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Manufactured
scarcity
Green
Capitalism. Manufacturing
Scarcity in an Age of Abundance.
By James Heartfield. www.heartfield.org
.2008. £7.50
James
Heartfield is associated with the former Trotskyist (British)
Revolutionary Communist Party (RCP) which used to publish Living
Marxism (LM) and has moved on considerably since “the collapse
of Communism” at the end of the 1980's and the dissolution of the
formal RCP organisation in 1997. These days the so-called “LM
network” produces the edgy www.spiked-online.com website
and organises debates and events under the
auspices of
the Institute of Ideas and a myriad of propaganda campaigns expedited
largely through a robust, sometimes entertaining, and not ineffective
style of media entryism.
One
area this current has been particularly interested in over the last
two decades is in promoting a full-on critique of the reactionary
imperatives of the politics of “Environmentalism”. In Green
Capitalism James Heartfield reminds us that the profit system is
essentially a system of rationing, which is now, in certain circles
and in a variety of ways, being dressed up as “greenwashing” by
Big Business and Governments – as the contemporary ruling elites
reinvent scarcity in an age of abundance.
Heartfield
rightly presents the capitalist mode of production as an epoch in
which the force of human ingenuity has sought to ameliorate the
exigencies of life through technical breakthrough with the result
that happiness is the condition for most of us in Western societies.
I do, however, take issue with the notion that one out of any of the
300 workers at the Lombe silk works on the Derwent in 1721 or the
5000 wage slaves at Arkwright's Mill in Cromford in 1771 woke up for
work every day with a sense of unmitigated joy. Whilst those long
deceased exploited workers are no longer “variable Capital”, my
modern-day neighbours don't seem to enthuse much about the conditions
of their means of living whilst having a sup on a Friday night in the
local pub, either. Nevertheless, the material gains we have made in
the interim between the first factories and 21st century capitalism
are impressive.
In
a summation of capitalist economics Heartfield tackles the
neo-classical economists and suggests they were in effect “Rationers
by Trade“ (my phrase not his) but you get the point.
Notwithstanding that, the book opens with a great sense of optimism
and opines succinctly upon the gains made by the working class under
capitalism. The author explains carefully the concomitant progressive
and destructive forces at play within the profit system and hints at
transcending towards a more rational form of society founded upon
technological progress.
This
work sets out to show how modern Environmentalism came about as a
consequence of ruling elites ideas about scarcity. Heartfield‘s
argument is that, in Western society, the myth of the “fragile”
planet emerged as a consequence of the retreat from production in the
original heartlands of industrial capitalism.
Much
of the Green Capitalism provides an excellent exposition of
the fools' errand of “Environmentalism” and the levers of power
behind that aspect of the moribund profit system. Meanwhile, at times
the prose is poor and plodding, and some of the referencing is both
points-scoring and unnecessary to make the more essential issue
clear. Do we really need to be lectured about Trotsky's ideas on
production? Some of this stuff would leave the general reader all at
sea in very short order. Whilst a final extraordinary point is
clearly made: the world population grew from 791 million in 1750 to
5.9 billion in 1999, as a consequence of advances in agriculture,
transport, sanitation, industry. Many of that number exist at the
level of subsistence – and it should not be that way! So, from an
editorial perspective the narrative simply peters out – a bang and
a whimper! Where is the alternative?
Notwithstanding
that, this book has much to recommend it, not least for cocking a
timely snook at both the modern-day misanthropes who see mankind as a
plague upon the planet and the long-dead 'dismal scientists' of
neo-classical economics who could not comprehend a theory of
productive growth through collective endeavour. Heartfield puts a
well aimed, populist boot into the modern-day Green Capitalists –
Branson, Goldsmith, Charles Windsor, Al Gore, Bill Clinton, Lord
(Peter) Melchett, and makes reasoned argument that Western Capitalism
has got to go Green for the sake of exploiting new sources of profit.
There
is an argument that modern socialists need to take on the Green
catastrophists and promote technology and real democracy to face down
the spectre of Austerity Capitalism in the 21st Century - in order to
kill the pernicious profit system once and for all.
ANDY
P. DAVIES
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