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Making America first in climate denialism, pt.1
Source Joseph Green
Date 17/06/04/23:09

Making America first in climate denialism:
Trump withdraws the US from the struggle against global warming
(part one)

On Wednesday May 31 Trump announced that he will withdraw the United States
from the Paris Accord on climate change. This is the accord stemming from the
UN Climate Summit of December 2015 in Paris. From day one of his presidency,
Trump has been doing his best to roll back any environmental protections, and
the withdrawal from the Paris Accord is his overall declaration of climate
change denialism.

Of course, Trump did say that he was open to renegotiating the Paris Accord
or taking part in a new one. But based on his complaints about the Paris
Accord, the new treaty would have to have the following provisions:

1) it would not interfere with fossil fuel production;

2) it would not cost anything to implement;

3) it would not provide any help to poorer countries; and

4) it would put America first.

It's no wonder that no one took this proposal seriously.

Trump's withdrawal has already met with widespread condemnation, and a number
of modest-sized mass protests. It may become a new focal point of mass
resistance. It is another chapter in a movement that already saw in April the
March for Science on Earth Day and the People's Climate March.

These broad protests against Trump bring together a number of different
trends, from bourgeois trends to militant activists. The defense of the Paris
Accord by establishment figures generally glorifies the weak measures taken
by various government and the green declarations of polluting corporations.
But if large protests develop, this serves the interest of the overall
environmental movement. It may help spread consciousness of the urgency of
the problem to yet wider masses.

But while taking part in the overall movement, it's also important to help
build up a militant pole inside it. It's important to talk about the need for
mass struggle. Matters can't be left in the hands of the pro-business
politicians and the polluting corporations, who may say they support the
Paris Accord while they lobby for the right to drill more oil and gas wells.
Trump's withdrawal from the Paris Accord shows, if anything, the need for the
masses to take matters into their own hands.

There is already a discussion beginning among activists of how to react to
this new phase of the struggle. These discussion tend to focus among tactics,
but they should also look more deeply into the question of what measures are
needed. This is important to develop a strong working-class trend in the
environmental movement.

The nature of the Paris Accord
------------------------------------------

The importance of denouncing Trump's withdrawal from the Paris Accord isn't
that this Accord is very good. It's actually a flop: pretty words masking an
inability to agree on serious measures. The governments and bourgeoisie have
lauded it to the sky, but back when the Paris Accord was first hammered out,
many environmentalists, such as James Hansen, were horrified by its
provisions.

For that matter, today a number of commentators say that Trump didn't have to
withdraw from the Paris Accord: the Accord doesn't require any country to do
anything but present it's own plan with whatever goals it sees fit to adopt.
But doesn't this show how weak the Paris Accords are? If Trump could have
stayed in the Accord while seeking to increase carbon emissions, doesn't this
show that something is missing in this Accord?

Against bourgeois complacency
-------------------------------------------

Some media commentators are saying that it really won't matter so much that
Trump is withdrawing from the Accord. Why, market measures are supposedly
already bringing down greenhouse emissions. But if you listen carefully, they
are generally promoting natural gas. And yet the extraction of natural gas
(mainly done through "fracking") is destroying the land and poisoning our
water, and leakage of methane from natural gas wells and pipelines makes a
mockery of the supposed decrease in greenhouse gas emissions.

Other commentators are saying that large numbers of cities and states are
already quite green. It's surprising, though, that lead poisoning, a problem
known to the cities and states for decades, is still so prevalent, if states
and cities are already allegedly so vigilant. What we often see is things
like the Detroit City Council saying that, oh yes, it opposes the increased
bringing of toxic and radioactive wastes into the city for processing, but
its hands are tied. It can't really stop this, it can just negotiate with the
companies for more blood money.

No, we need a struggle against greenhouse gas emissions that goes well beyond
what the Paris Accord called for, or the measures being taken in some
localities. Mass protest is particularly important. But the more that serious
measures are popularized at these events and among the masses generally, the
more effective the environmental movement will be. Among the issues that
should be raised are the following:

* The militant movement to keep fossil fuels in the ground and to prevent the
building of more and more pipelines should be supported. As part of this,
let's stop the drilling for oil and gas via hydraulic fracking. It's
incredible that, in the name of providing "transition fuels", the bourgeoisie
is promoting the environmental catastrophe of fracking.

* The struggle against global warming should be connected to the overall
struggle against environmental degradation. The fights against lead
poisoning, the poisoning and/ or exhaustion of water supplies, harmful farming
practices, and other environmental problems are connected to the fight
against global warming. These fights often face the same corporate enemies as
does the fight against global warming, and they face the same blockage from
market fundamentalism.

* There should be constant exposure of the role played by the large companies
and exploiters in polluting the environment. The establishment press repeats
over and over that various large companies, even fossil fuel companies like
Shell and ExxonMobil, are for the Paris Accord. But in fact, the energy
companies and large corporations in general are continuing to belch
greenhouse gases and block serious environmental measures.

* There should be demands for real measures to protect people's livelihood as
the change is made to green energy. It's not sufficient to rely on the job
shift from dirty to green jobs, nor to rely on infrastructure jobs. There
must be economic planning with the direct aim of preserving workers'
livelihoods. Market measures have brought increasing inequality and poverty as
well as one environmental fiasco after another. Market fundamentalism has to
be ended in the interest of both the environment and the working population.

* There needs to be overall environmental regulation and planning that forces
rapid cuts in greenhouse gas emissions. This will require reexamination of
all industrial processes, and it is incompatible with the continuation of
neoliberalism.

-- Joseph Green

(from the D/SWV list)

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