Citizens of the USA, Australia, Brazil, Canada and elsewhere are slowly waking to the sickening awareness that they are no longer up against local political forces – but, rather, a metastasizing international power against which they are largely impotent.
Common attributes now unify the regimes of Trump, Morrison, Bolsonaro, Trudeau, Salman, and maybe also those of Johnson and Putin:
- Blind support for fossil fuels, overt denialism or a reluctance to act on climate
- Prejudice and cruelty towards immigrants, many of whom are fleeing climate disruption
- A tendency to favour ecological rapine and increased pollution
- A taste for repression and the curtailment of civic freedoms
- Spreading right-wing ideology; use of the same political strategists; rising support from religious extremists
- Heavy defence spending; a habit of engaging in needless ‘carbon wars’
- Tax breaks for the already-rich; a disinclination to tax mega-corporates
- The support of Rupert Murdoch’s News Corporation and its ‘shock jocks’
- Digital manipulation of public opinion by the automated spreading of falsehoods on social media via bots, trolls and data pirates.
- A tendency to lie about anything and everything – then divert public attention using emotive issues like abortion, gun control, religious freedom, terrorism, assassination.
- Use of identical ‘talking points’ and disinformation, much of it scripted by carbon-funded ‘think tanks’.
- The labelling of concerned, protesting citizens as ‘anarchists’ and ‘terrorists’ to justify use of military force against them
- The tactic of accusing their political opponents of the very offences of which they themselves are guilty.
The accumulating evidence indicates that western democracy is no longer dealing with independent national governments – but, rather, with an orchestrated transnational movement manipulating a troup of local political puppets.
Many of these leaders and their governments enjoy the funding and political support of the most powerful companies on Earth – the oil and coal majors, here termed ‘Global Carbon’, supported by a host of shady think-tanks, institutes, media corporations and digital manipulators who manufacture and disseminate their propaganda to create a global ‘echo chamber’.
The Global Carbon regime is unlike any previous political movement. It has no interest in social wellbeing, health, education, equality, justice, the environment or any of the issues that traditionally occupy the political discourse in democracies. It is motivated solely by money – and the power it confers. It is responsible for 9 million deaths annually – a fresh Holocaust every 8 months.
If it were a country, Global Carbon would be the largest economy on Earth, with annual retail energy use worth around US$24 trillion. This compares with, say, the US GDP of US$21tr or China’s $14tr. To this is added the value of its byproducts like petrochemicals, pesticides, pharmaceuticals, dyes, textiles and plastics. This cyclopaean financial clout is increasingly being deployed to influence the result in any country on Earth where they still have elections.
Why, then, is Global Carbon a thing? Previously, these fossil fuel corporates operated independently, competed vigorously with one another and dealt individually with national governments – as Shell did in Nigeria or Exxon in the US.
The answer is fear.
Global Carbon – a loose alliance of 100+ oil, coal and gas mega-corporates and their ancillaries – are collectively terrified that the worldwide movement by citizens and governments to prevent catastrophic climate change is going to put them out of business (exemplified by the case of coal) or at least severely impair their licence to print money and pillage the planet ad libitum. It is a fear not without foundation: calls to lock up carbon and ‘leave it in the ground’ are multiplying from science as well as civil society.
Furthermore, the rise of green-tinged governments – especially in Europe – citizen movements like Extinction Rebellion and outspoken youth like Greta Thunberg – has shaken them. This has resulting in calls to crack down on these ‘anarchists’, in susceptible democracies like Australia, the US, Canada and Brazil.
Global Carbon believes it is in a fight for its life.
The principle that “The enemy of my enemy is my friend” has impelled onetime competitors to make common cause, to undermine and – if possible – defeat the worldwide movement to save humanity from an uninhabitable, hothouse Earth.
The stark similarities between the affected governments is powerful proof they are no longer independent nations ruled by their own elected governments. They are separate countries increasingly animated by an identical purpose – a regime motivated solely by carbon profit, disinterested in all other aspects of civic governance.
Recent false bushfire arson claims in Australia highlight how these forces now co-ordinate globally. Allegedly the claims were started by Australian resources interests, then multiplied by social media bots and trolls, amplified by right-wing politicians and media corporations, taken up globally by Donald Trump Jr, Fox News and members of the US Republican party to create a global ‘echo chamber’.
The implications of this for the future of democracy are grim. As Global Carbon grows and flexes its muscle, it becomes harder and harder for an opposition party in any individual country to win an election, because it is not just up against its national opponents – but is also engaging the most potent international cartel on the Planet.
There is only one way to defeat such a monster. If it is truly a regime, then there must be global regime change. The citizens of Earth must rise up and impose their collective will on the rich and malevolent few. They must shun their products, prosecute to the full extent of the law, exact just taxes and outlaw the corrupt alliances that bind carbon to politics.
Like any global conflict, to road to victory will be long, and will be accompanied by much blood, toil, sweat and tears, as Churchill might have forewarned.
First, however, it is necessary, for each citizen to grasp how great and grave is our peril – and for that the dwindling voice of the free press daily plays a critical and valiant role.
- Julian Cribb is an Australian science author. His latest books on the human future are “Surviving the 21st Century” and “Food or War”.
Julian Cribb AM is an Australian science writer and author of six books on the human existential emergency. His latest book is “How to Fix a Broken Planet” (Cambridge University Press, 2023)
Comments
5 responses to “JULIAN CRIBB.The War on Global Carbon”
Thanks Julian.
I am filled with tears of sadness, rage and frustration.
As you intimate, we need action as if we were at war. It is a useful analogy, both in the broad and in the specifics. To take but one example of myriads, we currently “try to use our air con less” – makes those of us who care feel a bit better, but it’s pissing in the wind. But what if, as part of our patriotic duty, we were forbidden to use them (with the obvious exceptions of frail, sick, etc)? Currently the electricity supply to each of our major cities is required to be able to meet peak demand – and that peak demand occurs at 6pm on the hottest days. Get rid of most air con, and we slash off the most expensive, but infrequently used, generating capacity.
Voluntary individual action versus mandatory collective action. Can’t be done? – look at what the USA did between 1941 and 1945 – the biggest true socialist experiment ever on the planet.
Keep fighting!
Sorry Julian, but fossil fuel corporates have never in modern times “operated independently, competed vigorously with one another and dealt individually with national governments”. See, for example, John Blair’s 1979 exposé, ‘The Control of Oil’ which comprehensively demonstrates how the major oil companies conspired to rigorously limit production to support prices across the entire world through depressions, world wars and 50 years of shifting political and economic circumstance.
Their core problem has always been that there is too much fossil fuel and how to limit its access to markets. They have often used national governments to enforce their will on this – e.g. the Iranian coupe and installation of “The Shah”.
Now they are faced with dual challenges: that they can no longer pretend that their products cause no harm and there is a whole range of technologies that almost anyone can buy that could easily and quickly replace all of their immense assets with relatively benign alternatives over which they have no control whatsoever.
Their wealth remains grotesque and they are using a part of it to fight against anything at all that might interfere with the status quo.
But might I (very quietly) suggest that the technologies emerging may make revolution, in the old sense of regime change by, for example, force of arms, irrelevant. There is a clear potential for consumers to simply stop using their products, a profound, subversive revolution by consumer choice. Electric or hydrogen transportation kills big oil. Renewables and backups kill coal. Trillions in fossilised assets made impotent.
The 0.1 per cent are quite aware of the danger their paper fortunes face and they are marshalling resources to fight every advance in technology especially in the US. But they may find that their control of legislatures through the power their wealth gives them cannot subvert homo bargain-hunter (trained for generations to seek more stuff for less effort) from a cheaper alternative, any more than the man said to have been required to walk before a horseless buggy waving a red warning flag stopped the atomobile replacing the horse and cart.
While I don’t disagree with anything you’ve said, Julian, I think your focus on Global Carbon is too narrow. Global Carbon is simply one part of Global Capital, other parts being, for instance, Global Alcohol, Global Gambling, Global Armaments, Global Pharmaceuticals, Global Agribusiness, Global Media, Global Finance, etc. Although, that said, ‘parts’ is the wrong word because it implies that they are all separate capitalist cliques, whereas it it truer to say that the same, several hundred individuals and families are dominant in many of them – the Global Capitalist Class. This Class has brought off two incredible coups: 1) it has convinced governments and intergovernmental bodies to embrace the neoliberal variant of capitalism and transfer many of the traditional elements of the public and domestic spheres of life to very lightly regulated private enterprise, and 2) it has convinced the understandably disenchanted lower middle class and working class, who have not benefited in recent decades from global and national economic growth, that liberal social democracy has failed them and that their salvation lies with right wing demagogues and their modern brand of fascism: nationalism, racism, anti-intellectualism, anti-democracy, anti-science, anti-liberalism, anti-environmentalism, etc. (For the record, I have nothing against anti-elitism.) If this reading is correct, the appropriate response is for the Global Working Class to mobilise and seize power.
While I don’t disagree with your comment in general, global carbon is far better organised internationally. The others are mostly lobbying country by country. Here we see a plan by oil, gas and coal to “buy up” as many democracies as they think they can afford.
The forces which promote injustice, war, genocide, ecocide and death, and their mouthpieces in parliaments and in the media, have become global. The outcome can only be anarchy and military takeover. Yet Nature bats last.
“… absurd promises of hope and glory are endlessly served up by the entertainment industry, the political and economic elite, the class of courtiers who pose as journalists, self-help gurus like Oprah and religious belief systems that assure followers that God will always protect them. It is collective self-delusion, a retreat into magical thinking. “The American citizen thus lives in a world where fantasy is more real than reality, where the image has more dignity than the original,” Daniel J. Boorstin: book The Image: A Guide to Pseudo-Events in America.
“https://www.truthdig.com/articles/the-folly-of-empire/