TomDispatch.com
by Rebecca Solnit
Next month, at the climate change summit in Copenhagen, the wealthy nations
that produce most of the excess carbon in our atmosphere will almost certainly
fail to embrace measures adequate to ward off the devastation of our planet by
heat and chaotic weather. Their leaders will probably promise us
teaspoons with which to put out the firestorm and insist that springing for
fire hoses would be far too onerous a burden for business to bear. They have
already backed off from any binding deals at this global summit. There
will be a lot of wrangling about who should cut what when, and how, with a lot
of nations claiming that they would act if others would act first. Activists
-- farmers, environmentalists, island-dwellers -- around the world will try to write a
different future, a bolder one, and if anniversaries are an omen, then they
have history on their side.
A decade ago, and a decade before that, popular power turned the tide of
history. November 30, 1999, was the day that activists shut down a World Trade
Organization (WTO) meeting in Seattle and started to chart another course for
the planet than the one that corporations and their servant nation-states had
presumed they'd execute without impediment. Since then, events have strayed
increasingly far from the WTO's road map for global domination and the
financial scenarios that captains of industry once liked to entertain.
Until that day when tens of thousands of protestors poured into the streets
of Seattle (as well as other cities from Winnipeg to Athens, Limerick to
Seoul), the might of the corporations made their agenda seem nothing short of
inevitable -- and then, suddenly, it wasn't. Disrupted by demonstrators
outside its door and, on the inside, by dissent from poor nations galvanized by
the ruckus, the meeting collapsed in confusion. Today, the WTO is puny compared
to its ambitions only a decade ago.
The mass civil disobedience in the streets was, in a way, an answer to
another landmark day a decade earlier: November 9, 1989, when the Berlin
Wall fell and tens of thousands of Germans swarmed across the forbidden zone
splitting their once and future capital city to celebrate, and eventually to
reunite their nation. The fall of the Wall is now often remembered as if
the gracious acquiescence of officialdom brought it about. It was not so.
"I announced the wall would open, but it was only the pressure by the people
that made it possible" said Günter Schabowski, then-East German Communist
Party central committee spokesperson, earlier this year. Had those East Germans
not shown up and overwhelmed the guards at the Wall, nothing would have changed
that night. In fact, popular will toppled several regimes that season.
Thanks to creative civil-society organizing, steadfastness, astonishing
courage, and imagination, Poland, Czechoslovakia, and Hungary also slipped out
of the Soviet bloc and so out of a version of communism tantamount to
totalitarianism as well.
There was a lot of triumphalism in the West thereafter. From the White
House to business magazines and newspapers came a drumbeat of pronouncements
that communism had failed and capitalism had triumphed. As it happened,
those weren't the binaries at stake in the astonishing uprisings that season in
Eastern Europe, or in the failed uprising in Tiananmen Square in the Chinese
capital Beijing that spring. People certainly wanted freedom, but it wasn't the
freedom to trade mysterious debt instruments and buy Double Whoppers, exactly.
Nor was it capitalism, but civil society, very nearly its antithesis, that had
risen up and brought down the Wall. The real binary then was: civil society
versus top-down authoritarianism -- and framed that way, our situation didn't
look quite as good as Washington and the media then made out.
Nevertheless, for a decade afterward, it wasn't that easy to argue with the
logic of capitalism's triumph, since even China was making a beeline for a
market economy and, in the process, doing an especially good job of proving
that capitalism and democracy were separate phenomena. It was also the decade
of the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA), the first of a series of
broad international treaties meant to secure the terms of corporate power for a
long time to come. Its implementation on January 1, 1994, prompted the
Zapatistas, the indigenous peasants of southern Mexico's jungle, to rise up
against the treaty, which promised -- and has now delivered -- a grim new
chapter in the deprivation and dispossession of Mexico's majority. Like the
fall of the Berlin Wall, the rise of the Zapatistas came as a great shock.
The Sucking Sound and the Turning Tide
Few remember how dissent against NAFTA was dismissed and even mocked in the
era when the treaty was debated, signed, and ratified. In his debate with Bill
Clinton and the elder George Bush during the 1992 presidential campaign, Ross
Perot was ignored when he said, "We have got to stop sending jobs
overseas." He was ridiculed for describing the "giant sucking
sound" of those jobs heading south. Which, of course, they did -- and then
on to China in a financial "race to the bottom," while cheap corn
raised by Midwestern agribusiness also went south where it bankrupted Mexico's
small farmers.
Cheap food, cheap labor, cheap products turned out to be very, very
expensive for the majority of us. It's a sign of how much things have changed
that Hillary Clinton felt compelled to lie in last year's presidential
campaign, claiming she had long been against NAFTA. In that, she was just a
weathervane for changing times. After all, in the decade since Seattle,
most of South America liberated itself not just from a legacy of
American-supported dictators and death squads, but from the economic programs
those instruments existed to enforce.
Venezuela lent Argentina enough money to pay off its debts to the
International Monetary Fund (IMF), that earlier instrument for imposing
free-market ideology and corporate profit. Various other countries did the
same, and the continent largely freed itself from the imposition of neoliberal
policies that mainly benefited Washington and international corporations. The
IMF was so impoverished by Latin American divestment -- which went from 80% of
its loans to about 1% -- that it's been reduced to selling off its gold
reserves. The World Bank is doing well only by comparison. By 2005, the tide
had clearly turned, and the power of these institutions and of the so-called
Washington Consensus that went with them was on the wane.
That tide had just begun to turn 10 years ago, when New York Times
columnist Thomas Friedman referred to the people in the streets of Seattle as "a
Noah's ark of flat-earth advocates, protectionist trade unions and yuppies
looking for their 1960's fix." He charged, "What's crazy is
that the protesters want the W.T.O. to become precisely what they accuse it of
already being -- a global government. They want it to set more rules -- their
rules, which would impose our labor and environmental standards on everyone
else."
Nice though our labor and environmental standards might have been elsewhere
too, most of us didn't want the WTO to do anything or to have any
power. As the Direct Action Network organizing leaflet from August 1999 put it,
the WTO's "overall goal is to eliminate ‘trade barriers,' frequently
including labor laws, public health regulations, and environmental protection
measures."
That day in Seattle a crane dangled a pair of gigantic
banners shaped like arrows: the first, inscribed "Democracy," pointed one way; the second, labeled
"WTO," pointed the other. The leaflet and banners were pieces of a
carefully organized resistance, and it's important to remember that events like
the Velvet Revolution in Czechoslovakia 20 years ago or the shutdown of the WTO
weren't just spontaneous uprisings; they were the fruit of long toil.
While the right and too many American media outlets like to remember a
fictitious Seattle that was nothing but a cauldron of activist violence (while
ignoring serious police violence), too many on the left wanted to think of it
as a miraculous convergence rather than the result of careful
coalition-building, strategizing, outreach, and all the usual labors.
Straying Far from the Blueprint for Our Era
In the twenty-first century, free-trade agreements came down with their own
version of swine flu, a disease likely generated on a gigantic Smithfield Farms hog-raising
operation in Veracruz, Mexico, and nicknamed the NAFTA flu. NAFTA itself has
been widely reviled. Presidential candidate Manuel Lopez Obrador
campaigned in Mexico's 2006 election on promises to renegotiate it; Hillary
disowned it. The plan for a hemisphere-wide Free Trade Area of the Americas
(FTAA) was met with massive opposition in Miami in 2003. It crashed and burned
in Argentina in 2005 and has since been abandoned.
Latin America went its own way while the Bush Administration locked its
attention on the Middle East. Indigenous peoples in Ecuador and Bolivia had a
particularly rousing set of victories, while the people of Cochabamba, Bolivia,
astonishingly, defeated U.S.-based Bechtel Corporation's privatization of their
water, and Ecuadorans are suing Chevron for environmental devastation in what
could be the biggest corporate settlement in history -- $27 billion.
Meanwhile, the WTO lurched from one meeting to another, safe in the Doha
round from pesky protesters, if not from the dissent of developing
nations. It was again besieged by activists in 2003 in Cancún, Mexico --
in scale and impact another Seattle -- and then further battered in 2005 in
Hong Kong. The next ministerial conference of the WTO actually convenes in
Geneva on November 30th, a decade to the day since the Seattle shutdown, still
attempting to resolve issues that arose in Doha. Of course, in the meantime,
sneakier bilateral trade agreements have taken the place of big multilateral
ones, but this has hardly been the triumphant era predicted a decade earlier.
Even Iraq hardly proved the hog trough the big oil and contracting
corporations had anticipated.
In fact, for the corporations nothing much has turned out as planned.
Capitalism itself failed a little more than a year ago. Or rather the bizarrely
rigged corporate-run market economies that determine at least some portion of
nearly everyone's life on Earth imploded in a frenzy of deregulated
fecklessness and weirdly disassociative procedures. Then, they were propped up
by governments in a way that made the phrase "socialism for the rich"
truer than ever. For a while, the same business newspapers that had celebrated
capitalism's triumph in 1999 were proclaiming "the end of American
capitalism as we knew it" and the "collapse of finance."
It was as though the world economy had been a car driven by a drunk.
Even if we have now let that drunk back behind the wheel, at least his
credibility and the logic of what he claimed to be doing have been irreparably
harmed. On the twentieth anniversary of the fall of the Berlin Wall, Time
Magazine's cover story was: "Why
Main Street Hates Wall Street" and it told readers in its opening
passage that they should be furious. The fall of Wall Street, you could
call it, if you want to hear the echo from Berlin.
Oil-price hikes, the misadventures in turning food into biofuels, and
economic meltdowns have had other consequences. Michael Pollan wrote in the New York Times more than a year ago:
"In the past several months more than 30 nations have experienced food
riots, and so far one government has fallen. Should high grain prices persist
and shortages develop, you can expect to see the pendulum shift decisively away
from free trade, at least in food. Nations that opened their markets to the
global flood of cheap grain (under pressure from previous administrations as
well as the World Bank and the I.M.F.) lost so many farmers that they now find
their ability to feed their own populations hinges on decisions made in
Washington... and on Wall Street. They will now rush to rebuild their own
agricultural sectors and then seek to protect them by erecting trade barriers.
Not only the Doha round, but the whole cause of free trade in agriculture is
probably dead..."
Another death knell for the sunny corporate vision of globalization had
nothing to do with ideology; it was about oil, since the more it cost to ship
things around the world the less financial sense it made to do so. As the New
York Times put it this August:
"Cheap oil, the lubricant of quick, inexpensive transportation links
across the world, may not return anytime soon, upsetting the logic of diffuse
global supply chains that treat geography as a footnote in the pursuit of lower
wages. Rising concern about global warming, the reaction against lost jobs in
rich countries, worries about food safety and security, and the collapse of
world trade talks in Geneva last week also signal that political and
environmental concerns may make the calculus of globalization far more complex."
The passages cited above came from the New York Times, not the Nation
or Mother Jones. Which is to say that if communism failed 20 years ago,
then capitalism staggered 10 years ago in Seattle, and fell to its knees a year
ago. The crises of petroleum and food costs only augment this reality. But the
crisis of climate change matters more than all the rest.
Futures that Work
There are endless questions and conundrums about the largely unforeseen
situation in which we now find ourselves, all six billion of us. One of them
is: if capitalism and communism both failed, what's the alternative? The big
tent of subversions and traditions called the left hasn't, in recent times,
done a very good job of providing pictures of the possibilities available to
us. Still, perhaps the answer to what the political and social alternatives
might be will prove very close to what a sustainable world in the face of
climate change might look like: small, local, smart, flexible economies
and technologies, democracy as direct as possible, an elimination of excess
wealth as part of a leveling that might also eliminate dire poverty.
Some of our hope for the future has to be that, one day, the ecological and
the economic can be aligned so that, among other things, petroleum and coal become
increasingly expensive, as well as increasingly offensive, ways to run our
machines. Will we be creative enough to embrace change before crashing systems
and wild weather force change on us in the form of an unbearable crisis?
Decisions about the nature of that change to come must be made by the
citizenry, which seems to be fairly willing to face change when it gets its
facts straight, rather than by wealthier nation-states and their leaders who
seem, at this juncture, more interested in protecting business than life on
Earth.
To survive the coming era, we need to re-imagine what constitutes wealth and
well-being and what constitutes poverty. This doesn't mean telling the
destitute not to hope for decent housing, adequate food, and some chance at
education, as well as some pleasures and power. It means paring back on the mad
consumption machine that has been the engine of the global economy, even though
what it produces is often enough entirely distinct from what's actually needed.
American life as it is now lived is poor in security, confidence,
connectedness, agency, contemplation, calm, leisure, and other things that you
aren't going to buy at Wal-Mart, or at Neiman Marcus for that matter. If we can
see what's poor about the way we are, we can see what would be enriching rather
than impoverishing about change.
Anniversaries of a whole host of revolutions seem to fall in years ending in
nine -- from 1789 in France to 1959 in Cuba and 1979 in Nicaragua. And then, in
our calendar of nines, there was the fall of the Wall and the Battle of
Seattle. The "revolution" that got us into this era of climate
change, however, can't be dated that way. It was the industrial
revolution, a gradual shift to an era of mechanization made possible by, and
paralleled by, the rise of fossil-fuel consumption. We can't, and shouldn't,
undo this revolution, but we need to reject some of its premises and recognize
some of its costs, including alienation, degradation, and
commodification.
We need a postindustrial revolution of appropriate technologies, both in the
developed world and in the developing one, so that, for example, kerosene
lanterns and wood-burning stoves will be replaced not by conventional
appliances but by elegant solar technologies.
There needs to be another revolution in addition to these, one that finishes
decolonizing the world so that Europe and the United States are no longer using
the lion's share of resources and emitting the lion's share of carbon per
capita. The WTO, the IMF, and other instruments of neoliberalism existed to
keep that world-as-it-was going; the revolt in Seattle was against their
ideology as well as their impact, and the decade-old graffiti that said,
"We are winning," had a point.
The "we" that could win and needs to win in the climate change
wars isn't the United States itself. As Bill McKibben recently wrote of President Obama, "The announcement
yesterday from the APEC meeting in Singapore that next month's Copenhagen
climate talks will be nothing more than a glorified talking session makes it
clear that he has, at least for now, punted on the hard questions around
climate. The world won't be able to get started on solving our climate problem,
and the obstacle is -- as it has been for the last two decades -- the United
States." The citizens of the U.S. need to revolt, again, against
their nation's failure of vision and responsibility, in solidarity with the
rest of the people of the world, and the animals, and the plants, and the coral
reefs, and the coastlines, and the rivers, the glaciers, the ice caps, and the
weather as we now know it, or once knew it. That's why November 30th is
going to be a global day of action.
Everything is going to change either as runaway climate
change takes hold, with its concomitant destruction and suffering, or
because a set of programs will be embraced that forestall the worst and return
our planet to an atmospheric carbon level of 350 parts per
million, now considered the necessary standard to avoid environmental
catastrophe. We're already at 390 parts per million. Unfortunately,
a lot of the nations in the key Copenhagen negotiations have fixed on an
outdated notion that the world as we know it can survive at 450 parts per
million, which would conveniently mean that relatively moderate adjustments are
needed.
Remembering how dramatically -- and unexpectedly -- things have changed in
the recent past is part of the toolbox for making a deeper, far more necessary
change possible. Surely, the extraordinary power of ordinary people in Berlin
and Seattle provides us with the kinds of history lessons, the riches we need,
to start learning to count.
© 2009 Rebecca Solnit
Rebecca Solnit is the author of A Paradise Built in Hell: The Extraordinary Communities that
Arise in Disaster and co-author with her brother David of The Battle of the Story of the Battle of Seattle, a short
anthology looking at how that watershed event has been misrepresented and
reproducing some of the original documents. She's signed beyondtalk.net’s
pledge to take action on climate change and she'll be out in the streets again this November 30th.