Last Saturday, October
19, was the date of the Second Annual Global Frackdown. In case you didn't hear, the Global
Frackdown is an international day of activism on which people who believe that
global warming is an oncoming train that's about to knock us silly, gather in
groups and protest the oil industry's practice of fracking. Fracking is a technology that has
produced renewed yields from old oil and gas fields and promises to make the
United States largely energy-independent in a few years. But there is no question that fracking
leads to the burning of more fossil fuel than otherwise, which is the reason
for the Frackdown. According to
the movement's website, there were Frackdown events scheduled even in Texas,
where fracking is a native industry and practiced widely. Opponents of global warming seem to
believe in their cause with an almost religious fervor, and for some it may be
exactly that: a substitute
religion, complete with a theology, an ethics, and an eschatology that
foretells doom for the planet unless we get with the gospel of global warming.
The Frackdown is
sponsored by an outfit called 350.org, whose guiding light is one Bill
McKibben, a journalist and author of such books as Fight Global Warming Now, Enough,
The End of Nature, and Eaarth. The last title requires a little explanation. McKibben's basic theme throughout is
that humanity has transformed the globe into an artifact (thus The End of Nature). The rather unfortunate neologism
"Eaarth" is McKibben's term for Earth.2, the new thing that isn't
really a natural environment anymore, but isn't completely under our control
either. Despite the world's new
status as a manufactured product, the laws of physics have not been repealed,
and McKibben claims there will be absolutely inevitable bad consequences that
will follow if we keep acting as though we were just a slight perturbation in
the thing we have historically called Nature. (Picture a 200-pound St. Bernard who still thinks he is a
cute little cuddly puppy and tries to sit in your lap.) Chief among these perturbations is our
burning of fossil fuels such as coal, oil, and gas, which began with the
Industrial Revolution and continues to be the single most important energy
source worldwide. McKibben appears
to believe as earnestly in the pronouncements of the Intergovernmental Panel on
Climate Change (IPCC) as he believes in the Bible (he is a practicing Methodist). The focus of his most recent efforts
has been to sponsor grass-roots movements to give the fossil-fuel industry a
bad reputation by means of divestiture movements, Global Frackdowns, and other
activist measures sponsored through 350.org. Why 350? That
is the alleged tipping point of parts per million carbon dioxide in the
atmosphere, beyond which innumerable disasters loom. The current number (as of May 2013) is around 400 ppm, by
the way.
I picked up
McKibben's Eaarth expecting a uniform
challenge to my blood pressure, and for the first two chapters I found what I
expected: a laundry list of
terrible things that will happen, and are already happening, because of global
warming, which is said to be largely if not exclusively due to anthropogenic
carbon dioxide in the air. Storms,
droughts, loss of seacoast regions, die-offs of all kinds, you name it. So far so bad.
But then I got to
Chapter 3, "Backing Off" and I checked the cover to see if the book
was really written by only one author.
McKibben turns out to be what I would call a crypto-distributist. Distributism, as almost nobody knows,
was a short-lived political movement popular in England in the 1930s, whose
most well-known exponent was the writer G. K. Chesterton. Its slogan could have been "smaller,
more local, more decentralized," and the old principles of distributism
are in perfect harmony with McKibben's plans for us to survive the oncoming
global-warming disaster. For
example, here's a problem: climate
change may cause entire monocultures of ag-industry genetically modified foods
to disappear. Solution: have thousands of independent farmers
supply hundreds of different varieties to farmers' markets in cities around the
globe, and some of them at least will make it. Problem: giant
fossil-fueled power grids with a few huge plants are wrecking the environment,
and giant nuclear plants to replace them would cost too much. Solution: spread solar and other renewable energy sources everywhere
so that people can be largely energy-independent down to the city block and house
level.
The biggest change
McKibben calls for is not technological but cultural. He thinks we will have to end our love affair with the
super-independent lifestyle so encouraged by American culture and commerce, and
live more like we used to, in interdependent communities where not only did you
know your neighbors, you depended on them for essential things in your life
such as services, goods, and jobs.
Only in this way will we survive the bugbear of climate disasters that
await us.
Eaarth is really two books: one written by a frenzied climate-change activist,
and another written by a pleasant, earnest Methodist Sunday-school teacher who
wants us all to get along together and be good little distributists, but
without using that word. I see no
indication that McKibben has even heard of distributism, but most of his
solutions lie squarely in that tradition.
And to the extent that they do, I by and large agree with them, although
my pragmatic side doubts that McKibben and his fellow activists will be able to
make much headway against the powerful entrenched political and economic
interests who would like things to stay the way they are now.
To the extent that
McKibben gets us to have more to do with our neighbors and less to do with huge
multinational corporations, I hope he succeeds. But he seems to have reached the same desirable conclusions
as the English distributists through what seems to me to be a long and
unnecessary detour through the notion of global warming and its promised
doomsdays, which has almost taken the place of a religion for many people. If you believe that buying an electric
car will make environmental Armageddon 0.0001% less likely, then your faith has
convenient ways for you to take actions that are unquestionably righteous, and
to condemn those bad actors such as fossil-fuel companies that are
unquestionably evil. But life is
seldom that simple, and I hope McKibben writes another book that sets forth
more substantial and eternal reasons for people to be more neighborly—and
leaves out all that stuff about global warming.
Sources: Bill
McKibben's Eaarth was published in
2010 by Henry Holt & Co. The
website 350.org has links about the Global Frackdown and many other related
activities. For more information
on Distributism, see my blog of Sept. 22, 2008, "What Is Distributism, and
Why Should Engineers Care?"
If This article had something to say I am sure it could have been said in about 3 sentences. Other wise it just sounds like more psycho-babel
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