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What the “We're Not Broke” Backlash Means for the Climate

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Donnachaidh Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu May-05-11 10:22 AM
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What the “We're Not Broke” Backlash Means for the Climate
http://www.yesmagazine.org/planet/tax-justice-as-climate-justice

You don’t have to leave America to go to the Third World.

I, for example, live in the San Francisco Bay Area, and here, as in all northern megacities, crushing poverty surrounds the comfortable precincts. I can’t call it “extreme” poverty, for of course it cannot compete with the despair endemic to, say, the north African drought zones. But when an organization like Remote Area Medical feels compelled to bring its traveling free clinic to the Oakland Coliseum (now, officially, the Oracle Arena), and when thousands stand for long hours to receive basic care they could not hope to afford, the problem is nonetheless clear. This last April, when the good folks at RAM pulled up stakes and left Oakland for their next stop, it was Haiti. And the America they were leaving was not the “exceptional” America of the official dream.

Obviously, there’s a lot to say about this. And plenty from which to avert our eyes. But what else is new? The apologists say that the poor will be with us always, so how is poverty in Oakland, California in any way “news?” Or poverty more generally, given the now routine brutalities of the economy? Or insecurity and suffering more generally still, given the precarious state of the whole global system? And what, finally, has any of this got to do with climate? The answer, simply put, is “everything.” Which is to say that while most economic-justice activists don’t see themselves as treating with the climate crisis, it’s become ridiculously easy to argue that the deficit, budget, and tax battles now raging across the wealthy lands of America and Europe are going to have outsized impacts on climate politics both domestic and international. That, in fact, they already have.

Consider the alacrity with which the right-wing elites moved to exploit the financial crisis, and consider especially the force of their assault. As an American climate hawk, I had to do just exactly this, for I had to watch as the corporate populism of the “Tea Party” swept away a years-in-the making push for carefully calibrated climate legislation as if it was a minor thing, an irrelevancy. Beyond that, the austerity panic managed to abruptly reset the terms of the overall political debate. To the point, and this is the least you can say, that we’re now in a changed world, playing a changed game—with lots of lessons to be learned.

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