Attacking the solution, not the problem
By
Robert C. Koehler for Common Dreams
By Nick Anderson |
That
explains the emergence, in recent weeks, among right-wing politicians and media
hacks, of a truly bizarre and unexpected scapegoat: the evil windmill!
In
the wake of the winter storm that shut down the Texas power grid and deprived
much of its population of electricity, warmth and drinkable water, these hacks
and pols have been desperate to divert public awareness from basic facts, such
as the utter failure of the state’s deregulated power grid to winterize and
remain functional in difficult weather, and— ultimately far worse—the looming
ecological collapse caused in large part by ongoing fossil fuel extraction and
consumption.
Hence,
as a Reuters fact-check analysis pointed
out: “On Feb. 14, (Tucker) Carlson began telling his viewers that ‘a reckless
reliance on windmills is the cause of this disaster,’ claiming that ‘the
windmills froze, so the power grid failed.’ The following day, (Texas Gov. Greg)
Abbott said in an interview that the crisis in Texas ‘shows how the Green New
Deal would be a deadly deal for the United States of America.’”
And Naomi Klein wrote: “Since the power
went out in Texas, the state’s most prominent Republicans have tried to pin the
blame for the crisis on, of all things, a sweeping progressive mobilization to
fight poverty, inequality and climate change. . . . Pointing to snow-covered solar
panels, Rick Perry, a former governor who was later an energy secretary for the
Trump administration, declared in a tweet ‘that if we humans want to keep
surviving frigid winters, we are going to have to keep burning natural gas—and
lots of it—for decades to come.’”
EDITOR'S NOTE: Charlestown had its own experience with scare tactics being used by anti-wind energy forces. Using fake science, they portrayed wind turbines as causing everything short of cancer (it was Donald Trump who took that last big leap into pseudoscience). Charlestown taxpayers paid $2.1 million, plus tons of legal costs, to block commercial wind energy development. One lasting legacy is that Charlestown's land use ordinances virtually ban ANY device - regardless of size or technology - that converts wind into electricity, including small household devices. Those rules were enacted in Charlestown in November 2011. Read the details HERE. - Will Collette
So of course the real scapegoat here is the Green New Deal, proposed legislation—not actual law—that begins re-envisioning who we are as a nation and what our relationship is to the future. This is what’s reckless, at least in the closed and purchased minds of the political right: embracing ecological and humanitarian awareness rather than the god of the “free market” and restructuring our world based on sustainability, not exploitation.
The
real recklessness is manifest in every second that ticks by with nothing
changing, with humanity still separate from the natural world and intent on
dominating it until it’s all used up.
Jeremy Lent puts it this way: “. . .
the multiple problems confronting us right now are symptoms of an even more
profound problem: The underlying structure of a global economic and political
system that is driving civilization toward a precipice.
“Take
a moment to peer beyond the day-to-day crises capturing our attention, and you
quickly realize that the magnitude of the looming catastrophe makes our current
political struggles, by comparison, look like arguing how to stack deck chairs
on the Titanic.”
What
he then proposes is profound: “We need to forge a new era for humanity.”
OK,
sure, this may be true, but it’s easily dismissible and ignorable. Or at least
it used to be. But as our climate karma catches up with us —“I’ve survived
three once-in-a lifetime storms in my 17
years of life,” Sunrise Movement leader Chante Davis said when the
environmental organization staged a rally in Austin—the need to envision
serious structural change is grabbing collective attention. It’s even beginning
to gain, oh my God, political traction.
“An
ecological civilization,” Lent writes, “is both a new and ancient idea. While
the notion of structuring human society on an ecological basis might seem
radical, Indigenous peoples around the world have organized themselves from
time immemorial on life-affirming principles. . . . Buddhist, Taoist, and other
philosophical and religious traditions have based much of their spiritual
wisdom on the recognition of the deep interconnectedness of all things. And in
modern times, a common thread linking progressive movements around the world is
the commitment to a society that works for the flourishing of life, rather than
against it.”
I
repeat: the deep interconnectedness of all things.
How
do we even begin to ponder the meaning of this? It’s one thing to honor our
indigenous roots, to bless an abstraction; it’s another thing to—and I grab the
first conundrum that pops into my head—go to the doctor’s office and get a
blood test, watch the nurse stick a needle into my arm, bandage it up, then
toss the needle and toss her rubber gloves into the trash bin.
Should
she do otherwise? Should she reuse the needle? Of course not! But nonetheless,
I find myself unable to avoid feeling an uneasiness about the whole procedure.
There’s a hole in our thinking. Where do a million used needles wind up? They
don’t disappear from the universe; they don’t disappear from the planet.
And
of course that’s just a random and infinitely miniscule example of what happens
every ticking second in a social structure that takes the idea of endless
trash-generation for granted. Bury it in the ground! Dump it in the ocean!
Release it into the air! Just don’t think about it—leave that to our children.
And
suddenly the thinking of the political right seems no more closed than my own.
This goes beyond windmills. The questions we must ask in order to reclaim our
roots, rebuild a world that reveres the interconnectedness of all things, begin
Now.
Robert
Koehler is an award-winning, Chicago-based journalist and
nationally syndicated writer. His book, "Courage
Grows Strong at the Wound" (2016). Contact him or
visit his website at commonwonders.com.