Terrance's last post heroically set out and engaged the two dominant
scenarios about the American future that progressives seem to be
wrestling with right now. These two scenarios might be described as:
1) Permanent Decline -- Due to Americans' native hyperindividualism,
political apathy, and overweening willingness to accept personal blame
for their country's failures, the corporatists finally succeed in
turning the US into Indonesia. This time, we will not find the will to
fight back (or, if we do, it will be too late). As a result, in a few
years there will be no more middle class, no upward mobility, few
remaining public institutions devoted to the common good, no health
care, no education, and no hope of ever restoring American ideals or
getting back to some semblance of the America we knew.
2) Reinvented Greatness -- Americans get over their deeply
individualistic nature, come together, challenge and restrain the
global corporatist order, and finally establish the social democracy
that the Powers That Be -- corporate, military, media, conservative --
have denied to us since the 1950s. This happens in synergy with a move
to energy and food self-sufficiency, the growth of a sustainable
economy, a revival of participatory democracy, and a general renewal of
American values that pulses new life into our institutions and assures
us a much more stable future.
Conservatives and the mainstream media, of course, are also offering a third scenario:
3) Happy Face -- Prop up the banks, keep people in their houses, and
by and by everything will get back to "normal" (defined as "how it all
was a few years ago.")
In my last article, I argued that Scenario #3 is a chimera -- and
Terrance's sobering list of everything that's wrong "here" and now
brought it home with grave finality. There is no going back. That
future was foreclosed on right along with the houses and the banks. You
can only believe in the Happy Face story if you willfully ignore the
deep structural changes afoot in the way the world works -- the changes
that have closed and locked the door back to "normal" behind us for
good.
There's a small number of overwhelmingly strong global trends that
explain why all this stuff is breaking, and why just fixing it isn't
even on the table. I originally wanted to summarize all of them in one
post; but after struggling with it last week, I finally realized that
it wasn't going to be that easy. So, starting today, I'm kicking off a
short series of posts outlining the big, deep trends that are driving
us toward change. Some of these will be familiar to regular readers
(they're horses I flog often); others will be new. But when we take
full stock of the size and quantity of major moving parts in the
machinery that's propelling us on toward the next future, it becomes
very, very clear that going back to the 20th Century isn't anywhere
among our current options.
Today, I'll start with the first three, with the rest following later in the week.
1. Energy regime change
The first reason there's no going back to the way it was is
that there's simply not enough oil left in the ground -- or carbon
sinks left in the world -- to sustain America as we've known it. We may
well be able to sustain some semblance of that way of life (or perhaps,
find our way to one even more satisfying); but we won't be running it
on oil or coal.
And when the oil goes, so goes the empire. Empires rise and fall on
their ability to dominate and capitalize on the world's dominant energy
supply (whatever that might be at the time). Thomas Homer-Dixon of the
University of Toronto has argued persuasively
that the Romans rose on their unsurpassed ability to organize and
deploy the Mediterranean sunlight and turn it into wealth. The Dutch
rose on their ability to develop technology to harness wind and turn it
into wealth. The British invented a repertoire of machines that ran on
coal, which they had an abundance of, and turned it into wealth. The
American empire, of course, has been built on oil and the things that
ran on it. (It's probably true that all the wealth you personally own
is somehow traceable back to that resource.) America's power is rooted
in the geopolitical fact that we've been able to control the most
potent form of energy ever found, and turn it into more wealth than
anyone's ever seen.
In all cases, empires finally failed when the systems that enabled
them to dominate that energy resource collapsed (Rome, and probably
us); or the energy source itself was made obsolete when some newer,
more concentrated form of energy came along (the Netherlands, England).
And in no case did an empire built on one energy regime successfully
position itself to dominate the next one as well: they were are almost
always too deeply invested in the old ways to recognize or capitalize
on the next thing when it came. Based on these precedents, America's
future imperial ambitions in an age of peak oil and global climate
change look questionable at best.
America's industrial powers spent the 20th century amassing vast
stores of political and economic power based in an oil economy. They're
gearing up to fight the change away from that for all they're worth,
for as long as they can hold out. But the alternatives are actively
emerging all around them now -- and if history holds true, the odds are
that their very resistance will cost them any chance they might have
had to become the dominant players in that new regime.
The good news is that losing the basis of our empire will greatly
increase the odds that we'll be able to restore our democracy. Another
lesson of history is that these are two incompatible ideals, and when a
country truly chooses to be one, it necessarily gives up on being
the other.
2. Environmental collapse
It's not just climate change. We're losing topsoil, fresh
water, fisheries, forests, and useful plant and animal species faster
than our scientists can count the losses. The first three, in
particular, are so urgent that it's entirely possible that one of them
may emerge as a serious threat to continued human life long before
climate change does. (And climate change, of course, is happening
faster than even last year's pessimists dare to imagine.)
This change slams the door on any hope of ever going back to the
world we knew. Capitalism as we've known it was based on the assumption
of a world with infinitely exploitable resources. We're bumping up hard
against the limits now, and our economic system is either going to
adapt to this new reality (and there are plenty of ways that it could
do that, given a proper shove from suppliers, consumers and
regulators), or give way to some other form of economic organization
that incentivizes us to preserve and invest in the earth's resources
and processes rather than gain profit by permanently destroying them.
(This is what cap-and-trade is about, at its core: creating a market
in something that has very real value to us -- a low-carbon atmosphere
-- but currently doesn't show up on the balance sheets. That's not a
"tax," as the Republicans would have it; it's simply finally putting a
price to a real cost that's currently visible to everybody but the
market.)
Progressives have been saying since the early 1970s that that the
limitless-growth model isn't sustainable over the long run. Forty years
later, the long run is today: we ignore the accumulating list
of undeniable environmental breakdowns at our own peril. As long as the
powers that be keep placing their bets on the old assumptions and try
to go back to business as usual, it's a safe bet for us that they won't
survive as dominant players in the future. Unfortunately, humankind as
a whole may not, either.
3. The dawning of the Information Age
The people currently running the show in America understand
that the global spread of computer technology is changing the way the
world does business and culture. What they don't understand -- and we
must -- is that they've grossly underestimated the depth, breadth, and
deep nature of that change; or what it means over the longer haul for
them...and for the rest of us.
We're already seeing signs that getting the world on one big network
(assuming we can find the energy to sustain that -- see #1) may be
triggering the biggest ontological shift since the Renaissance and the
Enlightenment deposed the Earth (and God) at the center of the
universe. What followed was the biggest revolution in human culture in
2,000 years. Philosophy and religion (the Reformation, humanism), art
and education, science and mathematics, technology and architecture,
banking and commerce, and social mores and politics were completely
transformed by these new ways of understanding reality. (Our own
constitutional democracy is one of that era's brightest artifacts.) The
birth pangs of this modern era convulsed the West for centuries. It was
damned bloody -- but sweeping revolutions in human consciousness always
are.
And we may be there again. The image of the local node intimately
connected to a worldwide network -- and our deepening collective
understanding of the ways complex systems behave -- are combining to
fundamentally change the way we view ourselves and our relationship to
the global whole. Those ontological shifts, coupled with the new sea of
information we're all floating in, have already transformed science and
math. The coming century will likely see the biggest revolution in
medicine since Hippocrates as we explore the genome. Information
technology has been the platform on which the globalization of banking
and commerce began to rise, which is in turn demanding new kinds of
trade and new regulatory structures.
These new models of reality are revolutionizing art, media, and
education; and providing new metaphors for human experience that are
re-awakening religion and philosophy. Wealth is dematerializing: we are
owning less stuff and more bits, which will come in handy in a world
where resources are running short. Basic concepts like "humanity,"
"privacy," "property," and "community" will be challenged and
re-defined as the transformation proceeds; and those new definitions
will in turn force us to re-think the meaning of our existence and our
aspirations for this world.
This shift could be one of the dominant forces shaping the history
of the coming century. There's enough to be said about it for a whole
post (and more); but right now, what's important is that
transformations of this magnitude always demand the creation of new
political and economic forms. I've already outined the ways in which
Enlightenment-era economic ideas are failing us. But it's also quite
possible that American-style democracy, which dominated the modern era
and proceeded from its assumptions about the world, won't be adequate
to this age (at least, not in its current form). Political power flows
differently now; and it may turn out that we'll need to find different
ways to organize it.
A couple of examples may help. First, the movement toward localized
food, water, and power may mean that local politics become far more
important -- though they'll exist within a global matrix of small
governments sharing solutions, sponsoring research, and forming
coalitions where needed. Second, large ecological, urban, and cultural
regions are becoming more important than counties or states, especially
when it comes to solving environmental and infrastructure issues. Both
these forces may eventually lead to a structural re-ordering of
government power.
In the next few decades, as these changes accelerate, computer-based
democracy spreads, the breakdowns become more acute, and the need for a
new approach becomes more evident to everyone, we or our children may
be having serious discussions about what the post-Enlightenment
Constitution America 2.0 should look like. In the short run, the
challenges to politics-as-we've-always-done it are already
reverberating through the system, creating accountability loops that
Washington and the statehouses have only begun to understand, let alone
reckon with.
They understand that they can use the Web to raise money. What they
don't yet understand is just how often they're going to have to dance
now with the folks that brought them to the party.
Source:
OurFuture