Jason Hickel
October 13, 2024
liberated
Palestine means a liberated Middle East. A liberated Middle East means
capitalism in the core really faces a crisis, and they will not let that
happen. It’s funny, like I’m always asked to talk about ecology, when really
what I want to talk about is capitalist imperialism, and the two are just a
piece of the same problem, right? The ecological crisis is ultimately playing
out along colonial lines, right? We know that it is the countries of the
imperial core that are overwhelmingly responsible, and specifically their
ruling classes, who control the means of production and energy systems and
investment, et cetera, et cetera, are overwhelmingly responsible for the excess
emissions that are driving climate breakdown, right? We know that’s a fact. We
also know it’s a fact that the Global South suffers the overwhelming majority
of the impacts of climate breakdown, right?
The people who
have contributed literally nothing to the crisis whatsoever, not contributed a
small amount, contributed nothing, right? And it’s not just, of course, climate
breakdown that we face. There’s also other dimension of the ecological crisis,
and here too, we see the same thing playing out. When it comes to excess
material use in the world economy, overwhelmingly, it’s due to excess material
use and accumulation in the imperial core. Half of the material that’s used in
the core is net appropriated from the periphery, from the territories of the
Global South, right? Which causes severe damage. You don’t see this damage in
Sussex or in Finland. You see it in the Congo, you see it in Indonesia, right?
You see it in Bolivia, in the frontiers of extraction. The core benefits and
everyone else suffers.
The ecological
crisis represents processes of colonization and appropriation, and also is a
disaster that’s playing out along colonial lines. I think that’s really
important to spell out. And if we’re not attentive to those colonial
dimensions, I really think we’re fundamentally missing the point. We’re
fundamentally missing the point. The other thing I want to point out here is
that we were in this incredible paradox, right, where the world economy, we
know, is just massively productive, like our productive capacities are
incredible. Think of the scale of the labor that humanity has at its disposal,
the resources, the technology, the factories, the energy, the materials.
Incredible amounts of production to the point of breaking past ecological
limits, and yet, the vast majority of the human population lives in conditions
of massive deprivation. 80% of the population can’t meet basic needs. So what
explains this incredible paradox?
It’s ultimately
our system of production, the social and ecological crisis that we face, which
appears unresolvable, is ultimately a symptom of our system of production,
capitalism, where our productive capacities, our incredible productive
capacities, are organized overwhelmingly around what is most profitable to
capital and what can most facilitate accumulation in the core, rather than what
is obviously necessary to meet human needs and achieve our ecological
objectives. And so we’re in this wild place where it’s like, oh, solving
poverty is just going to take generations, right? If we’re lucky, we’ll get
people above $1.90 a day by the end of the century, right? The climate crisis,
who can figure out how to solve this? It seems intractable. None of this is
true. It’s lies. These are problems that can be very easily solved and very
quickly.
The problem is
that we don’t have control over our own productive capacities, because we don’t
have an economic democracy, right? Some of us live in political democracies,
where, from time to time, we get to elect government officials, but when it
comes to the economic system, not even the pretense of democracy is allowed to
exist, and that is ultimately the contradiction we face, I think, right? This
is a crisis that, at its root, is about capitalism, and can only be resolved by
overcoming that fact. And the antidote to capitalism is economic democracy,
that we should have collective democratic control over what we are producing,
what the goals of our production are, who benefits from our production, and so
on. And when we do, we can solve these problems quickly, right? We know exactly
what to do.
The problem is
we don’t have the power. And so I think that, in the face of this crisis, we
have to have clarity about what has to be achieved, and we have to start
building the movements that are capable of achieving that. For the South,
there’s another element I think we have to pay attention to, which is that they
need economic sovereignty, right? They need economic liberation at a national
level first. The Global North is overwhelmingly responsible for the crisis, but
the Global South, we know, also needs to engage in ecological planning, energy
transition, et cetera, et cetera. How does anyone expect them to do that when
they do not have sovereign control over their own resources, their own labor,
their own lands, their own energy, right? Under the thumb of structural
adjustment programs that prevent them from using progressive industrial policy,
prevent them from using progressive fiscal policy, prevent them from using
progressive monetary policy, basic tools that we know can allow them to achieve
developments and ecological transition, they are effectively denied from using.
What is the
solution to that for the South is struggles for economic liberation right? Now,
I think we have to be cognizant of the facts that a struggle for economic
liberation in the South is fundamentally antithetical to the capitalist world
economy, because accumulation in the core depends utterly on the cheapening of
labor and resources in the Global South. It depends utterly on that and has for
the past 500 years. And so any attempt by liberation struggles in the periphery
to achieve economic independence, to use their own resources for their own
development, for their own ecological transition, for their own human needs, is
destabilizing for capital in the core, and capital reacts with the most
extraordinary violent backlashes. We see it happening all the time. Now, it is
Palestine before it was Libya, before it was Iraq, before it was Chile, before
it was Indonesia, before it was the Congo. It will never stop. It’s over and
over again.
And I think the
situation in Palestine right now, we have to understand, is not primarily a
moral one. That’s how we think of it. That is not how capital thinks of it. For
them, it is a matter of suppressing and crushing liberation movements, because
a liberated Palestine means a liberated Middle East. A liberated Middle East
means capitalism in the core really faces a crisis, and they will not let that
happen, and they’re unleashing the full violence of their extraordinary power
to ensure it doesn’t. And so I think that’s really what we face, right? It’s
the world system, dimension of the violence that we’re seeing, and we have to
be cognizant of that, and our struggles and our resistance have to be in
proportion.
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