The Environmental Apocalypse
By Daniel Greenfield
SultanKnish.Blogspot.com
Early in the morning, while most are still
sleeping, groups of elderly Chinese women spread out
across city streets. They tear open trash bags, pick
through the litter and sort out bottles and cans
that come with a deposit. And then they bring them
to the local supermarket to a machine that scans and
evaluates each can, accepting and rejecting them one
by one, and finally printing out a receipt.
The interaction between the elderly immigrant who
speaks broken English or the homeless man who is
barely holding it together... and the machine is a
stark contrast between what the new smart clean
green economy is pretends to be and what it actually
is. The machine, like so much else that we design,
is impressive, but its existence depends on someone
digging through the trash with their hands for much
less than minimum wage to extract a generally
useless item.
The entire bottle economy, which has more than a
passing resemblance to the trash sorting operations
in the Third World carried out by despised and
persecuted minorities, like the Zabbaleen in Egypt,
is artificial. The United States is not so poor that
it actually needs to recycle. It recycles not under
the impulse of economic imperatives, but of
government mandates.
The elderly Chinese women dig through the trash
because politicians decided to impose a tax on us
and an incentive for them in the form of a deposit.
All those useless 1980s laws created a strange
underground economy of marginalized people digging
through the trash.
Every time politicians celebrate a recycling target
met and show off some shiny new machine, hiding
behind the curtain are the dirty weary people
dragging through the streets at the crack of dawn,
donning rubber gloves and tearing apart trash bags.
They are the unglamorous low-tech reality of
environmentalism.
These are the Green Jobs that aren't much talked
about. They pay below minimum wage and have no
workplace safety regulations. They are the Third
World reality behind the First World ecology tripe.
It's not that the people who plan and run the system
don't know about them. But they don't like to talk
about them because they come too close to revealing
the unsavory truth about where environmentalism is
really going.
Environmentalism, like every liberal notion, is sold
to the masses as modern and progressive. It's the
exact opposite. It's every bit as modern and
progressive as those sacks of cans being hauled by
hand through the streets to the machine.
Prince Charles, that avid idiot and
environmentalist, visited a Mumbai slum a few years
ago and said that it had some lessons to teach the
West.
“When you enter what looks from the outside like an
immense mound of plastic and rubbish, you
immediately come upon an intricate network of
streets with miniature shops, houses and workshops,
each one made out of any material that comes to
hand,” Prince Charles wrote in his book, Harmony.
The Prince of Wales is quite the author. In addition
to Harmony: A New Way of Looking at Our World, he
has written Shelter: Human Habitats from Around the
World, The Prince's Speech: On the Future of Food
and The Illustrated Guide to Chickens: How to Choose
Them, How to Keep Them.
One might be forgiven for assuming that the royal
brain twitching behind those watery eyes is
preparing for some sort of apocalypse. And it is.
The apocalypse is environmentalism. Or from the
point of view of the environmentalists, who spare
some time from their public appearances and their
mansions to pen tomes on the future of food and how
to choose chickens, the apocalypse is prosperity.
People of that sort think that instead of getting
the slum dwellers of Mumbai into apartments, we
ought to be figuring out how to build shelters out
of random garbage. Think of it as the recycling can
solution as applied to your entire life.
“The people of Dharavi manage to separate all their
waste at home and it gets recycled without any
official collection facilities at all," a marveling
Charles, who probably never took out the trash once
in his life, wrote. It's easy to get people to
recycle without any mandates or collection
facilities at all. All it takes is grinding poverty
so miserable that you either make the most of every
last thing you can get your hands on or you die.
That is the sort of lifestyle that environmentalists
think of as sustainable. Or as Hobbes put it, "In
such condition, there is no place for Industry;
because the fruit thereof is uncertain; and
consequently no Culture of the Earth... no
commodious Building; no Instruments of moving, and
removing such things as require much force; no
Knowledge of the face of the Earth; no account of
Time; no Arts; no Letters; no Society." That is the
natural state to which environmentalists would
return us to.
More recently another deep thinker, Peter
Buffett, Warren Buffett's son, took to the editorial
pages of the New York Times to denounce Third World
philanthropy.
"Microlending and financial literacy — what is this
really about?" Buffett asks. "People will certainly
learn how to integrate into our system of debt and
repayment with interest. People will rise above
making $2 a day to enter our world of goods and
services so they can buy more. But doesn’t all this
just feed the beast?"
To the slum dwellers, the beast isn't capitalism,
it's that gnawing feeling in your stomach when you
haven't eaten for a day. But Peter Buffett, who
lives a life almost as privileged as Prince Charles,
bemoans the idea of getting people to the point
where they aren't worried about where their next
meal is coming from because it just turns them into
capitalists and consumers. And before you know it,
they're buying big screen televisions and writing
op-eds in the New York Times on the futility of
philanthropy.
"There are people working hard at showing examples
of other ways to live in a functioning society that
truly creates greater prosperity for all (and I
don’t mean more people getting to have more stuff),"
Peter Buffett wrote, probably unaware that he was
sniffing down the same trail that a thousand
communes had gone. But the experimental farm is old
hat. The new model is the Third World.
Instead of helping the Third World live like us, the
perverse children of the rich dream of making us
live like the Third World.
Those working hard to make our society function like
Charlie's favorite slum aren't moving to their own
collective farms. Instead they are transforming our
society into the collective farm while pretending
that their calculated destruction of our prosperity
is smart and modern.
The Soviet Union pretended that its plans for the
country were a modern step forward. In reality, the
Commissars took the farmers back to feudalism and
then turned much of the country into peasants,
coping with harvest labor problems by forcing urban
populations to come and pick the crops. And those
were the good times. In the bad times, highways and
other large projects were built through mass slave
labor no different than the way that ancient Egypt
built the pyramids.
Communist modernism was a Potemkin village, a cheap
tacky curtain and behind it, the sweating slave and
the stench of Babylon. The modernism of the
progressive the same facade covered in sociology
textbooks, New York Times op-eds and teleprompter
speeches. Behind it lie the ruins of Detroit, tribal
violence in the slums of every major city and an
economy in which there is no more room for the
middle class except as clerks in the government
bureaucracy. And it doesn't end there.
The elderly Chinese woman picking through the trash
in search of empty beer bottles isn't the past.
She's the future. Recycling is big business because
the government and its affiliated liberal elites
decided it should be. It's just one example of an
artificial economy and it's small stuff compared to
the coming carbon crackdown in which every human
activity will be monetized and taxed somewhere down
the road according to its carbon footprint.
The ultimate dream of the sort of people who can't
sleep at night because they worry that children in
India might be able to grow up making more than two
dollars a day, is to take away our prosperity for
our own good through the total regulation of every
area of our lives under the pretext of an imminent
environmental crisis.
The Global Warming hysteria is about absolute power
over every man, woman and child on earth.
"I strongly believe that the West has much to learn
from societies and places which, while sometimes
poorer in material terms are infinitely richer in
the ways in which they live and organize themselves
as communities," Prince Charles said.
It goes without saying that the Prince of Wales is
not about to take personal advantage of these
infinite spiritual riches of living in a house made
of garbage, drinking contaminated water and dying
before thirty. What he is saying is that while he
personally is a little too attached to his
lifestyle, he thinks that we as a society would be
better off giving up on the materialism of living on
more than two dollars a day and embracing the
infinite social and spiritual riches that rich
people imagine are accessible only to impoverished
Third Worlders.
Environmentalism is wealth redistribution on a
global scale. The goal isn't even to lift all boats,
but to stop the tide of materialism from making too
many people too comfortable.
The liberal billionaire who clamors about
sustainability likes progress. What he dislikes is
the middle class with its mass produced cars and
homes, cheap restaurants full of fatty foods and
television sets and daily deliveries of cardboard
boxes full of stuff and shopping malls. He thinks,
in all sincerity, that they would be happier and
more spiritually fulfilled as peasants. It's not an
original idea.
The Industrial Revolution had hardly begun revolving
when the 'Back to Nature' crowd began insisting that
it was time to learn a more harmonious way of life
by going back to the farm. Centuries later the only
new idea that they have come up with is threatening
an environmental apocalypse if the middle class
doesn't change its mass producing ways. Even its
adoration of the Noble Savage is older than the
American Revolution.
The modern environmentalism jettisons the idea of
moving to a dilapidated farmhouse to spend time
being bored while trying to make artisanal rocking
chairs to sell to someone, It's done its time
searching for the noble savage within through drugs
and degradation decades ago. Now it's our turn to
tap into the infinity of spiritual riches that comes
from just barely getting by.
While the tabloid front pages can't get enough of
Weiner, both of the Democratic front runners to
replace Mayor Bloomberg, Quinn and De Blasio, have
embraced his mandatory composting plan for the city.
New York City is not currently experiencing a
compost shortage. There is no reason to force
millions of urban residents to hoard rotting garbage
except for the moral one. The sustainable logic of
the slum that makes us better people by making us
more miserable.
The Soviet idea of progress was feudalism dressed up
in Socialist red. Environmentalism dresses up
feudalism in Green. It seeks to reverse all the
progress that we have made in the name of progress.
Environmentalism is as sophisticated as a Soviet
collective farm, as modern as the homeless people
dragging bags of cans along on sticks to feed the
machine and as smart as a slum made of trash.
Beneath all the empty chatter about social riches
and sustainability is that need to impose
progressive misery. Beneath the glossy surface of
environmentalism is a vision of the American middle
class learning to dig through bags of garbage, the
detritus of their consumerism for which they must be
punished, to become better people.