extinction,” and help mobilize both
scientists and the public.
While
you are focused mostly on the disastrous impact of capitalism, you also take on
elements of American culture in Dying for Capitalism. In particular, you
discuss the myth of American exceptionalism. How did this idea come to be so
ingrained in American culture and how does it undermine solutions to the dire
problems we face today?
American
exceptionalism — the idea that the U.S. is the only nation equipped to manage
world affairs and preserve freedom and democracy — goes back to the foundation
of the nation. The Puritans defined their settlement in America as a blessed
“city on the hill.” George Washington stated that the U.S. was destined to
become a great empire. The Monroe Doctrine confirmed that empire would begin in
the Americas itself.
Soon
thereafter, the U.S. embraced the doctrine of Manifest Destiny, perhaps the
most seductive military and moral doctrine of American exceptionalism,
legitimating military expansion into the Pacific, including the murderous
colonization of the Philippines. Teddy Roosevelt’s idealization of himself as a
“rough rider” was part of the new 20th century U.S. drive to global empire;
Roosevelt’s idealization of war, tied to his close relation to robber baron
capitalists, such as the Morgan and Rockefeller financial and oil interests,
helped fuel the long drive to a U.S.-led global fossil fuel, militarized
capitalism.
Empires
need what I have called “immoral morality,” the use of lofty moral ideals to
legitimate evil behavior. U.S. exceptionalism cloaked the rise of U.S. fossil
fuel-based, militarist global empire as a crusade for democracy. The building
of a world economy around U.S.-dominated oil and arms is the heart of today’s
“extinction triangle,” shrouded in immoral morality. Instead of seeing
extinction, many in the U.S. see a chosen people’s defense of liberty.
You
write that “green capitalism is an oxymoron.” Why?
Americans
have long been taught that technology is the solution to everything. Green
capitalism exploits this seductive approach, which tells Americans not to
worry: our technological prowess will solve climate change. Instead of helping
Americans see capitalism as a leading cause of climate change, it flips the
equation and says that capitalism is the solution, since only capitalism can
create the technological innovations — whether electric cars, carbon capture,
geo-engineering or cheap wind and solar energy — that will save the planet.
Technology
is obviously important in dealing with climate change. But even if capitalism
delivers many green technologies, it will not prevent climate disaster. Our
book explains why “green capitalism” is a dangerous illusion. Without changes
in capitalist appetites for insatiable profit, growth, consumerism, expansion
and war, the system will continue to place an infinite burden on a finite
planet.
This
awareness is beginning to surface. People note that electric cars require
scarce lithium that can generate militarized competition; moreover, building
all the other parts of the car and the roads they depend on will continue to
deplete the planet. It makes far more sense to build walkable cities than a new
interstate highway system connecting suburbs with big lawns. The oxymoron
derives from the reality that capitalism is designed for accumulating wealth
and living big on a small planet, the perfect recipe for environmental death.
You
call for a “new abolitionism” that draws inspiration and wisdom from the first
abolitionist movement. Talk about this.
Our
book ends with a conversation between a reporter and a climate and peace
activist in 2060, describing how activists discovered in the 2020s the “slender
path” to survival of life. They faced enormous skepticism about transforming
large systems such as capitalism. But they found a path forward partly by
looking backward.
Courtesy
of Charles Derber
The
2020 activists were aware that pre-Civil War abolitionists were told they could
never end slavery; it was an eternal system in human history and the U.S. We
show that 2020s activists took from the abolitionists the refusal to lose hope
and unexpected ways to challenge large systems regarded as unchangeable.
There
is no simple abolitionist formula; in fact, part of the slender path was
rejecting the idea of a single orthodoxy. The abolitionists grew from a tiny
group because they found ways of building links and solidarity with so many
different movements and change agents. Radical socialists like William Lloyd
Garrison welcomed moderate abolitionists such as Harriet Beecher Stowe, the
author of Uncle Tom’s Cabin. Formerly enslaved people such as Frederick
Douglass found common cause with white suffragettes. Reformers became part of
the same larger struggle as militants like John Brown.
Abolitionists
often melded a mix of economic, political and cultural strategies into their
own individual work. Douglass is a good example. He worked closely with Lincoln
and foreign global leaders on the politics of emancipation, globalizing the
struggle. At the same time, he helped lead the U.S. underground railroad and
was an economic activist against the capitalist profitability of the slave
trade. Douglass became the most widely photographed American of the 19th
century, recognizing the role of culture in ending the slave system.
We
show how abolitionists of fossil fuels, war and yes, capitalism itself, find
themselves in similar quandaries, and often despair, as did their abolitionist
ancestors. But we highlight how a new abolitionism is already finding earlier
abolitionist lessons for universalizing resistance — and protecting the commons
and a new economy of public goods from what is surely the most dangerous system
of extinction that humans have ever created.
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