Showing posts with label risky. Show all posts
Showing posts with label risky. Show all posts

03 April, 2018

Why Capitalism is Obsolete

Imagine that I told you you had to build a machine with somewhere between a million and ten million parts, each one made to sub-millimeter precise specifications. Imagine I told you you’d have to build the organization of thousands of people to put it together. Imagine I told you it would take at least five decades.


Now imagine I told you the humanity’s future just might depend on it. Science fiction? Nope. Reality. That’s ITER, the world’s first large-scale fusion reactorbased in France, a joint social project between many countries. And it’s a perfect example of why capitalism is obsolete.

Maybe you’ve understood why already. But let me make it crystal clear. The great challenges of the futurewe’ll come to precisely what those are in a momentaren’t like those of the past. They are more complex, demanding, constrained, risky, and, perhaps most crucially of all, they are more risky. The world’s future depends on getting them right. The stakes are infinitely higher. If we get them wrong, we perishwhether through war, extinction, self-destruction, folly, thirst, famine. If we get them rightthen and only then do we go on.

Read Umair Haque’s story from Eudaimonia - “Why Capitalism is Obsolete.”

(Yes, the individualistic, competitive, and winner take all philosophies of capitalism no longer play any useful role in ensuring, or guaranteeing the continuing wellbeing of humanity; it has been useful, but reflecting on the ideas of Karl Max, it was only a precursor to something even greater and more applicable to allowing us to thrive.

Yes, if we are to survive the rigours fo climate change, the most measurable change wrought to society by capitalism, we need to take the fundamentals of the world’s prevailing economic system and replace them with values that are about sharing, along with an understanding that our place on Earth is dependent on us caring for all the other flora and fauna - Robert McLean)

30 January, 2015

Alarming disconnect stops us from imagining a solution


-       by Robert McLean

A disconnect of cosmic-like dimensions frustrates climate change activists.

Considered in geological terms, climate change is happening at a withering rate; confusingly however, on a human time-scale, it is moving at snail’s pace.

Therein lies the massive, confusing and ultimately hugely risky disconnect.

Our response to climate change demands an immediacy of action never seen outside modern times, except that of World War Two.

Many, who live with the misplaced comfort that nothing appears to be happening, don’t see any need to change personal or societal behaviour and so the human contribution to the disruption of earth’s climatic machinery continues largely unabated.

So, climate change is arriving at an alarming speed, but to many, it is dawdling along, if happening at all and so will not impact on their lives and in what is an instance of tragic intergenerational irresponsibility, they choose to do nought or align themselves with some feel good green ideology.

This year, in the Goulburn Valley at least, has seen residents treated to mild weather with temperatures below that those expected for this time of the year.

And so the disconnect worsens with even more people not understanding, or even caring about, the fact that the weather (that’s what we have been experiencing since the New Year began) is different from the climate; a dynamic that continues to change and become even more remote from preserving conditions that ensures the earth is habitable for humans.

So here we stand in the midst of this alarming disconnect – geologically we are rushing toward an irreversible difficulty, but looked at through the human prism that is evolutionarily about “now”, nothing of any concern is happening.

Imagination has led us to where we are now
and it's about all we have left to rescue us
from the difficulties of climate change.
Humans have what it a unique skill in in that they can imagine, but for centuries now that ability has been perverted and applied to imagining things and ideas that we know now are clearly not in humanity’s best interests, hence we have climate change.

Yes, we can still imagine, but after many decades, if not centuries under intellectual assault form the capitalist/commercial world, that ability has become impoverished, almost skeleton-like, and so is largely limited to ideas and things that are profitable in our consumerist ways and being energy hungry make us even more remote from resolving the dilemmas that will, and are, disrupting life on earth,

To make our way through the unfolding disruptions brought upon by climate change, we need to renew, refresh and refocus our imagination and figure out a new way of living, a way that is far less energy intensive, kinder to the world and more about equality, rather that the amazing and disturbing inequality the world now suffers.