Friends,
Imagine on the first Earth Day in 1970, we were
concerned about pollution. Fifty years later, we have to deal with saving
Mother Earth. I suspect unless We the People take charge, our legislators will
fail us. Kagiso, Max
Nature’s
Revenge: Climate Change and COVID-19
Posted
By Evaggelos Vallianatos On March 20, 2020
Tehachapi, California. Photo: Jeffrey St.
Clair.
The corona virus pandemic is no accident.
Like past global epidemics, it’s a warning that nature has had it with the
ecocidal proclivities of man. These outrageous actions are changing climate and
are warming and threatening planet Earth. Nature (the Earth) is fighting back.
Climate change is sowing pandemic diseases.
Corona virus in America
No vaccine is likely to block for long the
spreading death. Like most people of the world, Americans fail to see the
broader significance of the pandemic. In addition, Trump and his sidekick, Mike
Pence, spread confusion about the virus. Retired general Barry McCaffrey denounced the “Revolting
sycophancy by Pence and others in the [Trump] Administration… There are eerie
echoes of ‘supreme leader’ adulation to all of this. That Trump tolerates or
needs this kind of faux devotion is dangerous in a democracy.” However, with
the national attention on the virus, Americans don’t think much about
democracy. They are getting ready to bunker down and
hide in their homes to avoid infection.
On the grip of the Anthropocene
Such measures of panic have limited
value. A bolder and wiser policy is necessary. If heads of state sign an
enforceable treaty of ending in the next ten years or so the dependence of their
countries on fossil fuels, over fishing, plastics, logging, pesticides, and
industrialized farming, there may be a hopeful turnaround in the planet’s
spiral towards more potent pandemic diseases, higher temperatures, and
catastrophic breakdown.
UN climate experts say humanity has about
a decade to prevent “irreversible damage” to the world from the monster of
anthropogenic climate. Ten years is the time we need to, at least, limit the chaos of
climate change.
I am not predicting the future by saying we
need to act fast to save ourselves and the planet from our petroleum nightmares.
I am a historian who has been observing American relations with the natural
world for decades. I have also studied the dark history of human exploitation
of the Earth.
The hubris of capitalism and state communism
did so much damage to the Earth, scientists are describing our era as Anthropocene (human
epoch). Like giant dinosaurs, men (primarily of the West) turned science and
technology into weapons for the conquest of the world, including land, the
seas, and the sky.
That “conquest” brought immense and
unforeseen calamities: nearly wiping out the rich variety of life and filling
the land with poisons and the seas with plastics, oil, and deleterious
pollution. You cannot go on killing and forcing to extinction wild animals and
plants, including insects, birds, fish, and other countless forms of life on
land, rivers, lakes and the seas without a violent response.
According to the British charity, Population
Matters, some 10,000 years ago, humans made up 1 percent of the animal
population. Wild animals were the overwhelming majority: 99 percent. In 2011,
humans ware 32 percent and wild animals 1 percent of the animal population.
About 67 percent of non-wild animals were food for humans.
The missing wild animals, even the tiniest,
are the species that kept the Earth beautiful, fruitful, habitable and alive.
Mother Earth
The Earth, I think, is still beautiful,
fruitful, alive and sacred. The Homeric Hymn to Gaia (Earth) describes the
Earth as mother of the gods and wife of heavens, very ancient Mother of All,
which nourishes every single plant and animal.
The ancient Greeks were not alone
in venerating the Earth. Many other pre-modern people and Native Americans
thought of the Earth as their Mother and Mother of the natural world.
Regulating pollution
Second, I am not an epidemiologist or
virologist. I simply don’t like humans harming the environment-natural world
because they are harming all plants and animals, including me.
For several decades, starting in the 1970s,
I observed admirable efforts in the United States to change the dangerous
Biblical obsession with human dominance of nature. Laws passed that said we had
to limit our stupidity and greed to ourselves. We had no right to export our
religious fanaticism in polluting the air, water, and land and in threatening
wildlife, especially already endangered species.
To put teeth to these pioneering laws,
President Richard Nixon in December 1970 founded the US Environmental
Protection Agency.
I joined EPA in May 1979. That gave me a
privileged angle from which to test the mission of EPA: that of protecting
human health and the environment.
I never had any doubt that human health and
the environment (air, water, wildlife) needed protection. Environmental
pollution gave birth to the cancer plague. The cancer pandemic was killing and
continues to kill millions.
Newspaper headlines, articles, and books
(like the 1962 Silent Spring by Rachel Carson) painted
a giant picture of an abused and poisoned world.
I worked for the Office of Pesticide
Programs, which administers the widespread use of petrochemical insect and weed
killers of enormous deleterious power and reach. My colleagues used to be very
quiet about pesticides. But a few raised nagging questions about the safety of
those chemicals and the integrity of the very labs testing them.
It turned out, the chemical industry labs
had made the testing of chemical pesticides a profitable business, hardly
concerned with science or integrity or public health. In 1976, a government
scientist, Adrian Gross, caught the country’s largest testing lab,
International Bio-Test, committing fraud, an awful and criminal tradition that
continues to this day. For example, the Laboratory of
Pharmacology and Toxicology in Hamburg, Germany, has been following
the playbook of IBT, falsifying animal studies for the approval of pesticides.
The realization that pesticides have been
dangerous for spraying America’s food and equally dangerous to wildlife, all
but destroyed any ideas I had of the EPA being a good and responsible
government agency.
I have written extensively on EPA and
pesticides. A physician and great environmentalist in the UK, Rosemary Mason,
shares my concern about pesticides. She has no doubt pesticides are the
greatest health threat to the children and adults in her country.
Merchants of danger
There’s no doubt that powerful pesticides
are deleterious to human beings and the natural world. Yet they are sprayed
over crops, forests, and bodies of water. Those who control the production and
use of pesticides, and the governments that approve those pesticides, are
devoid of ethical norms and harm both people and the environment. They are
contemptuous of civilization and the life-giving of the natural world. They are
deceiving themselves and threatening the rest of us.
This unethical model has been duplicated in
the economies of fossil fuels, chemicals, agribusiness, logging, cars,
airplanes, and electricity production. These industries, funded largely by
giant banks, are triggering global pollution and climate change. Virus
pandemics are merely symptoms of these overarching anthropogenic attacks
against the Earth.
Sanders and Biden
Ancient Athenians would ostracize and exile
such people for ten years. In our modern times, however, not only we don’t
ostracize these merchants of danger (corporate executives-oligarchs), but we
subsidize them to do more of the same.
Senator Bernie Sanders keeps saying that, if
elected president, he would force these guys to play by the rules, play a less
hazardous game, even put some of them out of business. He would replace fossil
fuels with solar, wind and other renewable zero-carbon alternatives. In that
process, he says, the alternative technologies would create 24 million
well-paying jobs. Sanders also promises to tax the billionaires behind the war
against the Earth.
Former vice-president Joe Biden is not as
forthright as Sanders on matters of rapid transition from petroleum to solar
power. He does support fighting climate change, however. Yet Biden is beholden
to his former boss, president Barack Obama. The Obama factor hangs all over
him.
That was me, people
Obama was business as usual. He relied on
Wall Street to dissipate the financial meltdown brought to America by Wall
Street. Why would he have done such a sellout to the very institutions that
nearly destroyed American and world economies? His EPA administrators (a black
and a white woman) did nothing out of the ordinary. They even failed to reverse
one of the most egregious damages the George W. Bush
administration had inflicted on EPA: the destruction
of the fabulous scientific document collections of the EPA library. Without
those documents of hundreds of studies funded by EPA for several decades, the
agency is blind.
Obama was
schizophrenic. He cultivated an image of caring for the environment while, at
the same time, he feasted with the industry. He used the Clean Air Act of 1970
and reduced the emissions of cars and coal plants. He often spoke with
intelligence about climate change. He convinced China joining the United States
in fighting climate danger. However, behind Obama’s enthusiasm, there lurk a
demon to also do the bidding of the polluters and the oligarchs. He pretended
he wanted to tame climate change, but, in reality, he did the bare minimum. He
left the chemical industry alone, and did nothing about pesticides or
agribusiness. He kept the national lands of the American West (some 450 million
acres) open to fracking, oil drilling, mining, logging and feeding millions of
cattle: all this destruction of public lands was for private enrichment.
In a speech at Rice University in Houston,
Texas, November 28, 2018, Obama prided himself for accelerating fracking in the
United States: “You wouldn’t always know it, but [oil production] went up
every year I was president… Suddenly America’s like the biggest oil producer
and the biggest gas [producer in the world] — that was me, people,” Obama said.
Epilogue
It’s this terrible Republican-like legacy of
Obama that threatens Biden. Yet he is more likely to win the presidential
nomination of the Democratic Party. Sanders understands that, but keeps
fighting. Nevertheless, he is trying to bring Biden closer
to his philosophy.
Meanwhile, the corona virus has eclipsed
climate change and everything else in America and the world. Yes, people are
dying and the shutting down of the country has merits. But unless we connect
the virus with the horrors of climate change and the anthropogenic
impoverishment of the planet, we imperil ourselves and this beautiful Mother
Earth, Mother to All.
URL to
article: https://www.counterpunch.org/2020/03/20/natures-revenge-climate-change-and-covid-19/
Donations can be sent
to the Baltimore Nonviolence Center, 431 Notre Dame Lane, Apt. 206, Baltimore,
MD 21212. Ph: 410-323-1607; Email: mobuszewski2001 [at] comcast.net. Go
to http://baltimorenonviolencecenter.blogspot.com/
"The master class
has always declared the wars; the subject class has always fought the battles.
The master class has had all to gain and nothing to lose, while the subject
class has had nothing to gain and everything to lose--especially their
lives." Eugene Victor Debs
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