The Path to a Livable Future: A New Politics to Fight Climate Change, Racism, and the Next Pandemic
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Stan Cox
Stan Cox began his career in the U.S. Department of Agriculture. For twenty years Cox was the Lead Scientist at The Land Institute, where he currently serves as a research scholar in Ecosphere Studies. Cox is the author of The Green New Deal and Beyond: Ending the Climate Emergency While We Still Can; Any Way You Slice It: The Past, Present, and Future of Rationing, Losing Our Cool: Uncomfortable Truths About Our Air-Conditioned World (and Finding New Ways to Get Through the Summer) and Sick Planet: Corporate Food and Medicine. His writing about the economic and political roots of the global ecological crisis have appeared in the New York Times, Washington Post, Los Angeles Times, Hartford Courant, Atlanta Journal-Constitution, Baltimore Sun, Denver Post, Kansas City Star, Arizona Republic, The New Republic, The Guardian, Al Jazeera, Salon, and Dissent, and in local publications spanning forty-three U.S. states. In 2012, The Atlantic named Cox their “Readers' Choice Brave Thinker” for his critique of air conditioning.
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The Path to a Livable Future - Stan Cox
INTRODUCTION
THROUGHOUT THE AFTERNOON and evening of November 7, 2020, my family, my friends, and I could not take our eyes off the spontaneous street celebrations that had erupted outside the White House and in cities across the country. Hearing that Joe Biden and Kamala Harris were projected to win Pennsylvania’s electoral votes, throngs came out to celebrate the demise of the Trump presidency. Watching the revelry in Times Square on TV, my mind went straight to the iconic photographs of crowds celebrating on the same spot seventy-five years earlier when Nazi Germany was finally defeated in Europe. The street party back then marked the end of a terrible struggle and the certainty of better days ahead; this time, the joyous eruptions provided only a brief moment of respite from years of fear and cruelty endured during Trump’s presidency. The next morning, it would be back to the Covid-19 pandemic and the fights against authoritarianism, white supremacy, and ecological breakdown—struggles that continue to become more urgent with each passing day.
Much effort has gone into drawing lessons from the year 2020, some of them grim, others inspiring. Yet in my view, we collectively have failed to accept the most urgent messages that were delivered to us by that terrible year. There were acknowledgments here and there that the widely expressed desire to get back to normal
was not going to be either possible or adequate. The Biden/Harris campaign slogan Build Back Better
implied improvement. However, given the realities we continue to face—a global ecological emergency, a public health system in tatters, economic apartheid, persistent assaults on civil rights and democracy—a better normal is insufficient and unacceptable.
As Trump’s presidency finally lurched to an end, excitement and support for climate action surged. In particular, the possibility of an industrial mobilization for wind and solar energy rebounded, echoing the enthusiasm that had swirled around the plan for a Green New Deal in 2018–2019. In that pre-pandemic period, with unemployment well below 4 percent, the plan’s proponents had emphasized economic stimulus only in passing. As death tolls and jobless rates soared and wildfires raged, however, many writers, ranging from liberals to democratic socialists, promoted a green,
pro-growth industrial policy as a central element in restoring livelihoods and income lost during the pandemic.
Big public spending was indeed badly needed to relieve the economic misery being suffered by millions. But the policy was also intended to revive the pre-pandemic drive for growth in production, consumption, and wealth accumulation. That drive has always been prioritized over mitigating the ecological degradation, racism, and injustice perpetrated by a political economy centered on the relentless pursuit of profit. In 2020, those disasters were having by far their cruelest impacts on Indigenous, Black, and Latino people—the same communities historically denied a voice in the decision-making process. The path to a livable future now involves not just reforming an unjust system, or budgeting a little more here and there to underserved
communities, but abolishing marginalization itself. By co-creating movements from all sectors of society, we organize in ways that are inclusive, open, democratic, and diverse. This is how we become unstoppable, and how we seed our present struggles with the dignified future we collectively envision.
In my previous book, The Green New Deal and Beyond, I focused tightly on the climate emergency and national public policies that will be necessary to end it. In this book, which zooms out to a wide-angle view of an entire society in rapid flux, I look to the movements now demanding the kind of transformation that’s necessary to get us all through the multiple, entangled emergencies that finally captured the nation’s attention in 2020. Has white America at long last started listening to the rest of the country? The answer had better be yes, because four hundred years of white settler-colonialism—and the failure to pay heed to Indigenous, Black, and Latino examples of a better way—have created the calamities we now face, including ecological destabilization.
Climate impacts are already being felt, and not uniformly. Corina Newsome, a wildlife conservationist at Georgia Southern University, told the Washington Post, Climate change is the most immediate threat for the marginalized people of this country and of the world.… But that also means we are the most quick to act.
For example, a Post poll found that at least twice as many black and Hispanic teens participated in school walkouts on climate change than their white counterparts; they were also more likely to say people need to take action in the next year or two.
¹ De-marginalization involves not just addressing matters of racial and environmental injustice, but centralizing the organizing roles of communities of color in the collective process of creating the governance necessary for a dignified and livable future for all.
In early 2021, Nick Estes, an assistant professor of American Studies at the University of New Mexico and citizen of the Lower Brule Sioux Tribe, cited some encouraging developments under the new administration in Washington—the end of the Keystone XL pipeline, a moratorium on oil and gas leases in the Arctic national wildlife refuge, and restoration of protections for Indigenous sacred sites. None of these victories would have been possible,
wrote Estes, without sustained Indigenous resistance and tireless advocacy.…‘Green’ techno fixes and consumer-based solutions might provide short-term answers, but they don’t stop the plunder of Native lands.
² The economic and environmental policies now being looked to for a post-pandemic society are heavy on the techno-fixes and every bit as inadequate as those that were promoted before 2020; in fact, they are even weaker, relative to the crises at hand. Without sweeping grassroots action, the forces that pushed us into the multiple crises of 2020—unshakable faith in technology and markets, the compulsion to exploit ecosystems, a belief in growth without limits—will be relied upon in a vain quest to build back better,
to restore the ecologically reckless U.S. that existed before 2020, only this time with more and better jobs, and without a would-be tyrant in the White House. Yes, we need good jobs for all, but building solar and wind power plants and producing electric cars will not end the climate emergency. We have reached a stage in which the pre-pandemic model of normal is not only unsustainable; it’s no longer survivable. In particular, the time has come for the institutions that have dominated environmental policy for a half century to yield right-of-way. Michelle Martinez, the acting executive director of the Michigan Environmental Justice Coalition, told Politico in 2020, The environmental movement was born of a colonial narrative, that nature was out there to be explored and to be used….I’ve had people at mainstream environmental organizations tell me point blank, ‘If we start doing this racial justice stuff, we’re going to lose some of our funders.’ And that risk is real. It’s this idea that focusing on racial justice, it becomes less about the environment. And that’s simply not true. That’s that colonial mindset.
³
That the pandemic exposed vulnerabilities in our health care, food, and transportation systems was obvious; how to make those systems more robust and adaptable was less apparent. Disparate responses to the pandemic also illuminated and exacerbated the exploitation of Black, Latino, and Indigenous communities and workers, while further whipping up the white supremacism that Donald Trump had been stoking over the previous four years. When the broad-based Black Lives Matter–led uprising against the police war on Black people swept the nation and world in 2020, it inspired all of the nation’s movements for justice and sustainability, providing a road map for the way forward. During the Minneapolis protests that followed George Floyd’s killing, activist Tamika Mallory delivered an electrifying speech in which she said, This is a coordinated activity happening across this nation, and so we are in a state of emergency.…America has looted black people. America looted the Native Americans when they first came here; looting is what you do.
⁴
Mallory’s message applies even more broadly. In addition to stealing the land and enslaving people to farm it, white settler-colonists plundered and violated the land itself, wreaking havoc upon the interconnected system of soils, waters, habitats, and atmosphere of the continent. One result of this relentless assault has been severe erosion not only of soil but also of health and quality of life in marginalized communities, both urban and rural. This erosion became increasingly clear through the uneven manner Covid has impacted communities of color.
Racial, economic, and environmental justice issues thus emerged from 2020 even more deeply entangled than they were before. Debates over when to declare that workers and the goods and services they produce are essential
were more about profit and prejudice than about ensuring supplies of basic necessities. The essential
designation resulted in the increased exploitation of already exploited workers and communities on the one hand, and favoritism toward ecologically destructive businesses that cater to the affluent on the other. In this book, I argue not only for an end to labor exploitation and systemic racism but also for a more serious discussion of the hard collective decisions that must be made regarding which goods and services must be produced and which should not be produced at all.
At one point in writing The Green New Deal and Beyond, I made an argument for what might be called consumers’ climate strikes, asking readers in part to imagine the impact of audacious mass boycotts of air travel, or house and car buying.
In early 2020, as I was making final edits on the manuscript and rereading those words, I thought, "Yeah, right, what are the chances that’s going to happen, ha, ha?" But at that very moment, as I sat there shaking my head, news reports were emerging of a highly contagious respiratory disease hitting Wuhan, China. Within weeks, the unthinkable was happening. Air travel dropped 95 percent; the world’s passenger aircraft fleet was almost completely grounded. Human civilization survived a halt in air travel—but now it is once again threatened by its resumption.
Ongoing emergencies in racial justice, climate, and public health jointly present us with grave challenges throughout society. In the pages ahead, I focus on three interconnected sectors of the economy where they converge in many ways: energy, land use, and food. The roots of the crises that collided in 2020, and the heavy impacts they will have on our future, are so intimately interwoven that these problems must all be resolved together, or they will never be resolved. Accordingly, it was clear to me they could not be dealt with individually, each in its own chapter. I therefore decided to work through the various entangled roots all at once, weighing the actions that are necessary to win a dignified and sustainable future for all, and seeking viable ways to overcome the material and political obstacles to such actions.
How do we transform ourselves and one another,
asks Black Lives Matter cofounder, Alicia Garza, into the fighters we need to be to win and keep winning?
Joining the nationwide revolt against systemic racism, including marching and rallying with my fellow residents of Salina, Kansas, brought me new optimism and answers. The confrontation with systemic racism that erupted in 2020, reaching even as far as little Salina, has created multiple openings. Widening them, however, is only the beginning, and navigating the rough terrain on the other side will require a lot of improvisation and perseverance.
The terrain ahead started looking rougher than ever on January 6, 2021, when a violent white mob stormed the U.S. Capitol with the aim of nullifying the outcome of the presidential election. Afterward, the Guardian noted that the insurrection was far from the first of its type: Mobs of white Americans unwilling to accept multiracial democracy have successfully overturned or stolen elections before: in Wilmington, North Carolina, in 1898, in Colfax, Louisiana, in 1873 and New Orleans in 1874, and, in Hamburg, South Carolina
in 1876.⁵ By repeatedly attacking the institutions responsible for enforcing racial justice after the Civil War, such violent mobs managed to shut down Reconstruction after barely a decade, thereby maintaining white supremacy as the law of the land for another nine decades. The Capitol insurrection failed, at least in its immediate goal. But the assault on multiracial democracy is as serious as it was in the 1870s, and far from over.
In the tumultuous fall of 2020, Angela Davis observed, So many struggles have been about bringing the marginalized into the fold of the democracy, and that is where we make many mistakes. W.E.B. DuBois argued that democracy could not remain the same and respond to the needs of those who had been previously enslaved. The democracy itself would have to be transformed, and new institutions would have to be created.…We are now preparing to do work which should have happened over 150 years ago.
⁶
There is much work to be done to win a livable future, and no time left for dawdling.
1.
THE CRUELEST YEAR
The excluded begin to realize, having endured everything, that they can endure everything. They do not know the precise shape of the future, but they know that the future belongs to them. They realize this—paradoxically—by the failure of the moral energy of their oppressors and begin, almost instinctively, to forge a new morality, to create the principles on which a new world will be built.
—James Baldwin, No Name in the Street, 1972⁷
VOTING DONALD TRUMP out of the White House may have forestalled a descent into fascism, but it did not resolve our national predicament. It’s as if, like Leonardo DiCaprio’s character in the 2015 film The Revenant, we had fought off a bear attack, but we were all still lost in the wilderness, gravely injured and not knowing how many more bears were out there. The election results preserved an opportunity to reverse the climate emergency, but achieving that with the necessary speed is now an even more daunting prospect, given that we lost four precious years. Trump’s defeat most likely prevented many thousands more Covid-19 deaths, but it came too late to save the hundreds of thousands of lives that could have been saved. And while freeing ourselves from white supremacy at the highest levels of the Executive Branch achieved an important victory, even more strenuous efforts lie ahead to completely emancipate U.S. society from racial injustice.
We lived to fight another day, but we didn’t buy ourselves any time. The urgency of our predicament is even greater than before the nightmare of 2020 began. Not only does the death toll from police shootings of Black people keep rising, communities of color remain outside many of the political processes required to restructure the institutions that directly impact their security, safety, health, and quality of life. Millions of people don’t have access to adequate food, health care, or clean air and water. And we are hurtling faster than ever toward the deadline for ending greenhouse emissions. The United Nations reported in 2020 that a decade of global procrastination on climate has dramatically raised the bar for effective climate mitigation. Greenhouse emissions will now need to be reduced at