by gg3 » Tue 12 Oct 2004, 06:59:34
Jato's got it exactly right with "Humans can make due with consuming less fossil fuels. Our economy can't. We need a new, overhauled economy."
An economy is nothing more than a system for exchanging and allocating resources among humans. In other words it's a tool. When the tool ceases to perform the job it was designed for, it's time to fix it or replace it with a tool that works. When the nature of the job changes such that the tool you're using isn't appropriate, it's time to replace it with the appropriate tool for the job. You dig a hole with a shovel and cut a fence-post with a saw. If someone tried cutting a fence-post with a shovel we would recognize them as incompetent or insane.
Presently we have a tool that only works when it's stuck in a positive feedback loop called growth. Think of a home heating system that only works when it can keep adding three degrees Fahrenheit to whatever the current temperature is: eventually it makes the house uncomfortably hot, and after a while, it causes the house to burn down.
The rationale for economic growth is that it keeps making life better for more and more people. That in turn is predicated on "more and more people," another assumption that is also killing us. Assuming population holds static, the only remaining rationale for growth is to make life better for the existing number of people.
At which point you have to ask, "what does *better* mean"? Does it mean that I can go to the store and buy a soda-pop bottle opener that contains a battery and sound-chip, that plays a little song when I open my soda? Or does it mean that children in Kenya have clean drinking water? And who decides? (Someone, after all, does decide: whether deliberately, or "by default" as a "side-effect" of behavior directed toward different ends.)
Increasing growth may be "necessary" (a-priori assumption) for the *present* economy, but it's *not* going to be necessary (in fact it's not going to occur) for the future economy, whether we like the outcome of that or not. At which point comes the question of distributional equity. Or to put it in terms of my example, the tradeoff between me wanting my singing soda-pop bottle opener, and Joe Kenya wanting clean water so he's not constantly sick with dysentery.
Now what about that question of "decreasing consumption"...? Humans are hard-wired with an "instinct for increase" since the days when we lived in caves and never had "enough" of anything. "Enough" was always "more than" what we had, so over time it came to be that "more" used the same brain-circuitry as "enough." Fixing this is going to be as difficult as fixing the population crisis, since the latter also depends on a piece of archaic brain-wiring called the orgasm, which we have to learn to disentangle from its usual reproductive consequences. Our ape-instincts are powerful masters but we have got to stop being their slaves.
So the first place to start, is to ennumerate exactly what is meant by decreasing consumption. "Drive slower." Okay, I can drive at ...well the general traffic speeds are about 70, so I can safely manage 60 without getting rammed, but that's a start. Install more efficient appliances. Okay, out go the incandescents, in go compact fluorescents; and repeat process for the fridge, washing machine, etc. Do not buy stupid trinkets that are pure waste. Okay, bye-bye singing soda-pop opener (by the way this horrid little piece of pure waste really does exist, I saw them the other day), and at the same time, hello clean water for Joe Kenya. Fix & re-use rather than disposing & replacing. Check, done.
What this also means is, people who have more to start out with, have a larger responsibility to do something about it. A tenant in an apartment can do little about replacing the inefficient washing-machines in the basement laundry room; only the owner can do that. A working poor family with a 20-year-old inefficient car can do little about buying a hybrid, but taxes and transportation policy can change, so there's a reliable bus that runs by their block regularly.
This is merely an application of the moral principle of responsibility: you are responsible for those things you have control over; the more you control (including the more you own), the greater the level of responsibility. The attempt by anyone to gain control (or gain ownership) of anything, without simultaneously taking on a commensurate share of responsibility for what they have gained control (or ownership) of, should be seen as an immoral act similar to abandoning a child.
Let's not forget that the entitlement mentality runs through our entire economy. It's not just "welfare mothers," it's anyone who thinks that they have a "right" to an endless increase in their level of resource throughput.
The key question that needs to become part of the foundation of our entire moral code as a civilization, is: "When is enough enough?"