“We need to stop this culture before it kills the planet”

A conversation with Derrick Jensen

As you begin reading this interview, take a look at the nearest clock. Now, dig this: Since yesterday at the same exact time, 200,000 acres of rainforest have been destroyed, over 100 plant and animal species have gone extinct, 13 million tons of toxic chemicals were released across the globe, and 29,158 children under the age of five died from preventable causes.

Worst of all, there’s nothing unique about the past 24 hours. It’s business as usual, a daily reality—and no amount of CFL bulbs, recycled toilet paper, or Sierra Club donations will change it even a tiny bit.

As you do your best to convince yourself of the vast chasm between the two wings of America’s single corporate party, I suggest you listen carefully to hear if even one of the politicians mentions any of the following:

This is just a minute sampling, folks, and sorry, but your hybrid ain’t helping. That reusable shopping bag you bring to the market has zero impact. Your home composting kit is not gonna start a revolution.

In fact, even if every single person in the US made every single change suggested in the movie An Inconvenient Truth, carbon emissions would fall by only 21%—in contrast to the 75% emissions decrease that scientific consensus believes must happen…now.

None of this, of course, is news to Derrick Jensen. He is the author of essential works such as A Language Older Than Words and Endgame. His worldview has nothing to do with party politics, incremental reform, leftist in-fighting, corporate compromise, or anything that seeks to tweak but ultimately maintain the ongoing global crime we call civilization.

“My loyalty,” he told me, “is with the nonhuman and human victims (or targets) of this culture, and my work is toward stopping this culture’s assaults on nonhumans, on the land, on the planet itself, on women, on indigenous peoples, on the poor.”

If you’ve grown weary (and wary) of the entrenched Left and all the words left unspoken, you owe it yourself to read the rest of our conversation below. Afterwards, you just might start realizing that you also owe to the planet to get busy.

Our exchange took place during the week of January 17 and went a little something like this…

Mickey Z.: We’re starting this conversation as another MLK Day is observed. Not much of a chance that we’ll hear this Dr. King quote—”The question is not whether we will be extremists, but what kind of extremists we will be”—mentioned much by the corporate media, huh?

Derrick Jensen: Just today I read an article stating that, no surprise, industrial-induced global warming will be far worse than estimated, and if carbon emissions continue as expected, could render much of the planet uninhabitable within 100 years. Even now, 150-200 species are driven extinct every day. This culture extirpates indigenous peoples. The oceans are being murdered. And today I saw a study of rates of fire retardant in every fetus. And on and on. And yet those of us who are working to stop this planetary murder are sometimes characterized as extremists.

I think the real extremists are the people who value capitalism over life, the people who value civilization over life. I cannot think of any more extreme position than valuing this insane culture over life.

MZ: Not surprisingly, another major African-American figure from the 1960s—Malcolm X—had some positive words for extremism in the name of toppling that insane culture. Using Hamlet as a springboard, Malcolm wrote:

Hamlet) was in doubt about something—whether it was nobler in the mind of man to suffer the slings and arrows of outrageous fortune—moderation—or to take up arms against a sea of troubles and by opposing end them. And I go for that. If you take up arms, you’ll end it, but if you sit around and wait for the one who’s in power to make up his mind that he should end it, you’ll be waiting a long time. And in my opinion, the young generation of whites, blacks, browns, whatever else there is, you’re living at a time of extremism, a time of revolution, a time when there’s got to be a change. People in power have misused it and now there has to be a change and a better world has to be built and the only way it’s going to be built with—is with extreme methods. And I, for one, will join in with anyone—I don’t care what color you are—as long as you want to change this miserable condition that exists on this earth.

DJ: I think the key has to do with wanting to change this miserable condition.

I try to be fairly inclusive of the people I would work with, but I’ve realized over the past many years that I’m not working toward the same goals as many of the environmentalists who are explicitly working to save capitalism or to save civilization, rather than the real world. In talks and interviews I often ask what all of the so-called solutions to global warming or the murder of the oceans, or biodiversity crash, etc, all have in common. And what they all have in common is that they all take industrial capitalism as a given, and the natural world as that which must conform to industrial capitalism. That is literally insane, in terms of being out of touch with physical reality. I mean, look at Lester Brown’s Plan B 4.0 to Save Civilization. What does he want to save? Could he be any more explicit? He wants to save civilization. But civilization is killing the planet. It’s like writing a book about how to save a serial killer who is murdering so many people he’s running out of victims. We see this attitude all the time. When people, for example, ask how we can stop global warming, they’re not asking how we can stop global warming; they’re asking how we can stop global warming without changing the physical conditions (burning oil and gas, deforestation, industrial agriculture, and so on) that lead to global warming. And the answer to that question is that you can’t. Likewise, when they ask how we can save salmon, they aren’t really asking how we can save salmon, they’re asking how we can save salmon without removing dams, stopping industrial logging, stopping industrial agriculture, stopping industrial fishing, stopping the murder of the oceans, stopping global warming, and so on.

A question I keep asking is: with whom (or what) do you identify? Where is your loyalty? Whom, or what do you want to save? And if what you really want to save is this “miserable condition”—capitalism, civilization, what have you—at the expense of the planet, then we’re not really working toward the same goal, are we? My loyalty is with the nonhuman and human victims (or targets) of this culture, and my work is toward stopping this culture’s assaults on nonhumans, on the land, on the planet itself, on women, on indigenous peoples, on the poor.

MZ: It’s a testament to the power of propaganda how even well-meaning folks will choose the options—both public and private—that work against their own interests. Gay rights activists are currently applauding the alleged repeal of “don’t ask, don’t tell.” In the name of promoting diversity and inclusion, they are celebrating the ability to volunteer for an institution that exists to violently crush all diversity and inclusion.

The conditioning is so interwoven throughout every aspect of our culture that even respected Leftist thinkers simply cannot comprehend your comment, “civilization is killing the planet” and resort to retorts about “misanthropy.”

So, the question must be asked, Derrick: Can these people be reached with the message that we can’t have industrial capitalism as a given without all the murderous side effects?

DJ: There’s a great line by Upton Sinclair about how it’s hard to make a man [sic] understand something when his [sic] job depends on him not understanding it. I think that’s true even more for entitlement. It’s hard to make someone understand something when their entitlement, their privilege, their comforts and elegancies, their perceived ability to control and manage, depends on it.

So much nature writing, social change theory, and environmental philosophy are at best irrelevant, and more often harmful in that they do not question human supremacism (or for that matter white supremacism, or male supremacism). They often do not question imperialism, including ecological imperialism. So often I feel like so many of them still want the goodies that come from imperialism (including ecological imperialism and sexual imperialism) far more than they want for these forms of imperialism to stop. And since the violence of imperialism is structural—inherent to the process—you can’t realistically expect imperialism to stop being violent just because you call it “green” or just because you wish with all your might.

Here’s another way to say this: as I say in Endgame, any way of life that requires the importation of resources will a) never be sustainable and b) always be based on violence, because a) requiring importation of resources means you are using more of that resource than the landbase can provide, which is by definition not sustainable (and as your city grows you’ll need an ever larger area to harm); and b) trade will never be sufficiently reliable, because if you require some resource (e.g., oil) and the people who live with or control that resource won’t trade you for it, you will take it, because you need it. It’s inherent. One of the many implications of this is that if you don’t question imperialism itself, the solutions you present will be absurd, and either irrelevant or harmful.

Here’s a story. A couple of weeks ago a tree fell down in a storm and knocked down an electric wire in this neighborhood. My neighbor told me about it, and when I saw the downed tree I looked and looked and looked for the stump, to see where the tree came from. I couldn’t find it. I’ve looked again every time I’ve gone by that place. Well, today I was walking and I saw where it came from. The top of a big tree had broken off. It was really obvious when I looked up instead of down. Point being (instant aphorism): You can search as thoroughly as is possible, but you’ll never find what you’re looking for if you’re looking in the wrong place.

This applies to everything from personal happiness to solutions to global warming.

But the problem is worse than mere entitlement. RD Laing came up with the three rules of a dysfunctional family:

Rule A is don’t.

Rule A.1 is Rule A does not exist

Rule A.2 is Never discuss the existence or nonexistence of Rules A, A.1, A.2

This is as true of dysfunctional cultures as dysfunctional families. So we cannot talk, for example, about the fact that this culture is only one way of living among many, that this way of living is based on conquest and the acquisition of power, that this way of life systematically destroys landbases, other cultures, and on and on. Systematically, functionally.

But it’s worse than this. In the 1960s a researcher attached electrodes to people’s eyeballs to track where they looked, and then showed them pictures. What the researcher found is that if the photo contained something that threatened the person’s worldview, the person’s eyes would not even track to it once: they would evidently see it out of the corners of their eyes, and know where not to look. So far too often you can make the point as reasonably as you can, and the person will have no idea what you are talking about.

MZ: Considering the glacial rate by which most humans – myself very much included – recognize and address destructive or self-destructive patterns in their personal life, it’s difficult to imagine a lot more humans allowing their eyeballs to focus in on global crises and their obscured causes. High Noon is approaching and it seems most of us don’t even know how to tell time.

Speaking of High Noon, I recently watched the classic 1952 film and found myself focused on the moment when Amy (Grace Kelly), the pacifist wife of Marshal Kane (Gary Cooper), shoots and kills a man to save her husband’s life. Earlier in the film, Amy had declared: “My father and my brother were killed by guns. They were on the right side but that didn’t help them any when the shooting started. My brother was nineteen. I watched him die. That’s when I became a Quaker. I don’t care who’s right or who’s wrong. There’s got to be some better way for people to live.”

However, she not only ends up shooting a man, she also fights off the main villain, which allows Marshal Kane to finish him. Now, before some readers run and tell Gandhi on me, what I’m proposing as the lesson is that when faced with the clarity a crisis can sometimes inspire, we can recognize that those clock hands are inching towards noon and surprise ourselves (as Grace Kelly’s character did) with our ability to take things to a new level.

If not, what chance do we (the animals, the trees, the eco-system, etc.) have?

DJ: Very little chance. Even if people don’t care about nonhumans, recent estimates are that billions, literally billions, of humans will die in what is beginning to be called a climate holocaust. This is if the temperature rises 4 degree Celsius.

And the most recent estimates are revealing that global warming is far worse than previously believed (have you ever noticed how the previous estimates were always low?), and could go up 16 degrees C within 90 years, rendering much of the planet uninhabitable (“Science stunner: On our current emissions path, CO2 levels in 2100 will hit levels last seen when the Earth was 29°F (16°C) hotter—Paleoclimate data suggests CO2 ‘may have at least twice the effect on global temperatures than currently projected by computer models'”). This means that there are young people now who will die in this climate holocaust. And there are too many people who prefer this wretched, destructive way of life over life on the planet, and literally over their own children. We need to stop this culture before it kills the planet.

MZ: Although I feel there’s way too much hand-holding in the realm of activism and far too many progressives sitting idle as they wait for a leader to give them direction, I must ask you this: What types of immediate direct action might you suggest to those reading this interview, in the name of stopping this culture before it kills the planet?

DJ: I think the important thing is that they start doing some form of activism. I can’t tell people what to do, because I don’t know what is important to them and I don’t know what their gifts are. But the important thing is that they start. Now. Today.

So how do you start? The problems are so huge! Well, the way I started as an activist was the result of the smartest thing I ever did. When I was in my mid-20s I realized I wasn’t paying enough for gasoline (in terms of including any of the ecological costs, etc), so for every dollar I spent on gas I would donate a dollar to an environmental organization (never a national or international organization, but rather local grassroots organizations), but since I didn’t have any money I would instead pay myself $5/hour to do activist work, whether it is writing letters to the editor or participating in demonstrations. My first demos were anti-fur demos and anti-circus demos. And don’t let your perceived ignorance stop you: I had no idea what exactly was wrong with circuses, but I knew they were exploitative of nonhuman animals and so I showed up, and other people handed me signs. If anyone asked me, What’s wrong with circuses? I just pointed them to the person standing next to me. I went from there to other forms of activism, including filing timber sale appeals, and so on. The point is that I started. At the time it cost $10 to fill my tank with gas, and if I filled it once a week, that meant two hours per week. And I started having so much fun with the activism that I stopped keeping track of how many hours I was doing activism, and just did it. But the important thing is that I got off my butt and started doing something.

It’s also important that when people do activism, that it not simply be personal stuff: environmentalism especially has gone down the dead end of lifestylism, where people think that changing their own life is sufficient. Just today I read an article that said, about water, “First of all, turn off the water when you don’t need it. It’s that simple. I don’t want to sound too preachy, but, according to UNICEF and the World Health Organization, lack of access to clean drinking water kills about 4,500 children per day. The water won’t magically travel from our taps to someone in need, but creating a mind-set of conservation will certainly help. There is absolutely no purpose served by letting water you are not using run down the drain.” This is just absurd. Yes, lack of access to clean water kills 4500 children per day, but it’s not because of my own water usage. 90 percent of the water used by humans is used by agriculture and industry. So all these environmental pleas for simple living are tremendous misdirection: these children (and what about the salmon children, and the sturgeon children, and so on) aren’t dying because I brushed my teeth: they’re dying because agriculture and industry are stealing the water. Just yesterday I read that Turkey is sacrificing all nature reserves to put in dams. This is not so people can have showers. It’s for agriculture and industry.

I live pretty simply, but that’s because I’m a cheapskate. I turn off the water while I brush my teeth, too. Big fucking deal. That is not a political act. There are no personal solutions to social problems. None.

So when I say that people should do some activism, I mean do something good for your landbase. Stop destructive activities. Do rehabilitation. Or if your primary emergency is violence against women, then do work against domestic violence, or against pornography, or against the trafficking in women. Get started.

Like Joe Hill said, “Don’t mourn, organize.”

MZ: I like to tell people that we live in the best time ever to be an activist. We’re on the brink of economic, social, and environmental collapse. What a time to be alive. We can take part in the most important work humans have ever undertaken. How lucky are we? In this era of “hope and change,” I say action is always better than hope. Or, as Rita Mae Brown said, “Never hope more than you work.”

DJ: Yes, I get so tired of people saying they hope salmon survive, or hope this or hope that. But what is hope? Hope is a longing for a future condition over which we have no agency. That’s how we use the word in every day language. I don’t say, “Gosh, I hope I put my shoes on before I go outside.” I just do it. On the other hand, the next time I get on a plane I hope it doesn’t crash. After I get on the plane I have no agency. Think of this: if a parent says to an eight-year-old child, “Please clean your room,” and the child says, “I hope it gets done,” we all know that’s ridiculous. I asked an eight-year-old what would happen if she said that to her parents, and she said, “Someone has to clean the room!”

That kid is smarter than a lot of environmentalists. It’s ridiculous to say we hope global warming doesn’t kill the planet when we can stop the oil economy that is causing global warming. I’m not interested in hope. I’m interested in agency, and I’m interested in people no longer waiting for some miracle to solve their problems. We need to do what is necessary.

MZ: When you first began writing and speaking about civilization and the eventual collapse, did you ever truly imagine that you’d be around to see things as bad as they are right now?

DJ: No. And even though I wrote in The Culture of Make Believe about the ways in which economic collapse can lead to more and more over brownshirt-ism and fascism, I’m still kind of stunned at the way it is happening here. But more to the point, even though I’ve written something on the order of fifteen books about this culture’s insanity, I still cannot believe this isn’t all a bad dream, with this frenzied maintenance of this culture as the world is murdered. I keep wanting to wake up, but each time I awaken this culture is still killing the planet, and not many people care.

MZ: I’m sure you can’t even calculate how many times you’ve been interviewed but I’m wondering if there’s a question you always wished you’d been asked but so far, no one has done so. If so, by way of wrapping up, please feel free to ask and answer that question.

DJ: Four questions:

Q: You’ve said many times that you don’t believe that humans are particularly more sentient than other animals. Where do you draw the line?

A: I don’t draw the line at all. I don’t see any reason to believe anything other than that the universe is full of a wild symphony of wildly different voices, wildly different intelligences. Humans have human intelligence, which is no greater nor less than octopi intelligence, which is no greater nor less than redwood intelligence, which is no greater nor less than flu virus intelligence, which is no greater nor less than granite intelligence, which is no greater nor less than river intelligence, and so on.

Q: How did the world get to be such a beautiful and wonderful and fecund place in the first place?

A: By everyone making the world a more beautiful and wonderful and fecund place by living and dying. By plants and animals and fungi and viruses and bacteria and rocks and rivers and so on making the world a better place. Salmon makes forests better places because of their existence. The Mississippi River makes that region a better place because of its existence. Bison make the Great Plains a better place because of their existence.

Civilized humans do not make the world a better place because of their existence. They are collectively and individually making the world a less beautiful and wonderful and fecund place. How can you make the world a better place? What can you do to make the landbase where you live more healthy, more beautiful, more fecund? And why aren’t you doing it?

Q: What will it take for the planet to survive?

A: The eradication of industrial civilization. Industrial civilization is functionally, systematically incompatible with life.

The good news is that industrial civilization is in the process of collapsing.

The bad news is that it is taking down too much of the planet with it.

Q: So if industrial civilization is collapsing, why shouldn’t we just hunker down and make our lifeboats and protect our own, and basically take care of our own precious little asses?

A: I would contrast the narcissism and cowardice of this attitude with that expressed by Henning von Tresckow, one of the members of the German resistance to Hitler in World War II. When the Allies invaded France in 1944, anybody paying any attention at all knew that the Nazis were going to lose: it was just a matter of time. So some members of the resistance suggested that they stop working to take down the Nazis, and instead just protect themselves until the war was over, basically hunker down and make their lifeboats and protect their own. Henning von Tresckow responded that every day the Nazis were killing 16,000 innocent civilians, so basically every day sooner they could bring down the Nazis would save 16,000 innocent civilians.

There is more courage and wisdom and integrity in that statement than in all the statements of all the craven lifeboatists put together.

Between 150 and 200 species went extinct today. They were my brothers and sisters. It is not sufficient to merely hunker down and wait for the horrors to stop. Salmon won’t survive that long. Sturgeon won’t survive that long. Delta smelt won’t survive that long.

Here’s another way to say all this. I would contrast the narcissism and cowardice of the lifeboatists with the attitude expressed by my dear friend, and the person who really got me started in environmentalism, John Osborn. He has devoted his life to saving as much of the wild as he can, through organized political resistance. When asked why he does this work, he always says, “We cannot predict the future. But as things become increasingly chaotic, I want to make sure that some doors remain open.” What he means by that is that if grizzly bears are around in 30 years they may be around in fifty. If they are gone in 30 they are gone forever. If he can keep this or that valley of old growth standing, it may be standing in 50 years. If it’s gone now, it will be gone for a long, long time, maybe forever.

As you said, Mickey Z, we are living at a time when we have perhaps more leverage than at many previous times. Any destructive activity we can halt now may protect that area until the collapse: people couldn’t realistically say that in the 1920s. I believe it was David Brower who said that every environmental victory was temporary while every loss was permanent. I think we are quickly reaching the point where every victory can be permanent.

One final thing: the single most effective recruiting tool for the French Resistance in WWII was D-Day, because the French realized once and for all that the Germans weren’t invincible. Knowing that this culture is collapsing should not lead us into narcissism and cowardice, but should give us courage, and should lead us to defend the victims of this culture.

For more about Derrick Jensen and his work, you can find him on the Web here.

Mickey Z. is the creator of a podcast called Post-Woke. You can subscribe here. He is also the founder of Helping Homeless Women - NYC, offering direct relief to women on New York City streets. Spread the word. Read other articles by Mickey.

40 comments on this article so far ...

Comments RSS feed

  1. bozh said on January 24th, 2011 at 7:34am #

    DJ:
    “I mean, look at Lester Brown’s Plan B 4.0 to Save Civilization. What does he want to save? Could he be any more explicit? He wants to save civilization”.

    did lester count the ways in which we r civilized? how does he define it? tnx

  2. bozh said on January 24th, 2011 at 7:42am #

    DJ:
    “My loyalty is with the nonhuman and human victims (or targets) of this culture, and my work is toward stopping this culture’s assaults on nonhumans, on the land, on the planet itself, on women, on indigenous peoples, on the poor.”
    Yes, me, too!
    let’s go back where we come from: from the end of history; i.e., whenwhere the first time a civilization had been destroyed, say, ca. 10k yrs ago in asia and 17oo in americas. tnx

  3. bozh said on January 24th, 2011 at 7:55am #

    dj:
    “So much nature writing, social change theory, and environmental philosophy are at best irrelevant, and more often harmful in that they do not question human supremacism (or for that matter white supremacism, or male supremacism).”

    i thought i was not alone in thinking as in above-quote!

    i am sure if DJ had been prompted, he’d have included in supremacistic ideology also personal [{fe}male-child], ethnic, ideological, cultish, linguistic, cultural, mythological, sport, institutional, legal, bodily, blitzunderstanding, et al. tnx

  4. bozh said on January 24th, 2011 at 8:35am #

    DJ:
    “This is as true of dysfunctional cultures as dysfunctional families. So we cannot talk, for example, about the fact that this culture is only one way of living among many, that this way of living is based on conquest and the acquisition of power, that this way of life systematically destroys landbases, other cultures, and on and on. Systematically, functionally.”

    we became dysfunctional at a point of time-place. by whose hand? and maintained by whose hand?

    in this connection, recall, please the apodictic: we were always ok; we r ok now; we will always be ok!

    fortunato, the dysfunction [us not behaving correctly] has two apodictic ends: a beginning and an end; hopefully, happy one for biota!

    we wld be ok if we wld export to gaza or india every scholar, columnist, editor, priest, politico, cultist, expert, inventor-inventing-anything-we-don’t-want-to-have, general, ‘lawmaker’, sheriff, cia-fbi agent, expert, actor, singer, bankster, ‘jobgiver’ , et al.
    am i kidding? ok, maybe, we cld do s’mthing else with these people. how about the ogrish “THEM” digging ditches, mopping floors, etc. tnx

  5. bozh said on January 24th, 2011 at 8:48am #

    aren’t u glad the above post [mine] had a beginning and an end?
    that’s gonna happen to my next post. i have to go back to DJ to see what else he didn’t have to say, but says it anyway!

    ‘Like Joe Hill said, “Don’t mourn, organize.” ‘.
    in a political party, opposing just about any supremacistic thought. just ending personal and religious supremacism might do; to get rid of most ills that befall us. tnx

  6. bozh said on January 24th, 2011 at 9:07am #

    alas, even DJ avoids to cite one actor-factor which is explicitly [only god can end wars] promoting warfare that suits herhim: a priest, imam, or rabbi.

    to wage wars, one has to have weaponry. to make weaponry, one has to mine ore; smelt it, etc.
    how much army-navy-air force pollutes alone? tnx

  7. Don Hawkins said on January 24th, 2011 at 11:01am #

    I think the real extremists are the people who value capitalism over life, the people who value civilization over life. I cannot think of any more extreme position than valuing this insane culture over life. Jensen

    Another good one Mickey and the truth. You know I think the truth is getting out as Fox New’s is back to it’s so cold outside. Tomorrow is only a day away and the State of the Union speech here in the States. Maybe the leader of the free World will let the cat out of the bag all the way out of the bag. Just five little words could do it the fate of the species well all life on Earth. One can only imagine the ramifications of that I mean reason, knowledge, known knowledge not illusion really working together, imagination and of course one little side effect if he did do just that to turn to Fox New’s after the speech to just see the look’s on there faces. You mean we are going to have to tell the truth now we just got over toning it down and for many on Wall Street get a real job and the fossil fuel corporations knowing they will be taxed and or nationalized wouldn’t have to run those greenwash commercial’s anymore on TV put the money and time to better use. I wonder how it will go tomorrow the speech more grand word’s as we see Democrat’s and Republicans sitting together in perfect harmony. Probably better not to hold my breath and so it goes. I’ll bet after this summer and next somebody will need more commercial’s all right. Hurry talk faster the light the light it’s gaining on us.

  8. bozh said on January 24th, 2011 at 12:58pm #

    DJ:
    “This is as true of dysfunctional cultures as dysfunctional families. So we cannot talk, for example, about the fact that this culture is only one way of living among many, that this way of living is based on conquest and the acquisition of power, that this way of life systematically destroys landbases, other cultures, and on and on. Systematically, functionally.”

    but such thinking evolved. it has two ends: a beginning and an end.
    it evolved, but never among some indigenous peoples.
    how-why-when-where-by whom had this been invented needs studying; i.e., looking at what can be found out and not at what cannot be found-understood!

    so let’s abandon the hunt for understanding ‘zionism’, capitalism, ‘a democracy’, truth, a ‘religion’, an organized-led by priests ‘religion-cult, schooling, etc., unless such [vitiating] phenomena r viewed as parts of a whole. tnx

  9. Deadbeat said on January 24th, 2011 at 2:24pm #

    Yet another bozh contradiction …

    i.e., looking at what can be found out and not at what cannot be found-understood! so let’s abandon the hunt for understanding ‘zionism’, capitalism, ‘a democracy’, truth, a ‘religion’, an organized-led by priests ‘religion-cult, schooling, etc., unless such [vitiating] phenomena r viewed as parts of a whole. tnx

    You want answer but you want to also abandon those areas where you’ll find answers.

  10. Deadbeat said on January 24th, 2011 at 2:27pm #

    I haven’t finished reading this article but Jensen seems to conflate civilization with Capitalism. He uses the two ideas interchangeably which confuses his message.

  11. Deadbeat said on January 24th, 2011 at 2:29pm #

    I find Mickey Z use of Malcolm X’s quote as opportunism. Mickey has NO desire whatsoever to challenge the system in the way Malcolm did. He would rather see someone else stick their neck out and follow from the bleachers.

  12. Deadbeat said on January 24th, 2011 at 2:30pm #

    that should be “cheer from the bleachers”.

  13. bozh said on January 24th, 2011 at 3:44pm #

    db,
    read a bit slower the passage that u say is contradictory. the passage includes studying the aspects i listed in that passage as long as they r connected with each other and looked at as forming an inseparable whole.

    studying vitiating effects of religion only or ‘zionism’ only cannot free us from darkness.

    eg, islam=talmudism-judaism=christianity=americanism= zionism=capitalism=russism in sowing nescience, waging poverty-wars.

    u may add just about any profession to the aspects of a whole. some professions, tho, do more harm than others.
    however, i think that all professionals in u.s. think of selves as better than most of us.
    and some appear as looney as palin, gingrich, pope, caliph, john waine, jolie, pitt, obama, kristol, et al. tnx

  14. bozh said on January 24th, 2011 at 4:35pm #

    even nader had not challenged to date, as far as i know, the system in u.s.
    neither does hedges. in fact, hedges said there is nothing wrong with u.s. constitution
    But, then, question imposes self: how can a set of laws; aka, constitution be infallible while u.s. slaughters people all over the globe?

    supposes u.s. constitution is a perfect writ? then, u.s. lawmakers, warwagers, etc.. must also be holy as well as whatever it is they do. tnx

  15. Don Hawkins said on January 24th, 2011 at 5:22pm #

    January 24, 2011

    Brazil’s Amazon may hold “super giant” fields of light oil in an area the country is starting to explore, HRT Participacoes em Petroleo SA Chief Executive Officer Marcio Mello said. The shares gained.
    The Rio de Janeiro-based oil-exploration company will start producing from its wells in the Amazon’s Solimoes river basin as early as June, Mello said today in a Bloomberg Television interview in New York. HRT will begin drilling in February and expects to reach an oil reservoir in May, he said.

    “The oil at Solimoes is the best in the whole of South America,” Mello said. “The Amazon is a completely unexplored frontier.”

    “The Amazon is one of the last frontiers in the whole world where you can find giant and super giant oil and gas fields,” Mello said. “It has a third of all the gas in Brazil.” Bloomberg

    The Amazon is one of the last frontiers in the whole world where you can find giant and super giant oil and gas fields; go for it men let’s get this over with.

  16. Don Hawkins said on January 24th, 2011 at 5:57pm #

    Wait I just figured this out as we turn the Earth into one big giant parking lot with the new oil finds the ice will melt even faster in the Arctic and then they can drill there too and we thought all the great minds were gone. All done while pursuing their institutional role: maximizing short-term profit and putting aside externalities it’s going to be wonderful well there is the fate of the species all life on Earth but better that is kept a secret.

    …Spaceship Earth is having an Apollo 13 moment.
    And there is no Mission Control. Can you hear me, Major Tom?

  17. Rehmat said on January 24th, 2011 at 7:03pm #

    “Never have I witnessed such sincere hospitality and the overwhelming spirit of true brotherhood as is practiced by people of all colors and races here in this ancient Holy Land, the House of Abraham, Muhammad, and all the other Prophets of the Holy Scriptures. For the past week, I have been utterly speechless and spellbound by the graciousness I see displayed all around me by people of all colors.

    You may be shocked by these words coming from me. But on this pilgrimage, what I have seen, and experienced, has forced me to rearrange much of my thought-patterns previously held, and to toss aside some of my previous conclusions. This was not too difficult for me. Despite my firm convictions, I have always been a man who tries to face facts, and to accept the reality of life as new experience and new knowledge unfolds it. I have always kept an open mind, which necessary to the flexibility that must go hand in hand with every form of intelligent search for truth…..”
    On his return to United States from pilgrimage, the White reporters stormed him to confirm that he stick to his earlier statement, calling White-folks his brothers. His response was

    You’re asking me “Didn’t you say that now you accept white men as brothers?” Well, my answer is that in the Muslim world, I saw, I felt, and I wrote home how my thinking was broadened! Just as I wrote, I shared true, brotherly love with many white-complexioned Muslims who never gave a single thought to the race, or to the complexion, of another Muslim.

    My pilgrimage broadened my scope. It blessed me with a new insight. In two weeks in the Holy Land, I saw what I never had seen in thirty-nine years here in America. I saw all races, all colors, — blue-eyed blonds to black-skinned Africans — in true brotherhood! In unity! Living as one! Worshipping as one! No segregationists — no liberals; they would not have known how to interpret the meaning of those words.

    In the past, yes, I have made sweeping indictments of all white people. I will never be guilty of that again — as I know now that some white people are truly sincere, that some truly are capable of being brotherly toward a black man. The true Islam has shown me that a blanket indictment of all white people is as wrong as when whites make blanket indictments against blacks

    Alex Haley – in ‘Malcolm X’

  18. jayn0t said on January 24th, 2011 at 7:33pm #

    I saw Derrick Jensen speak twice, and each time, he used the same trick, claiming he’d been given a packaged plastic bottle of water by the organisers, and used it to illustrate how far we are from nature. He asked ‘how many of us know the native names of where we are?’. Immediately, everyone shouted out the names of the local counties, all of which are aboriginal. He hadn’t done his research. He doesn’t need to. His audience are completely uncritical. Those with whom I tried to explain Jensen’s errors were furious at my impudence.

    He said that he ‘knows’ hackers who could take down the world’s airline system. I think not.

    He trotted out the stories made up by Franz Boas’s followers about hunter-gatherer women knowing five hundred contraceptive herbs, and how Western anthropologists didn’t ask the women, so they didn’t find this out. This got knowing smiles from the audience – most of the women liked what he said, and the men wouldn’t challenge it, because it’s pro-female, and pro-primitive. Never mind its scientific accuracy – the feelgood factor is what matters. He plays to the audience. He’s a politician.

    John Zerzan, in contrast, is an honest defender of the ‘anti-civilization’ perspective. Read him instead of Derrick Jensen and his warm fuzzy feelings.

  19. 3bancan said on January 24th, 2011 at 7:34pm #

    Rehmat said on January 24th, 2011 at 7:03pm #

    Who would have thought that some people would use this site as a religious forum…

  20. Deadbeat said on January 24th, 2011 at 10:36pm #

    bozh writes …

    db, read a bit slower the passage that u say is contradictory. the passage includes studying the aspects i listed in that passage as long as they r connected with each other and looked at as forming an inseparable whole.

    You wrote …

    i.e., looking at what can be found out and not at what cannot be found-understood! so let’s abandon the hunt for understanding ‘zionism’, capitalism, ‘a democracy’, truth, a ‘religion’, an organized-led by priests ‘religion-cult, schooling, etc., unless such [vitiating] phenomena r viewed as parts of a whole. tnx

    The fact is that understanding both Zionism and Capitalism is needed to fully comprehend our current enemies.

  21. hayate said on January 24th, 2011 at 11:30pm #

    Arguing with bohz is a lot like this:

    [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xdax8uWYmnQ]

  22. hayate said on January 24th, 2011 at 11:33pm #

    Hmmmm….I forgot the 😀

  23. Don Hawkins said on January 25th, 2011 at 3:39am #

    {http://nsidc.org/data/seaice_index/images/daily_images/N_stddev_timeseries.png}

    Is it to late well for some of the changes but with total focus an enormous effort that very sure a slowdown will be part of that effort just might be able to survive.

    Let’s see how the summer goes and ignorance is strength might work for another planet in the Universe in it’s earlier stages of development not Earth. State of the Union tonight a better way to look at it just might be The State of the Earth. All done while pursuing their institutional role: maximizing short-term profit and putting aside externalities again maybe for another planet in the Universe in it’s earlier stages of development not Earth.

  24. Don Hawkins said on January 25th, 2011 at 4:54am #

    Even watch the Weather Channel as they seem to be good at high’s and low’s it’s snowing it’s raining oh and one third of Australia is under water flooding then skiing weather or football weather. How hard would it be to start The Climate Channel keep it simple one camera maybe just a table no dress code and the guest’s the best minds on the planet Earth. No commercial’s a public Channel and fair and balanced well no like James Inhofe and many more if they did call just give them Fox New’s phone number. Probably just one TV screen for a few chart’s ok who can help me start this? Look out NBC or Comcast as here’s a few names James Hansen, Stephen Hawking, James Lovelock, J. Overland, M. Wang, and J. Walsh so you never heard of those last three names you will.

  25. Wingnut said on January 25th, 2011 at 6:19am #

    Hi gang! Don, I’ve thought about W.H.O. statistics TV channel MAN times… pure commune tv. But guess what. You’ll need to participate in capitalism to pay for all the devices and supplies needed to get and stay on the air. In doing that, you’ve just become part of the problem and not part of the solution. As long as price tags exist (and economies in general), thoust shalst not do communalist TV. Been there, trained in it, considered it, and its not even CLOSE to possible. And while I’m here, I officially vote AGAINST that one big parking lot idea of yours. 😉

    Hope everyone is well. Abolish economies (money, ownership, price tags), and hurry. Hey 18 yr olds… when “civilization” does “join the free marketeers’ competer’s church OR STARVE” (or else, or die), that’s felony extortion (and forced religion). Scream bloody murder! Elliot Ness once stopped “pay up or else” felony extortion. So can you. Throw a tantrum… you’ll be heard.

    Larry “Wingnut” Wendlandt
    MaStars – Mothers Against Stuff That Ain’t Right
    (anti-capitalism-ists)
    Bessemer MI USA

  26. Don Hawkins said on January 25th, 2011 at 6:33am #

    One camera maybe just a table and either we all start working together from all walk’s of life and yes some will take a pay cut so to speak or hope you have those boot’s probably a good idea anyway.

  27. bozh said on January 25th, 2011 at 6:56am #

    what we say about ‘zionism’ cannot cause arguments. saying that ‘zionists’ murder-etc. people –which have stated numerous times– or saying that americans murder-etc. people cannot cause confusion.

    if to some people murder by ‘jews’ is not murder by americans, then let them say it.
    murder or a kill by a russian in occupied chechnya = murder or kill by a german in occupied pashtunstan=murder by an israeli in occupied palestina.

    but why call a murderer an ideologist? killing, murdering, torturing, expelling in name of an ideology or goddism cannot be right. don’t americans say, God bless america? which also means, bless all our killings, expelling, torturing!!
    ascribing this knowledge to just one individual and then putting himher on a wrack for not abnegating it, is as old as the hills. that ruse is not gonna work on me.
    mns or even bns of people think just like i do! tnx

  28. Don Hawkins said on January 25th, 2011 at 11:44am #

    Rep. Paul Ryan (R-Wisc.) is delivering the official rebuttal to President Obama’s State of the Union next week. But, thanks to technology and the tea party movement, it won’t be the only Republican response. In concert with Tea Party Express, Rep. Michele Bachmann (R-Minn.) is delivering her own post-speech message.

    Two Stars will be born tonight and very sure not in the Milky Way Galaxy but somewhere far far away. Will it be a battle of knowledge from these two well no probably like the State of the Union speech itself mere illusion. Hope you all have those boot’s because it sure look’s like the decision has been made to not try you know the fate of life on Earth. Oh that’s not true oh yes it is. I guess I’ll watch the speech and the rebuttals tonight then write a comment on location as if we don’t try location will be everything like say Florida Southern Florida no not my first choice for my kid’s. Yes the decision may have been made to not try;

    But the fact that she had not been vetted by the Senate for her current position continued to rankle Republicans, who had threatened to call her in to testify in this new Congress, particularly about her work on the climate bill.

    Scott Segal, an energy lobbyist with Bracewell & Giuliani, said in a statement that Browner’s departure may represent a policy shift within the Obama administration.

    “Carol Browner was a passionate contributor to a strong White House commitment to environmental policy,” he said. “Her departure may be part of a legitimate effort to pay careful attention to addressing some of the real regulatory obstacles in the way of job creation in the United States.”

    Segal noted that EPA plans to propose and finalize greenhouse gas emissions standards in the coming years for the power and refining sectors, which he said could be harmful to economic growth.

    “Infusing the White House with some new and fresh viewpoints makes sense,” he added. NYT

    What this administration was proposing was a band aid an illusion and now I guess there tired of even that. They seem to get tired very easily.

    “Never again will you be capable of ordinary human feeling. Everything will be dead inside you. Never again will you be capable of love, or friendship, or joy of living, or laughter, or curiosity, or courage, or integrity. You will be hollow. We shall squeeze you empty and then we shall fill you with ourselves.” Orwell

    I think I’ll pass on that one just on the off chance of course.

  29. Deadbeat said on January 25th, 2011 at 8:20pm #

    hayate writes …

    Hmmmm….I forgot the 😀

    LOL! How right you are.

  30. Don Hawkins said on January 26th, 2011 at 2:25am #

    A human being is part of the whole called by us universe, a part limited in time and space. We experience ourselves, our thoughts and feelings as something separate from the rest. A kind of optical delusion of consciousness. This delusion is a kind of prison for us, restricting us to our personal desires and to affection for a few persons nearest to us. Our task must be to free ourselves from the prison by widening our circle of compassion to embrace all living creatures and the whole of nature in its beauty. The true value of a human being is determined by the measure and the sense in which they have obtained liberation from the self. We shall require a substantially new manner of thinking if humanity is to survive. (Albert Einstein, 1954)

    Every square mile of ocean hosts 46,000 pieces of floating plastic
    Eighty-one tons of mercury is emitted into the atmosphere each year as a result of electric power generation
    Every second, 10,000 gallons of gasoline are burned in the US
    Each year, Americans use 2.2 billion pounds of pesticides
    Ninety percent of the large fish in the ocean and 80 percent of the world’s forests are gone
    Every two seconds, a human being starves to death

    I think the real extremists are the people who value capitalism over life, the people who value civilization over life. I cannot think of any more extreme position than valuing this insane culture over life. Jensen and Z

    The State of the Union speech last night and before it started did we see; We experience ourselves, our thoughts and feelings as something separate from the rest. A kind of optical delusion of consciousness. This delusion is a kind of prison for us, restricting us to our personal desires and to affection for a few persons nearest to us. In this insane culture and our present stage of development not looking to good for the home team. Before the speech started and the black SUV’s then the dress suit and tie and oh those pearl’s talk about embracing all living creatures and the whole of nature in its beauty. Is this unusual in this civilization, culture no it sure isn’t. The stars come in a few different shapes and sizes and the higher they go they need us more and more so as to impress those few close friends and in reality maybe not so much friends. After the speech started last night John Boehner siting behind the leader of the free world as Obama was talking seemed to have a vision or two the look on his face at times and I wonder did he learn that from Nancy. For some reason as they went to the audience in the Capital I thought they would be sitting at tables having drink’s maybe some food. 2010 was the first climate crisis and look’s like 2011 not much let up but that’s right we are now going to make fuel with Sunlight and water great ninety percent of the large fish in the ocean and 80 percent of the world’s forests are gone I guess somebody is going to have to stop eating and so it goes.

  31. Don Hawkins said on January 26th, 2011 at 2:49am #

    {http://goes.gsfc.nasa.gov/goescolor/goeswest/overview2/color_lrg/latestfull.jpg}

    A substantially new manner of thinking if humanity is to survive.

  32. Don Hawkins said on January 26th, 2011 at 5:06am #

    Flooding in South Africa has killed more than 100 people, forced at least 8,400 from their homes and prompted the government to declare 33 disaster areas.

    With unusually heavy rainfall forecast until March, the UN has warned that almost every country in southern Africa is on alert for potentially disastrous flooding. Guradian

    By 2035 is it? We have all heard of the law of gravity here’s another law warmer air hold’s more moisture. In the States the winter isn’t over yet and this summer will probably not be boring fill that glass.

  33. Don Hawkins said on January 27th, 2011 at 4:39am #

    Yesterday was almost an interesting day in the greatest Nation on Earth. I was watching the NBC Nightly New’s and I saw and heard Konrad Steffen for 15 seconds. Konrad is a real scientist and has done a little work in Greenland for many years and I think George Bush, junior gave Konrad Steffen a satellite phone to get updates on the state of the ice probably to find out when they could drill baby drill in the Arctic. Konrad is one of the good guy’s and have a feeling policy makers is not his favorite people. When I saw him last night I lost my breath for a minute and then I thought I was seeing things. Could this be the start of the truth maybe a real try? Then of course Donald Trump wanting to build a building in DC for foreign big cheeses with a ball room and if he did a flat roof probably not a good idea as on the weather channel the man on the seen was taking the snow and ringing it out like a sponge water oh and earlier on CNBC The Larry Kudlow Show he worked for Ronald Reagan had on a young man from the weather channel and it was almost like master and slave Larry being the master something very wrong with that picture. Here’s a chart again update and Konrad Steffen on for 15 seconds is sort of a start but can think of a few more real people who could be helpful if we wish to survive as we need to stop this culture before it kill’s the planet is that true it sure is. Oh almost forgot Palin and Newt, Beck, Fox New’s in general were talking there nonsense yesterday American exceptional ism and all that. I guess could write a few thousand words on that subject but 100% looney tunes work’s in very simple terms. Let’s see what happens today maybe we will find out human’s walk upright.

    {http://nsidc.org/data/seaice_index/images/daily_images/N_stddev_timeseries.png}

    This summer will tell us much more on the killing of the planet part.

  34. Don Hawkins said on January 27th, 2011 at 5:19am #

    Here’s an interesting question did NBC put on Konrad Steffen to see if the phones would start ringing off the hook you know from corporate headquarters across the Nation you will never work in this town again, really as probably be good to still have a town to work in.

  35. Wingnut said on January 28th, 2011 at 3:34am #

    Boy, you weren’t kidding when you said that you wanted to open a broadcasting station, Don. You’re going to need to pay HUGE transmitter power costs. haha. Now for the coherency, punctuation, and pertinence factors.

    That’s not on subject, is it? Or maybe it IS part of the current culture… to speak one’s mind and emotions… every single last drop of it. Sounds like the tea party, somewhat.

    In a feeble attempt to get back onto the “culture” problems… I see lots of supply-rationed (poor?) people seeking JOBS instead of seeking survival coupons (money). Do many in this culture have survival coupons… WELDED to the phenomena of JOB? Do people realize that when they seek jobs, what they often really seek is survival coupons? Is it programmed into most… that “job” is the ONLY way to get survival coupons/credits? And maybe we could ask ourselves WHY there is only a single type/make of survival coupon, and why only available from one “company”… the federal reserve. (Wingy kicks the thread to see if there’s still life in it)

  36. Don Hawkins said on January 28th, 2011 at 4:16am #

    Go to James Hansen’s web site and read his new article called singing in the rain.

  37. Deadbeat said on January 28th, 2011 at 4:20am #

    Not only a job wingnut which is actually wage slavery but why is there a need for survival coupons at all? That’s the question that needs to be asked. If you need anything you should just be able to go the the “access center” and take what you need.

  38. Don Hawkins said on January 28th, 2011 at 4:43am #

    Wingnut how about a friendly takeover of Fox New’s? Public instead of private forget all the fancy set’s and fancy people and yes keep Beck’s blackboard’s and really put them to good use. Fair and balanced no not what we see now and most of what would be said might shock a few at first. Let’s see, Hello people of Earth today we have a group of scientists who were sort of on house arrest but we bailed them out and we will talk today on why we all see rather funny weather/climate and some very hard choices if we all wish to survive. Here’s where the message would probably get scrambled with a powerful beam from the darkside. It’s early and Friday as we all go down the drain in not such slow motion.

  39. Don Hawkins said on January 28th, 2011 at 5:04am #

    Go to this web site,
    {http://goes.gsfc.nasa.gov/goesproject.html}

    and click on latest full disk. Top left and take a look at that Wamer Jamer coming down the track. That one maybe more ice than snow.

  40. Wingnut said on February 1st, 2011 at 11:07pm #

    Hi guys. I lost a pretty huge post right here. It was here, then it was gone. Thanks for your replies to my thread kick. I’m a bit too discouraged to reciprocate atm. Admin, any ideas what might have happened?