Friday, May 7, 2021

Space Colonization Is A Capitalist Perception Management Op — Caitlin Johnstone

Space colonization is largely a capitalist perception management op promoted by the likes of Musk and Bezos to strengthen the narrative that it’s okay to continue the world-raping global capitalist principle of infinite growth on a finite world because we can escape the catastrophic ecological consequences of that paradigm by fleeing to space.

“Ecocidal capitalism is fine, we’ll just go to space before it kills us!” is the message we’re all meant to absorb. And too many do. A large obstacle to waking people up to the existential crises we are facing as a species is the blind faith that technology will save us from the consequences of our mass-scale behavior, and therefore we don’t need to change. Which suits the world’s richest men perfectly.
Contemporary capitalism is based on advertising-driven consumerism to fuel "growth," which results in massive unnecessary overuse of limited resources by manufacturing wants, together with negative externalities of production that are socialized. It's a dumb system based on greed and selfishness that is supposed to result in spontaneous natural ordering for the great good. Does anyone actually believe that stupid story?

See also
By destroying traditional social habits of the people, by dissolving their natural collective consciousness into individual constituents, by licensing the opinions of the most foolish, by substituting instruction for education, by encouraging cleverness rather than wisdom, the upstart rather than the qualified, by fostering a notion of getting on to which the alternative is a hopeless apathy, Liberalism can prepare the way for that which is its own negation: the artificial, mechanized or brutalized control which is a desperate remedy for its chaos.
– TS Eliot
Well-written article on liberal overreach. How liberalism got unhinged from rationality and spun off into unenlightened self-interest with destructive consequences.

In terms of the historical dialectic, 18th century classical liberalism can be view as a reaction to the dogmatism prevalent in the West since the rise of Christendom as a social and political force. IN such reactions, the pendulum often swing too far in the other direction and stands in need of correction. Then another moment in the historical dialectic supervenes to restore balance. Then the cycle repeats in the new moment.
Liberalism is paradox. This is the conclusion drawn by Domenico Losurdo in his “counter-history” of the project. There’s the contradiction just alluded to: its unencumbered economy being born from, and dependent on, ravaging its accompanying society in order to survive. (The host has the unenviable task of regulating its own devourment.) But there’s also the uncomfortable fact that, right at the moment liberalism was most vociferously demanding liberty, it did so while upholding the most depraved chattel slavery. When it declared the necessity of self-determination, its ideologues were undertaking the almost total annihilation of North America’s first nations. The continent had to be made safe for the free market.
But today’s [neo]liberals can’t countenance this reality, it doesn’t fit with their cognitive maps. To them, the logic of the market — that leviathan that they will sacrifice everything to — is above criticism. After all, through it we have equality (in that, with enough money, intrinsic qualities are no constraint), freedom (regardless of previous error there’s always the option of succumbing to exploitation or starving), and smart phones (late modernity’s bread). This perfect system, which works best of all in minds poisoned by game theory, is forced into every part of society. The idea of a moral economy — i.e. all economies that existed before the Industrial Revolution — is lost; a dangerously utopian one is born....
Utopian thinking is a type of magical thinking.

Counterunch
Liberalism’s Last Legs?
Luke O'Brien 

See also
"Incredibly but while openly undermining international law Western politicians don’t hesitate to say that the key task of global politics is to counter Russia’s and China’s attempts to change the rule-based order," he told an online UN Security Council meeting. "Such statements came after a recent G7 ministerial meeting in London. In other words, this is nothing but double-talk. The West no longer cares for norms of international law and now insists everyone obey by its rules and stick to the order based on these rules."

"We think that such steps geared to impose totalitarianism in global affairs are inadmissible but they are widely practiced by our Western colleagues, first of all, the United States, the European Union and its other allies, who reject all principles of democracy and multilateralism insisting on everything be done their way and threatening punishment," Lavrov said.…
"My way or the highway" aka "You're either with us or against us."

19 comments:

Peter Pan said...

Does anyone actually believe that stupid story?

China does.
They believe that economic development will bring them power.
They believe it's a better strategy than military conquest.
They are correct.

For the majority of humanity who aren't in leadership roles, the imperative is biological. They want a better standard of living for themselves, and their progeny. They want better food and shelter, followed by a list in accordance with Maslow's hierarchy of needs.

Nothing can deter our species from following this stupid story to a tragic outcome. Since we live in a world divided into competitive nation-states, economic and geopolitical concerns are paramount. Since we are programmed to fill all available habitat, technological advancement results in a burgeoning population, with exponentially greater energy requirements.

The story is no more stupid than the behavior that complements it.

Peter Pan said...

How liberalism got unhinged from rationality and spun off into unenlightened self-interest with destructive consequences.

How pious philosophical ideals were not up to the task of building an empire... but remained useful as flowery window dressing.

Tom Hickey said...

How pious philosophical ideals were not up to the task of building an empire... but remained useful as flowery window dressing.

It is remained window dressing, the situation would be quite different. Now the narrative around liberalism is being used to push totalitarian capitalism under the guise of Western values, "rules-based order," "free markets," competition, "freedom and democracy," etc.

I conclude that some delusion people actually believe the story but many others know it is just a ruse to dupe the rubes and provide a cover for elite takeover.

A similar situation exists with QAnon and related conspiracy theories. Many delusional people believe this nonsense, and exploitive politicians pretend to do so, knowing they can use it to promote their own interests, all the while laughing up their sleeves at the stupidity of it all.

Tom Hickey said...

Does anyone actually believe that stupid story?

China does.


Not really. China is not neoliberal. China runs what is essentially a command economy and controls its markets tightly to promote national policy, which is geared to balancing the interests of rich, middle class and poor (mostly rural people). It's working for them quite well.

Peter Pan said...

China and a number of countries have social democratic policies instead of laisser faire liberalism. But without exception, they are engaged in commodity production. There is no alternative to that mode of production, even in the face of warnings by the scientific community.

The failed 'socialist' economies of the Cold War era did not move beyond commodity production either. Their lack of economic development did not lead to better outcomes in terms of environmental destruction. Environmentalism is to a large extent, an issue born of relative affluence.

As far as trade is concerned, there is a rules-based order and China is adhering to it. What is there to globalism but an elaborate dispute mechanism designed to encourage trade. While smaller economies can be bullied into submission, larger countries will not give up their sovereignty.

The stupid unsustainable story will continue until it becomes untenable. At which point, we may return to an agrarian-based economy. But most people believe that technological fixes will prevent or reverse any decline. Where technology doesn't suffice, ideology takes up the slack.

As several environmental authors have argued, people will not accept the decline of civilization until they are in the midst of it. Then it will be perceived as part of their everyday normal expectation. It's the transition from rise to decline that is traumatic.

Tom Hickey said...

As several environmental authors have argued, people will not accept the decline of civilization until they are in the midst of it. Then it will be perceived as part of their everyday normal expectation. It's the transition from rise to decline that is traumatic.

This is the likely scenario. Conscious, intelligent, intentional change at the global scale is difficult at best and likely beyond human capability to manage.

Matt Franko said...

“ A similar situation exists with QAnon and related conspiracy theories. ”

I look at you guys as promoting your own “neoliberal conspiracy!” theory...

“NeoAnon” or NAnon... or whatever you want to call it....

Nobody else is doing that...

Matt Franko said...

“ It's the transition from rise to decline”

That has never happened...

Matt Franko said...

You’re talking about it like it happens all the time but it never has happened....

Matt Franko said...

You’re doing the same thing as the inflationistas...

“Fiat currencies always fail!” and bullshit like that...

Peter Pan said...

How many civilizations have risen and fallen?
All of them?

Matt Franko said...

We’re at like 7.5B people... had to start with 2 at the beginning... I’m looking at it from perspective of mankind...

Some civilizations have seemed to fail but the people could have just moved away there is never a documented account...

Matt Franko said...

https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Roanoke_Colony

This failed but nobody knows what happened...

Jamestown a couple decades later was successful... but there was always indigenous people in the mid Atlantic....

Matt Franko said...

https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-5839677/A-ghost-town-making-Salton-Sea-went-busy-resorts-public-health-disaster.html

Peter Pan said...

From an evolutionary perspective, it doesn't matter if 99% of humans were to die. As long as there are enough survivors to avoid inbreeding, a species can avoid extinction.

It's a question of caring about timescales. Civilizations last on the order of centuries. Politics operates on a considerably shorter horizon.

Michael Dowd has changed my thinking on this. For example:
Irreversible Collapse: Accepting Reality, Avoiding Evil (Dowd, Dec 2020)

Peter Pan said...

The Salton Sea was an accident... so is living in the desert and pretending you have lots of water.

Matt Franko said...

“Peak oil!”

Matt Franko said...

https://books.google.com/books/about/Bankruptcy_1995.html?id=wVVINGXlKtEC&source=kp_book_description


Same thing...

Peter Pan said...

Not the same thing... financial abstractions are sustainable.