By Joel Kovel and Michael Lowy
Sept 2001
Introduction
The idea for this ecosocialist manifesto was
jointly launched by Joel Kovel and Michael Lowy,
at a September, 2001, workshop on ecology and
socialism held at Vincennes, near Paris. We all
suffer from a chronic case of Gramsci's paradox,
of living in a time whose old order is dying (and
taking civilization with it) while the new one
does not seem able to be born. But at least it
can be announced. The deepest shadow that hangs
over us is neither terror, environmental
collapse, nor global recession. It is the
internalized fatalism that holds there is no
possible alternative to capital's world order.
And so we wished to set an example of a kind of
speech that deliberately negates the current mood
of anxious compromise and passive acquiescence.
This manifesto nevertheless lacks the audacity of
that of 1848, for ecosocialism is not yet a
spectre, nor is it grounded in any concrete party
or movement. It is only a line of reasoning,
based on a reading of the present crisis and the
necessary conditions for overcoming it. We make
no claims of omniscience. Far from it, our goal
is to invite dialogue, debate, emendation, above
all, a sense of how this notion can be further
realized. Innumerable points of resistance arise
spontaneously across the chaotic ecumene of
global capital. Many are immanently ecosocialist
in content. How can these be gathered? Can we
envision an "ecosocialist international?" Can the
spectre be brought into being?
Manifesto
The twenty-first century opens on a catastrophic
note, with an unprecedented degree of ecological
breakdown and a chaotic world order beset with
terror and clusters of low-grade, disintegrative
warfare that spread like gangrene across great
swathes of the planetviz., central Africa, the
Middle East, Northwestern South Americaand
reverberate throughout the nations. In our view,
the crises of ecology and those of societal
breakdown are profoundly interrelated and should
be seen as different manifestations of the same structural forces.
The former broadly stems from rampant
industrialization that overwhelms the earth's
capacity to buffer and contain ecological
destabilization. The latter stems from the form
of imperialism known as globalization, with its
disintegrative effects on societies that stand in
its path. Moreover, these underlying forces are
essentially different aspects of the same drive,
which must be identified as the central dynamic
that moves the whole: the expansion of the world capitalist system.
We reject all euphemisms or propagandistic
softening of the brutality of this regime: all
greenwashing of its ecological costs, all
mystification of the human costs under the names
of democracy and human rights. We insist instead
upon looking at capital from the standpoint of
what it has really done. Acting on nature and its
ecological balance, the regime, with its
imperative to constantly expand profitability,
exposes ecosystems to destabilizing pollutants,
fragments habitats that have evolved over aeons
to allow the flourishing of organisms, squanders
resources, and reduces the sensuous vitality of
nature to the cold exchangeability required for
the accumulation of capital. From the side of
humanity, with its requirements for
self-determination, community, and a meaningful
existence, capital reduces the majority of the
world's people to a mere reservoir of labor power
while discarding much of the remainder as useless
nuisances. It has invaded and undermined the
integrity of communities through its global mass
culture of consumerism and depoliticization. It
has expanded disparities in wealth and power to
levels unprecedented in human history. It has
worked hand in glove with a network of corrupt
and subservient client states whose local elites
carry out the work of repression while sparing
the center of its opprobrium. And it has set
going a network of transtatal organizations under
the overall supervision of the Western powers and
the superpower United States, to undermine the
autonomy of the periphery and bind it into
indebtedness while maintaining a huge military
apparatus to enforce compliance to the capitalist
center We believe that the present capitalist
system cannot regulate, much less overcome, the
crises it has set going. It cannot solve the
ecological crisis because to do so requires
setting limits upon accumulationan unacceptable
option for a system predicated upon the rule:
Grow or Die! And it cannot solve the crisis posed
by terror and other forms of violent rebellion
because to do so would mean abandoning the logic
of empire, which would impose unacceptable limits
on growth and the whole "way of life" sustained
by empire. Its only remaining option is to resort
to brutal force, thereby increasing alienation
and sowing the seed of further terrorism . . .
and further counter-terrorism, evolving into a
new and malignant variation of fascism. In sum,
the capitalist world system is historically
bankrupt. It has become an empire unable to
adapt, whose very gigantism exposes its
underlying weakness. It is, in the language of
ecology, profoundly unsustainable, and must be
changed fundamentally, nay, replaced, if there is
to be a future worth living. Thus the stark
choice once posed by Rosa Luxemburg returns:
Socialism or Barbarism!, where the face of the
latter now reflects the imprint of the
intervening century and assumes the countenance
of ecocatastrophe, terror counterterror, and their fascist degeneration.
But why socialism, why revive this word seemingly
consigned to the rubbish-heap of history by the
failings of its twentieth century
interpretations? For this reason only: that
however beaten down and unrealized, the notion of
socialism still stands for the supersession of
capital. If capital is to be overcome, a task now
given the urgency of the survival of civilization
itself, the outcome will perforce be "socialist,
for that is the term which signifies the
breakthrough into a post-capitalist society. If
we say that capital is radically unsustainable
and breaks down into the barbarism outlined
above, then we are also saying that we need to
build a "socialism" capable of overcoming the
crises capital has set going. And if socialisms
past have failed to do so, then it is our
obligation, if we choose against submitting to a
barbarous end, to struggle for one that succeeds.
And just as barbarism has changed in a manner
reflective of the century since Luxemburg
enunciated her fateful alternative, so too, must
the name, and the reality, of a socialism become adequate for this time.
It is for these reasons that we choose to name
our interpretation of socialism as an
ecosocialism, and dedicate ourselves to its realization.
Why Ecosocialism?
We see ecosocialism not as the denial but as the
realization of the "first-epoch" socialisms of
the twentieth century, in the context of the
ecological crisis. Like them, it builds on the
insight that capital is objectified past labor,
and grounds itself in the free development of all
producers, or to use another way of saying this,
an undoing of the separation of the producers
from the means of production. We understand that
this goal was not able to be implemented by
first-epoch socialism, for reasons too complex to
take up here, except to summarize as various
effects of underdevelopment in the context of
hostility by existing capitalist powers. This
conjuncture had numerous deleterious effects on
existing socialisms, chiefly, the denial of
internal democracy along with an emulation of
capitalist productivism, and led eventually to
the collapse of these societies and the ruin of
their natural environments. Ecosocialism retains
the emancipatory goals of first-epoch socialism,
and rejects both the attenuated, reformist aims
of social democracy and the the productivist
structures of the bureaucratic variations of
socialism. It insists, rather, upon redefining
both the path and the goal of socialist
production in an ecological framework. It does so
specifically in respect to the "limits on growth"
essential for the sustainability of society.
These are embraced, not however, in the sense of
imposing scarcity, hardship and repression. The
goal, rather, is a transformation of needs, and a
profound shift toward the qualitative dimension
and away from the quantitative. From the
standpoint of commodity production, this
translates into a valorization of use-values over
exchange-valuesa project of far-reaching
significance grounded in immediate economic activity.
The generalization of ecological production under
socialist conditions can provide the ground for
the overcoming of the present crises. A society
of freely associated producers does not stop at
its own democratization. It must, rather, insist
on the freeing of all beings as its ground and
goal. It overcomes thereby the imperialist
impulse both subjectively and objectively. In
realizing such a goal, it struggles to overcome
all forms of domination, including, especially,
those of gender and race. And it surpasses the
conditions leading to fundamentalist distortions
and their terrorist manifestions. In sum, a world
society is posited in a degree of ecological
harmony with nature unthinkable under present
conditions. A practical outcome of these
tendencies would be expressed, for example, in a
withering away of the dependency upon fossil
fuels integral to industrial capitalism. And this
in turn can provide the material point of release
of the lands subjugated by oil imperialism, while
enabling the containment of global warming, along
with other afflictions of the ecological crisis.
No one can read these prescriptions without
thinking, first, of how many practical and
theoretical questions they raise, and second and
more dishearteningly, of how remote they are from
the present configuration of the world, both as
this is anchored in institutions and as it is
registered in consciousness. We need not
elaborate these points, which should be instantly
recognizable to all. But we would insist that
they be taken in their proper perspective. Our
project is neither to lay out every step of this
way nor to yield to the adversary because of the
preponderance of power he holds. It is, rather,
to develop the logic of a sufficient and
necessary transformation of the current order,
and to begin developing the intermediate steps
towards this goal. We do so in order to think
more deeply into these possibilities, and at the
same moment, begin the work of drawing together
with all those of like mind. If there is any
merit in these arguments, then it must be the
case that similar thoughts, and practices to
realize these thoughts, will be coordinatively
germinating at innumerable points around the
world. Ecosocialism will be international, and
universal, or it will be nothing. The crises of
our time can and must be seen as revolutionary
opportunities, which it is our obligation to affirm and bring into existence.
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