On Track for Extinction – Can Humanity Survive?
For a taste of the evidence in this regard focusing on the climate, see Climate Collapse and Near Term Human Extinction, Release of Arctic Methane “May Be Apocalyptic,” Study Warns and 7,000 underground [methane] gas bubbles poised to “explode” in Arctic.
Unfortunately, of course, the climate is not the only imminent threat to human survival. With an insane leadership in the White House in the United States – see Resisting Donald Trump’s Violence Strategically– we are faced with the prospect of nuclear war.
And even if the climate and nuclear threats to our survival are removed, there is still a substantial range of environmental threats – including rainforest destruction, the ongoing dumping of Fukushima radiation into the Pacific Ocean, extensive contamination from military violence… – that need to be addressed too, given the synergistic impacts of these multiple and interrelated threats.
Can these extinction-threatening problems be effectively addressed?
Well the reality is that most (but not all) of them can be tackled effectively if we are courageous enough to make powerful personal and organizational decisions and then implement them. But we are not even close to doing that yet. And time is obviously running out fast.
Given the evidence, scientific and otherwise, documenting the cause and nature of many of these problems and what is required to fix them, why aren’t these strategies to address the problems implemented?
At the political and economic level, it is usually explained structurally – for example, as an outcome of capitalism, patriarchy and/or the states-system – or, more simply, as an outcome of the powerful vested interests that control governments and the corporate imperative to make profits despite exacerbating the current perilous state of the Earth’s biosphere and its many exploited populations (human and otherwise) by doing so.
But the reality is that these political and economic explanations mask the deeper psychological drivers that generate and maintain these dysfunctional structures and behaviours.
Let me explain why and how this happens using the climate catastrophe to illustrate the process.
While scientific concern about the increase in carbon dioxide in the Earth’s atmosphere had been raised more than a century ago – see The Discovery of Global Warming– it wasn’t until the 1980s that this concern started to gain significant traction in public awareness.
And despite ongoing agitation by some scientists as well as climate and environment groups, corporate-funded climate deniers were able to stall widespread recognition of, and the start of serious official action on, the climate catastrophe for more than two more decades.
Robert J. Burrowes‘s article was published in Wall Street International. Go to Original.
Read more articles by Robert J. Burrowes in Human Wrongs Watch.