The Right is the Centre?

August 25, 2019

Some people argue that the Coalition government under Malcolm Turnbull was too left wing, and that it needed to move rightwards to the centre.

The idea that the far right, who objected to Turnbull, is more or less the centre has been a great propaganda technique, its a bit like the idea of calling Fox “fair and balanced” when its close to 90% or more right wing or neoliberal propaganda. Not only does this endlessly repeated script keep shifting the supposed centre to the right, but it enables almost all dissent and criticism to be classed as ‘far left’ so that most of the righteous no longer have to bother looking at it- they know its biased in advance, and often can support its suppression.

So what is the main difference between left and right? It’s clearly not conservatism vs radicalism, as the right is radicalising and continually destroying the “checks and balances” that have been built up over the years to contain destructive capitalism, and the left is often frantically trying to conserve things like the environment, people’s wages and working conditions, or the old checks and balances. It’s not about ‘liberty’ as the left tends to support people’s rights to do things that do not harm others and the right supports abstract moralizing, getting into people’s bedrooms, and attempting to prevent all kinds of study and behaviour, while suppressing dissent through increasing fines and jail terms for protestors, and of course media vituperation.

I’d suggest, again, the real difference is that the right is about increasing and protecting hierarchies. Usually they are concerned with the hierarchy of wealth and thus protecting and increasing plutocracy, but hierarchies of gender and sexuality and religion are also important to them, probably as these ideas can more successfully motivate the relatively not-well-off to support plutocracy. The success of this centralist propaganda is shown by events like large tax cuts for the rich, privatisation of public assets, and contracting out public services (and hiding the costs to the taxpayers of the deal behind commercial in confidence agreements) becoming seen as normal, natural and even praiseworthy, rather than right wing and destructive of society, as they might have been considered 50 years ago.

Even as recently as the Howard government (1996-2007), no government would have thought that “robodebt” (a system which systematically and inaccurately harasses people on unemployment benefits, subjecting them to threats of homelessness as money is demanded from them on false charges) was a great idea. Especially as it seems to primarily affect those who are actively seeking for work, and earn bits and pieces of income when they can (and declare it). But nowadays it goes on more or less without comment, and indeed there are supposedly discussions about extending the scheme to pensioners, presumably because the benefit in harassing the relatively poor rather than employers who rip off wages, or fraudulent financial operators, is so great.

Robert Menzies, the founder of Australia’s major modern right wing political party, once wrote things like

“The purpose of all measures of social security, is not only to provide citizens with some reasonable protection against misfortune but also to reconcile that provision with their proud independence and dignity as democratic citizens. The time has gone when social justice should even appear to take the form of social charity.”

In other words he objected to the idea that people who were unfortunate and unemployed should be humiliated, or harassed, in order to receive help.

He also wrote:

“if the individual is to have social and industrial justice and to be guarded against what might become the tyranny of the strong, private enterprise must accept its duties or even its burdens.”

Obviously, in today’s terms, he is a ravening leftist.

The same fate has befallen people who were central to Coalition at one time, like Malcolm Fraser and John Hewson who largely stuck to their guns. One being against the idea of torturing and imprisoning refugees without hope, and the other because he was committed to economic free market moderation and not destroying everything for profit. Now the right has moved on – indeed in the US, we can see that being a neo-nazi and threatening violence has become respectable in Republican eyes, and that the only really terrible racism comes from black people, and sexism from women. The supposed centre has moved rightwards.

Under Turnbull the Coalition may have taken a mild detour into not harassing gay people and having an energy policy, but that is not necessarily far left thinking. The UK’s Conservatives managed to have an energy policy and a commitment to phase out coal burning, before Johnson, although I don’t know what has happened since.

See also: https://www.politifact.com/truth-o-meter/statements/2014/oct/28/facebook-posts/viral-meme-says-1956-republican-platform-was-prett/

1956_platform_meme

Plutocracy and resistance to Climate Change

August 25, 2019

It is a common assertion that people don’t want to sacrifice anything, such as living standards, to fight future threats like climate change, and it is probably true. Humans are not good at avoiding slow future threats. This is especially the case in a Plutocracy (such as most of the world now lives in) when most of the dominant classes understand that facing the threats could challenge their power, wealth, and accepted way of doing things. A big threat, like massive ecological upheaval produces an existential crisis for plutocratic power. This is especially true when many of the modes of making wealth seem to involve ecological destruction somewhere in their path.

One of the recurring motifs we hear, seems to be able to be summarised as “We can’t see how capitalism can solve ecological crises and destruction, therefore there is no threat, we can be concerned about” or perhaps “without destruction there is no profit, so there can be no threat”.

There are obviously some corporations whose executive officers disagree with this kind of position, but they seem in the minority, or handicapped by the usual demand for profit at all cost. I am reminded of an academic paper by Christopher Write & Daniel Nyberg which described how corporate greening starts of with enthusiasm, goes through cost cutting, eventually gets slammed for not delivering maximum profit, until the greening becomes little more than words. Greening is expensive. Paying decent wages is expensive. Not destroying things is expensive. Doing good work is expensive. All go against short-term profit.

Plutocracies are particularly inefficient at facing such threats because wealth concentrates power. The government, and government policy, is bought through money (for campaigning), knowledge, and knowledge distribution is bought through money, the media is nearly all corporately owned and largely protects corporate power. Business associations tend to be against doing anything that might disrupt them or lessen their influence, and the driven wealthy can then use the government to stop government scientists and public servants from communicating with the public. They can get tools of research shut down to help maintain ignorance. Business ends up buying public services and property through privatisation, gets contracts for services, and use “commercial in confidence” to make sure that the public has no idea of the monies involved. It can probably privatise the data, so that the contracting government has little direct idea of what it is doing, and this opens the way for fraud – say finding a person a job with a sub-company, to get the completion and then sacking them to get the ‘new’ client again. In this way, business becomes the government – giving the government the information it wants, directing people with State power, buying politicians, and carrying out services with no responsibility to the people. The only responsibility is to make money out of the situation, and that is threatened by change in approach to government. Encouraging capitalist profit driven markets does not have to encourage democracy, or understanding.

In this situation, if the ruling groups don’t want to do something, then it is hard to persuade them, or others, to do it. While this is reality, it does not make it useful.

Plutocracies are too invested in things remaining as they are to face serious change. They have to be dismantled slowly.

Obviously a sensible business will not behave like this. If the people in it do not recognize change, then they will go out of business. Change is also an opportunity. But business which acts as government has not learnt to do this. It has learnt to use the government to suppress threats to its profitability, and therefore becomes inefficient, unobservant of the surrounding world and frightened of change. This is reinforced by the hierarchy of business, in which people at the top routinely manipulate, or restructure, people beneath them, and people at the bottom routinely give their management the information they think the management requires. This affects the business information systems. In all cases, because there is no real transmission of information or understanding, everyone is governed by social fantasy. And if the business is wanting to avoid a problem like climate change, the fantasy is easily imposed on the world as reality – at least for a while.

Greens and windmills

August 25, 2019

One-time Australian Greens leader, Bob Brown, has recently protested against a windfarm in Tasmania saying:

the Tasmanian public, including the people of the North-West of the island, has not been properly informed of the private deals, or public impacts or cost-benefit analyses (economic, social, cultural and environmental) of this, one of the biggest wind farm projects on Earth.

and

The transmission lines are planned to cut through wild and scenic Tasmania, including the northeast Tarkine forests and (until local outrage led to a sudden change) the Leven Canyon, en route to Sheffield and then the new export cable beneath Bass Strait. Why not use the more direct, much less environmentally destructive route aligning the Bass Highway?

He has been accused of hypocrisy and puzzlement that the ABC and so on did not report this

Bob Brown is human so he should be allowed to be inconsistent. That happens

However, it has never been Greens’ policy, as far as I am aware, that wind farms should be imposed on people. I think those claiming hypocrisy are thinking of the kinds of policies espoused by the right, in which people should joyfully embrace the coal mines, gas fields, highways and so on, which are imposed on top of them or expanded into them – and that farmland and water supplies should be permanently destroyed for temporary private profit, no matter what local people think.

However, Brown’s actions were not unreasonable, it was not about an impact on him in particular; he was responding to worried calls from people who contacted him, which shows he can listen to the public. This is unusual, but not hypocritical.

Again, who has said there should be no controls on Renewable Energy? Why should protected forest be destroyed for windfarms? Why should there be no debate or community consultation? Why should we assume that all renewables are without problem? Again, as this is not a coal mine, a motorway, or a casino in which everything has been agreed beforehand, we can attempt to make this process hospitable to locals….

Renewable energy has to fit in with the community, its views and values, if we value a free society. This may be too slow a way to proceed, but it is an ethical way.

Bob Brown is simply supporting democracy ahead of a development he might approve of in general, and this is so unusual that it looks weird and some people do not know how to respond.

China Problem

August 24, 2019

It is true that if China goes ahead building coal plants, and supporting the building of coal plants elsewhere in the world, then any fight against climate change is lost.

The point is often made, why then aren’t environmentalists fighting China? Is this hypocrisy?

Well I’d have to say that most of what I know about China comes from the UN, Greenpeace or other Environmental NGOs, so I don’t know that people can say truthfully, that environmentalists are unconcerned about China or not fighting them in any way at all.

Most of the environmentalists I know are totally aware of the coal problem in both China and India. However, they tend to think that the only way we can influence the State in both of those countries is through example, so they would rather reinforce environmental concerns in the countries in which they live.

Also the countries in which they live,especially Australia and the US, can often seem to be trying to join the Chinese coal rush rather than counter it, and if that happens the environment is probably lost. So the idea is to fight were we might have influence.

Privatising the Clean Energy Finance Corporation

August 24, 2019

The publicly owned Australian Clean Energy Finance Corporation, has been massively successful in financing clean energy, and making a profit. It is therefore being suggested it should be sold to the private sector because it “must evolve” and it should avoid “crowding out the banks,” avoid competing with the private sector and probably because the current Australian government does not like supporting renewables, or having public sector involvement in anything that is helpful to the public.

And of course we know that financiers, bankers and developers always work towards the best result in the public interest.

If privatisation happens we can predict:

1) Directors and high level executives will award themselves massive increases in salary.

2) Costs to the public will go up.

3) Employees who know what they are doing will be sacked in an efficiency drive.

4) Staff doing due diligence will be cut back likewise, because they inhibit profitable risk taking.

5) People will make profitable employment transfers from the new owner’s original corporations.

6) Public money will be transferred back to the new owners.

7) Public money will be spent on private entertainments, or invested in arcane financial products that are beyond anyone’s understanding.

8) Money will not be spent on what is best for the country but on what brings the best temporary income, or tax concessions, to the owners

9) Money will be distributed through old boys’ networks, rather than by quality.

10) Public money will be lost and the institution run down.

11) Corruption will likely become the norm.

12) All the people who moved in on it, will be very happy.

Extending private ownership, where it is not required has the potential to extend and create disorder and unintended consequences.

Protest then and now….

August 24, 2019

We were lucky when I was young. In the 1980s it is true that leaders in the English speaking world suddenly decided that supporting corporations and hitting the poor would solve all our problems, but they also were rational enough not to want atomic war and global destruction. They understood what nuclear war meant. Basically the protestors and the dominant groups were in harmony – all of us preferred not to have nuclear war and the end of the world. As a result, we all lived through this potential universal death.

Even when it came to environment, the dominant groups largely thought saving the earth was good and possible, and that if it cost a few bucks extra that could be done. Even Margaret Thatcher thought global warming should be tackled, while she was in office – even if she later thought saving capitalism was more important than saving the planet. Apparently after retiring she wrote “Kyoto was an anti-growth, anti-capitalist, anti-American project which no American leader alert to his country’s national interests could have supported.”

Apparently she was persuaded by the usual groups of people. Exxon, Koch, Cato, Institute of Economic Affairs etc. who sold her the 80s mantra, we can do everything if we just don’t get in the way of corporate profit. No work, no planning, is necessary (unless its planning to destroy the power of ordinary people).

This was the transition to the change in which leaders began to value elite profit more than survival. They cannot imagine a future without corporate capitalism and economic growth and I guess that tips them out of reason and their position becomes there is no alternative – we have to destroy everything else in order to survive. Something of a contradiction, we might think.

However, our recent leaders don’t seem even this rational. Trump for example is encouraging corporations to pollute and poison people even more than they might want. The current leader of Brazil apparently started by claiming that the land clearing he had promised for the Amazon was not happening and then trying to suppress the bearer of news:

“The state-run National Institute for Space Research (INPE) has reported a 88-per cent increase in deforestation in June year-over-year, and said that cleared area increased 278 per cent between July 2018 and July 2019.”
“Jair Bolsonaro claimed that the statistics were “lies” meant to tarnish the image of Brazil and its government. He went on to fire INPE head Ricardo Galvao after suggesting that he was working for a foreign non-profit group.”

When the massive fires arrived, he apparently first of all claimed they were not happening, despite the evidence of satellite photographs, later claiming the fires were lit by green NGOs. It seems obvious that people who wanted to clear the Amazon, and reduce oxygen, would be happy with the fires.

Our NSW government is a simple mess of contradictions, but if you want support from them, then do some land clearing, help destroy people’s lived environment in the cities for profit and you will be fine. Our two main parties in Australia, seem to want not just to maintain coal pollution, but to increase it. Again because it would profit some people.

What does money profit anyone if they loose the world to spend it in? The contradiction drives people crazy.

Faced with this lack of sense and coherence, contemporary righteous politicians seem to have decided that they will do as much destruction as possible.
If they are going down they will take the world with them, and maybe they will be wealthy enough to buy some kind of survival, or support from those who are wealthy enough to be building fortress bunkers. This is an unusual combination of psychological factors, but it is now ingrained. Maybe corporations really to select for psychopathology?

The common attitude seems to be that normal folk are disposable and easily deceived, and service directed at them is pointless – apparently these people do not share the same world or wealth. I guess this attitude could also function as a psychological defence against climate change – they might suffer or die, but we will not.

What do you do in such a situation, to fight a leadership wedded to destruction?

Three sentence Marxism

August 21, 2019

Material forces are important in history

People organise themselves to live in (or adapt to) a material world, and this organisation affects the rest of our social life, our conceptions of the world, and the course of history.

History is the story of class conflict

Forms of social organisation tend to set up modes of domination, oppression and exploitation and this sets up forms of resistance and conflict between social groups or ‘classes’.

The dominant ideas of an era tend to support the dominant classes of that era

Ideas tend to come out of their producers’ experience, which comes out of their way of life and modes of social organisation. The people who make the dominant ideas tend to be supported and funded by the dominant classes. The dominant ideas are distributed by people who support the dominant classes, and these ideas tend to justify or naturalise the dominant classes’ mode of oppression and action.

Blocks to information

August 19, 2019

The government attempts yet again to foster terror in the public service.

Scott Morrison gave a very long speech that said very little, but what it did say seemed management speak contradictory.

I expect my Ministers to be in the center driving policy agendas for their agencies and departments. And so I’ve selected and tasked my Ministers top set and drive the agenda of the Government. I believe the public have a similar expectation of my Ministers as well….

ultimately it is the Minister who must decide, whether approve or not approve, to provide comment, feedback, as they appreciate, because ultimately it is the Minister who will be held accountable by the public. And that’s how it should be….

I have always believed that, guided by clear direction from Ministers, the public service is at its best when it is getting on with the job of delivering the services Australians rely on and ensuring Governments can implement the policies they have been elected to deliver for the Australian people….

Good government is about receiving excellent policy advice. … It’s about telling Governments how things can be done, not just the risks of doing them, or saying why they shouldn’t be done. The public service is meant to be an enabler of Government policy not an obstacle….

There does not seem to be any provision in these comments for a minister to find out if the Government’s policies are actually having their intended effects.

It seems as if, when it is found the policies are not working, then it must be because the departments are resisting them. Any attempts to tell the minister otherwise are clearly examples of slacking off, and disrespect by, the people responsible for making them work.

In other words, Mr. Morrison appears to assume that his government must always be right, with complete knowledge of how social, ecological and other systems really work, in advance. Something the less managerial of us, might think was a little difficult.

Mr. Morrison is said to be saying that governments are responsive to the bottom end of society, as well as the top end.

There is strong evidence that the “trust deficit” that has afflicted many Western democracies over recent years stems in part from a perception that politics is very responsive to those at the top and those at the bottom, but not so much to those in the middle.

I would like to know where this response to the bottom end manifests. It is not immediately clear to me at least, other than in the sense of harassing them, say by Robo-debt calls. Or is this an indication that Mr. Morrison is immune to hearing from people at the bottom to begin with, and does not know it?

It will also be interesting to see if the government does ignore the highly promoted and resourced interests of the IPA or the Murdoch Empire. I suspect those people are seen as representatives of the supposedly “quiet Australians” we are supposed to take notice of. Their ‘representative’ nature is quite probably emphasised by the fact that they agree with the government, or encourage it to go further on its way.

Quite how being immune to, or suppressing, accurate feedback is supposed to restore trust in the public sector, I’m not sure.

Consolation for the Pacific Islands

August 19, 2019

The Pacific Islands forum has been held recently. Australia made a splash over keeping up the coal burning, and don’t you worry about those rising sea levels. I mean its not our problem…

From the Sydney Morning Herald

Tuvalu prime minister Enele Sopoaga, whose tiny atoll nation face a growing threat from rising seas levels, said members of the forum had called on Australia not to open new coal mines, move away from coal-fired power and to “do things that are necessary to keep up with the targets of the Paris agreement”.

[But], the Morrison government has worked furiously behind the scenes to convince counterparts to tone down the language of the draft Funafuti Declaration, arguing any reference to a transition away from coal-fired power was a “red line” issue for Australia.

Lots of protest and then the deputy Prime Minister said:

“I also get a little bit annoyed when we have people in those sorts of countries pointing the finger at Australia and say we should be shutting down all our resources sector so that, you know, they will continue to survive,” he said.

“They will continue to survive, there’s no question they’ll continue to survive and they’ll continue to survive on large aid assistance from Australia.

“They’ll continue to survive because many of their workers come here and pick our fruit, pick our fruit grown with hard Australian enterprise and endeavour and we welcome them and we always will.

There you are: the capitalist paradise, “come and provide wage labour for us and everything will be ok”.

Jacinda Ardern the New Zealand Prime Minister supported the Pacific Island position and well known Australian radio gnasher, Alan Jones, with the usual calm of the Righteous stated:

“I just wonder whether [Prime Minister] Scott Morrison is going to be fully briefed to shove a sock down her throat. I mean she is a joke this woman…”

As usual, he tried to avoid Australian responsibility, by saying China produces lots of coal (true, but when I was young I was taught that because someone else did something bad, it didn’t mean I should do it as well), and he implied that seeing this statement as part of a repeated pattern of him encouraging violence against powerful women was “wilful misinterpretation of what I said to obviously distract from the point that she was wrong about climate change and wrong about Australia’s contribution to carbon dioxide level.” He also made a number of misleading charges about NZ, apparently being unaware that:

New Zealand’s primary renewable energy sources are hydro and geothermal power. About 80 per cent of New Zealand’s electricity comes from renewable energy, compared with about 20 per cent of Australia’s.

Now Pacific Islanders know righteous Australians hate New Zealand more than them.

Sea level rise is an issue for both Australia and the Pacific.

So far sea level rises have been largely trivial (maybe 7-9 centimetres over the last 25 years. Not really perceptible by human vision, especially given tidal variation, human perceptual adaptation and lousy memory. However, even this amount of sea level rise can make a huge difference in terms of flooding and storm surges in low lying lands (such as the Pacific Islands or Bangladesh), and certainly affects underground water supplies in those regions – and even in places like the US. You can see the information on the NASA websites…. Much of this increase may have occurred through the expansion of water through heat absorption.

However the problem is that once the land ice in the Arctic and Antarctic circles starts melting, which it is with the extraordinarily high temperatures they have been getting up in Greenland and Alaska, then we are in unknown territory. The melting is, as I understand it, way more pronounced than expected at this stage of the process, as were the high arctic temperatures. The more the ice melts, the more will melt, as the local temperature’s rise, due to lack of ice. There is also heady suspicion that there is a lot of methane under the ice. Releasing this will increase the rate of warming, so even more ice will melt. Glaciers all over the world seem to be shrinking, so this is not a purely arctic or antarctic event. Glacier shrinkage will cause massive water supply problems in many countries, and hence more refugee movements, and probably wars.

In 2007 the IPCC projected a high end estimate of 60 cm by 2099 (that will probably result in Bangladesh loosing a tenth or more of its land), but in 2014 they estimated 90 cm in the same period because of more rapidly increasing temperatures. Some people suggest that the last time the average temp was around 2 degrees warmer than pre-industrial times then the water was about 5m higher than now. That would do serious damage to most coastal cities. Most of the Pacific Islands would not be remotely habitable. Some people have suggested that, with runaway climate change we are looking at tens of metres of rise before the end of this century – we have to hope those figures are not correct – and most people will assume that.

If people keep pouring greenhouse gasses and pollution into the skies then the rates of sea level increase will be faster than if they stop. Certainly, it is extremely unlikely that water levels will go down. If Tuvalu is increasing in size, it is almost certainly not because water is going down. Land masses apparently increase for many reasons, but it would probably be unusual to hope that all significant land masses will rise by enough to offset the sea level rise.

Events are further complicated because if the Gulf Stream dies which seems probable, then London could get around about the same temperatures as Moscow – whatever they turn out to be – and so we might possibly get a re-icing in parts of Europe, but it seems unlikely, as that is primarily regional, and summer temperatures will be above freezing. Also for reasons I do not understand, sea level rises are not uniform across the globe.

The Pacific Islands, and many other places do seem threatened by sea-level rises. Some small islands in the Solomons have already become uninhabitable and have significantly eroded, and in other islands people are moving to higher ground – where such ground is available.

And the main cause of such rises, as understood at the moment, is greenhouse gas emissions. This comes largely from fossil fuel use, but agri-business practices and building practices are important as well. If we go past various tipping points, because of our emissions, there probably really won’t be much we can do and the levels of destruction Australia will experience from sea level rise alone, will almost certainly be extremely disruptive of anything resembling normal life here.

So while we are helping to destroy the Pacific Islands, we are also helping to destroy ourselves. But hell it makes someone a mighty amount of money.

An approach to the politics and economics of coal

August 19, 2019

1) Coal usage and burning is the problem, not coal itself.
People often write as if coal has imperatives in itself. If this was so, then everywhere with coal would have the same trajectory as happened in the UK. This did not happen independently, but as a matter of emulation and conflict. Taking coal as having imperatives, may move us into technological determinism, and coal useage is political at many levels.

2) If a post-coal future is to arrive, it will arrive through political struggle
Politics, to a large extent, is about people in struggle using narratives and scripts, where scripts are semi-automatic formulations and associations of ideas and actions.

Politics involves persuasion – whether this is through words and ideas, through force, or the imposition of risk for dissent.
Various groups argue about the meaning and value of coal. In other words the value of coal is tied to the meaning of coal, which is tied to a family of scripts or narratives which are being used to change, or reinforce, that meaning.
Without reinforcement of established meaning and action, there would be no struggle.

3) In considering the politics of coal, we are exploring how the meaning and value of coal can be challenged and change.
This ongoing political struggle is why commodities are not “stable entities.” For example, ivory, slaves, uranium. Commodities are unstable in capitalism anyway; very few people buy typewriters nowadays – and if they do, they do so because the typewriters are ‘collectable’ not high-tech.

Coal is not inherently valuable, useful or whatever. For example, it can be classified as dirty, poisonous, dangerous, and old-fashioned.

An item only becomes a commodity in a particular type of pattern of social action.

4) Coal is burnt because of:

  • a) Its association with scripts and narratives of ‘development’ largely based on the history of ‘development’ of ‘the West’, ‘First World’, or ‘North’.
  • The established economic and other power or influence of various fossil fuel companies in the State (which has come about largely through previous acceptance of scripts of development).
  • c) Existing scripts about “needs” for (increasing) profit in capitalism.
  • 5) This recognition implies that: Economic relations are fundamentally political and about meaning.

  • a) Markets involve struggles (often about the shape of the markets, and who should succeed in them). Not all markets are capitalist.
  • b) The State supports particular scripts about markets, and attempts to give those scripts legitimacy, and force in law – this includes capitalist markets which depend on the State to guarantee private property, contracts and the subservience of workers
  • c) Legitimacy comes about by violence, AND through reinforcing these scripts and other scripts and narratives. De-legitimacy comes from people actively weakening established scripts and reinforcing new ones.
  • 6) The State is not monolithic.

    There is struggle in the State, as elsewhere, which is why scripts, policies, and markets, can change. The state is a site of legitimate conflict. It gains its power like everything else gains power, through a combination of violence, wealth, persuasion, organization, communication etc.

    7) Developmentalism can be a tricky term. Not all developmentalisms are the same. However, the type of developmentalism we are describing, means aiming for material prosperity, economic growth, emulation of Western nation-states in terms of power and prosperity, ‘modernity’ and military power/security.

    Those forms of life which are classed as traditional which impede this ‘progress’ are classified as obstacles to be sacrificed for the greater good.
    Cheap and plentiful energy is at the heart of development, as is steel production. Hence importing, production and burning of coal has been a key developmentalist operator.

    8) Relationships between developmentalist states spur developmentalism.

  • a) From a desire for military security and defense against the capacities of other developed states.
  • b) From importing, building or exporting developmentalist products like coal, steel etc. to, or from, other states. Or from accepting investment projects and monies from developed states which use developmental scripts (which usually do not have the interests of local people at heart, who are sacrificed).
  • c) Competitions for status and influence and role in the world.
  • 9) The expansion of thermal coal production and burning occurs in response to these scripts, and relationships, of development.
    Reducing thermal coal apparently could leave people in life-threatening poverty, unhinge the eternal increase of development, and weaken the State with respect to other States.

    10) The main conflict or struggle is between:

  • a) Groups that demand coal burning for development (which often involves industrialization, military security, and competition with other countries) and/or profit.
  • b) Groups trying to defend local modes of life, land use, and to resist dispossession. And
  • c) Groups against climate change, and for transition to a new economy of some sort.
  • There can be alliances between b and c, but not necessarily.
    Groups in c, can lift local struggles into the national and even international field.
    Alliance between b and c, is potentially useful, unless people in b feel it alienates them from the holders of State power, or attracts State hostility or State support of the mining companies.

    11) The force in ideas arises because people use them, or because they reinforce, or challenge, a way of life or way of dominance.
    People often write about things like the contradiction between ideas of coal use and climate policy, as if the ideas have force.
    But the force in ideas comes from struggle between people with different ideas. These ideas were developed or utilised in that struggle, or in the politics before the struggle.
    For example, arguments do not become ‘anachronistic’ (this is an evaluation which assumes that the change is happening), they become challenged by other people.

    When making an analysis, reported statements should be anchored in the groups making them. Statements do not exist without context or makers.

    12) That climate change is happening could be irrelevant to coal use, without the idea of climate change being used by politically active groups opposed to coal use.

    In other words coal supporters do not have to necessarily worry about pollution or climate change; they can just keep burning and denying, or not recognizing, the problems. Just as renewable energy people do not have to see the problems that come with particular organizations of renewable energy.

    People who are opposed to coal “in their backyards”, do not have to care about climate change. So people who do care about climate change, need to be careful not to make everything about climate change, and alienate these people. Both groups are opposed to more coal mining and/or burning.

    13) Climate change often seems used as a mode of ‘Framing’ arguments and attempting to change meanings.
    While climate change is real, it is also part of the mode of scripting used by some of those opposed to coal.

    ‘Pro-capitalist or neoliberal economics’ and ‘Development’ are also ways of framing the argument. These framings are used to favour coal use, the profit of particular groups of companies, and reinforce the established meanings of coal as commodity and useful resource.
    People who use these economic or developmental framings tend to suppress awareness of the destructive parts of actual developmental and economic processes as part of their politics and framing.

    Hence it is useful for opponents to emphasise those necessarily destructive parts: ‘sacrifice of the less powerful for the general good’, or more theoretically, ‘accumulation by dispossession’ ‘capitalisation of nature,’ Luxemburg’s vision of capitalist ‘primitive accumulation’ as ongoing, etc.

    14) There is no apparent consensus on climate change and policy.
    This is despite the science and political necessities of survival appearing clear.
    That is why there is struggle going on.
    If there was consensus, there may well be no need for struggle.

    I think it is clear the Australian government does not worry about climate science as a reality, only as an argument it needs to dismiss, and as pointing to people it would like to suppress.
    Likewise I’m not sure that the Australian government recognises transition as a necessity or is arguing that transition should happen later on, when we are ready. it may well prefer to stop transition. Likewise, in Australia Labor seems to be moving to a ‘do little’ and support coal mines position.

    While some coal mines have been stopped, not all mining has been stopped. The Adani mine is being speedily approved. New coal mines are opening in NSW and QLD for example, despite water problems, and the Australian Resources Minister Matthew Canavan is aiming to promote the sale of an additional 37 million tonnes of coal. He said:

    That is the equivalent of three or four new Adani Carmichael–sized coal mines. If this investment occurred in the Galilee Basin, it would open up a new, sustainably-sized coal basin in Queensland.

    Villages seem to be continuing to be destroyed in Germany to make way for coal.

    Trump is actively encouraging pollution, ostensibly for economic/developmental purposes. He does not accept any climate consensus, unless the consensus is “burn away and be damned”

    China is actively encouraging coal power in the rest of the developing world.

    Coal, itself, has probably not been ‘discredited’ in India by the corrupted privatisation process. Some people may have utilised this position in political struggles. Others used it to redistribute coal licenses to other companies – and the second process seems to have been more effective.
    Forests are still being cleared for coal, and villagers thrust into heavy pollution or complete loss of land.
    India would, at best, seem to be ambiguous. Sure they have a good renewables programme, they also have an increase coal programme.

    It is pretty clear by now, that IEA recommendations for a decline in coal consumption by 2020 will not happen in most of the world.

    We cannot ignore this if we want to understand what is going on, and the stakes involved. Yet many people opposed to climate change talk as if there was a real and universal consensus. This is not correct.

    15) The fight is not won.
    It is not inconceivable that the appeal of known scripts of development and profit will win out over the appeal of survival until it is way too late.

    16) The politics of waiting works both ways.
    While the strategy of delay has been used by coal protestors, in the hope that the mine will become uneconomical, as the problems of climate change become clearer, the politics of waiting work both ways. Companies can wait until protest becomes unfocused, or people assume that no one can be crazy enough to open a mine, and then move in and open up those mines or whatever. We have been waiting for climate action for decades. Waiting is not just an anti-coal strategy.

    17) Solar and wind power use is small throughout the world
    When people are discussing transition to renewables they need to be careful, as biofuels are often classed as renewables, although they are not as clearly beneficial, and this hides the low level of progression towards transition to solar and wind.

    For example in the Key World Energy Statistics for 2017 the IEA points out that only 1.5% of World total primary energy supply by fuel is “geothermal, solar, wind, tide/wave/ocean, heat,” 2.5% is hydro and 9.7% is biofuel.

    If you look at ‘Electricity generation by source’, in the same publication, then, 7.1% of Electricity is generated by “non-hydro renewables” – this includes biofuels – it is not just solar and wind.

    Elsewhere they say: “Modern bioenergy (excluding the traditional use of biomass) was responsible for half of all renewable energy consumed in 2017 – it provided four times the contribution of solar photovoltaic (PV) and wind combined.”

    So the percentage of low GHG renewables is tiny. It could appear that currently there is no significant move to solar or wind throughout the world, only in certain places.

    This makes the struggle even more important, but it does not make it easy.