AS THE CORPORATION FEASTS, THE EARTH FESTERS

by
ROBERT J. LEWIS
___________________________________
It is
excellent to have a giant's strength
But it is tyrannous to use it like a giant.
Shakespeare
Half
the confusion in the world
comes from not knowing how little we need.
Richard E. Byrd.
The
French philosopher Jean Beaudrillard proposes that reversibility
is the basis, the guarantor of human agency, that all our worldly
concerns and engagements are proportionate to reversibility, that
we are drawn to, engaged by situations where an outcome or expectation
need not necessarily occur. Mechanical cause and effect or anything
predetermined simply cannot compete with the excitement generated
by contingency that animates, for example, financial markets or
sporting events.
In 1971
John Lennon (dead at 42 in 1980) recorded the song “Imagine.”
Eight years later, Bob Marley (dead at 36 in 1981) recorded “There’s
So Much Trouble in the World.”
In answer
to the troubles that were plaguing the world, Lennon was trying
to imagine a new world order, one that Marley characterized as
“no care for you no care for me.”
Where
the Marley lyric falls short is in its lack of breadth. It’s
not only “no care for you no care for me” but no care
for the planet that is now on the endangered list. To quote Bill
Maher in a rare moment of eloquence: “we eat shit, we breathe
shit.”
The
data points are no longer disputable: The world is over-heating,
our erstwhile good air has been compromised by ozone and particulate
matter, there’s a plastic cesspool the size of France floating
(farting) in the Pacific, and “the water line is rising
and all we do is stand there” on the corner watching the
good earth being turned into an open sewer. All in the name of
consumption, the guarantor of happiness, so we are told as soon
as we draw our first breath. But despite the science and the proliferation
of ‘save the planet’ initiatives, the Greens are losing
out to the Browns (the skatamakers) because corporations,
and not governments, write the rules.
At the top of the “no care” list – our elected
leaders come a distant second – is the corporation, likened,
by Joel Bakan, to a psychopath in its cold-blooded behaviour.
In his book (The
Corporation: The Pathological Pursuit of Profit and Power),
the author describes the corporate entity, whose tentacles are
everywhere, whose appetite is insatiable, as rapacious and immoral
in pursuit of lucre.
During
the 2009 financial meltdown, the Canadian government bailed
out Chrysler with a 1.2 billion dollar tax-payer funded loan.
Shortly thereafter, Chrysler reincorporated as Chrysler Fiat,
which earned 4.3 billion in 2017. Since the old non-performing
Chrysler received the loan, the Canadian government was unable
to recuperate it, and (including accrued compounded interest)
had to write off a 2.6 billion dollar loss. Now we all know
that the law that allowed old Chrysler to finance the new
Chrysler wasn’t drafted by the shoemaker or the candlestick
maker. The corporation wrote the law specific to its interests,
lobbied (paid off) the government to enact it, thus legalizing
an act of grand theft against the Canadian taxpayer. That
the fate of the planet is in the hands of the world’s
most powerful (immoral) corporations is not an exaggeration
but a numbers backed fact that should worry us all.
The Guardian reports that
100 companies are responsible for 71`% of the world’s
global emissions.
Corporatism
thrives, feasts on consumption, the algorithm that is inexorably
rendering the earth uninhabitable. Most experts on both sides
of the debate now agree that ocean temperatures are rising, fish
stocks are depleting, the coral reef is on life support, 10% of
all the earth’s children suffer in varying degrees from
asthma, while the life expectancy curve is flattening out despite
medical advances in all disciplines. Why? Because we can’t
stop wanting what everyone else has regardless of utility. The
corporation specializes in turning us into a horde of insatiable
wanters. Our ever-expanding get lists, which dwarf our bucket
lists, are as unobtainable as the fugitive happiness that getting
promises. We want to earn more because we want more, as if happiness
is an order or quantity to be filled out.
From
our earliest years we are encouraged and then rewarded for being
a coin-clink in the chain of consumption. There once was a time
when respect and status were conferred on those who could save
and store. Today, those same rewards are accorded to the devotees
of consumption. It’s not the guy with a 15-year-old car
but a new car that gets the woman, just as every young man knows
or learns the hard way that women are attracted to mega-consumers.
Proportionate
to our growing appetite to consume is our contempt for the natural
rate of product degradation. Clothes that would normally last
five years are chucked after six months. The typical Canadian
consumer ditches 680 pounds of textiles per year, 85% of it clothing.
We can’t wait to replace our cars, computers and digital
devices because marketing experts convince us we are unhappy or
unsatisfied with the older versions. We shouldn’t be surprised
that in the 1930s -- ironically during the Great Depression --
the then already morally suspect corporation introduced the notion
of built-in obsolescence, the deliberate producing or manufacturing
of inferior products in order to shorten the interval between
product purchase and replacement. Following the wasteful example
of the fashion industry, car manufacturers began to radically
redesign their fleets from year to year in order to persuade the
consumer that he would be happier with the newer, hipper version.
The term throw
away culture
became current in the 1950s, referring to disposable
tableware (mostly plastic) and packaging. Eighty billion pairs
of chopsticks are thrown out annually. In 1969, in his seminal
The Waste Makers, Vance Packard exposed "the systematic
attempt of business to make us wasteful, debt-ridden, permanently
discontented individuals."
Without
overstating the case, scientists and environmentalists warn that
if we don’t reverse the consumption paradigm, the earth
will be unrecognizable in the not so distant future. Every known
environment suffers from varying degrees of toxicity because our
ability to think for ourselves -- wean ourselves from consumption
dependency -- has been co-opted, hi-jacked, vitiated by the corporation.
Our unregenerate thoughtlessness – the necessary invariable
in corporate success -- is the great enabler. The corporation
pulls the strings, calls the shots. We are the pawns, the foot
soldiers doing the bottom line’s bidding. We have traded
away – not a kingdom – the earth for a bourse. In
The Closing of the American Mind, Allan Bloom writes:
“The thoughtless are always going to be prisoners of other
people’s thoughts.”
Once
it takes root in the mind, it is very difficult to extirpate the
greed bug. Microsoft, a multi-billion dollar company whose value
exceeds that of many individual countries, without any outside
consultation or regard for the well-being of the planet, during
the past two decades has – on the flimsiest of pretexts
-- suspended support for Windows 2000, then Windows XP, then Windows
7, forcing hundreds of millions of users to change their operating
system, 95% of whom were happy with their software. The truth
of Bill Gates is that while he is giving away millions of dollars
to fight malaria and other worthy causes, he is already planning
to replace Windows 10, and millions of us will have to retire
a product that would otherwise last a lifetime.
GIVING
UP COWS AND CARS
But it
is still not too late to reverse current trends and regain control
of our critical faculties provided we begin to question our most
basic assumptions about life and what constitutes happiness. As
more and more of us fall ill from over-consumption as a consequence
of envy, depression, obesity, dysphoria, isolation (in the West,
50% of adults now live alone), some of us – the stricken
and the damned -- will begin question the virtues of consumption
and its dubious promises.
How is
it that the wealth of nations is not an indicator of happiness
but of production and consumption? Why is growth not a measure
of becoming wise but an increase in the value of goods and services?
Why are markets more concerned with GDP and not the unit number
of pesticides and herbicides and PCBs (polychlorinated biphenyl)
found in the food chain? To whom do our eyes belong when they
behold the jaundice coloured pall that hangs over every major
city in the world if all we do is check into another mall and
make another purchase on our debit cards?
Corporations
spend billions of advertising dollars (supplied by us, the consumer),
to get us interested in products we don’t need, and to get
rid of things that are still useful. The corporation understands
that if the masses were to be suddenly stricken by the equivalent
of a preservation virus, it would collapse, and with it, the entire
world order that is responsible for the world’s present
peril.
The
challenge then is to convince the consumer that in order to save
the planet and himself from extinction, he must begin to honour
the products he consumes by allowing them to assume their natural
rate of degradation, which just happens to be a priceless undertaking
everyone can afford.
However
unrealistic or idealistic it must seem imagining a world order
based not on consumption but preservation, it is not a world unknown
to us. From man’s early history until the Industrial Revolution,
saving -- providing for the future -- was prized above everything
else. Man, in order to survive, had to learn how to make last
the hides he wore on his back, to preserve and store food supplies
to get him through inclement weather, crop failure and political
upheaval. His utensils, hunting and farming implements were especially
valuable. The tribe, and later the village earned their fitness
by learning to Save and Preserve, injunctions informally spoken
of as the S & P, an ancient index that commanded universal
respect until it was co-opted by finance.
Once
the nations of the world find the will to prioritize the launching
and dissemination of a coordinated series of S & P initiatives,
a new world order will become a reality, and with it, a new configuration
of winners and losers. Among the big losers will be corporations
in the manufacturing sector as product demand crashes. Industries
based on preservation of land and water will thrive as will the
health sector and research and development. Industrial and agricultural
pollution, over time, will cease to be a major problem; life expectancy
will increase, and there will be exponentially fewer children
whose IQs are adversely affected by air-borne pollutants and contaminated
water.
But none
of this is likely to come about in the absence of a catastrophic
event. Man will continue on his present perilous course until
Venice and other cities go under water, or tens of thousands of
city dwellers are poisoned by toxic air trapped in by weather
inversions. Meteorological studies single out Delhi,
Beijing, Cairo, Varanasi and Mexico City as likely candidates,
and if and when it happens it will be irreversible, and thousands
of people might lose their lives in a matter of days. In the weeks
that follow, the tragedy will be compounded due to lack of facilities
to dispose of decomposing bodies.
If we
still can’t see the writing on the wall, are these fatalistic
futuristic scenarios -- the wake up calls that finally incite
us to action -- our best hope since there is not even a small
indication that we are able to command ourselves to act pre-emptively,
to do what we know is right?
Man is
his own worst enemy, and if he continues to refuse to make peace
with the flawed species he sees when he looks into the cracked
mirror, his home – The Earth -- will soon be another casualty
of war he is waging against his intractable nature.
Left
to his own inadequate devices, man reveals himself as incurably
inclined to see “what he wants to see and disregards the
rest” – a state of mind that portends increasing unrest
in a restive world.