| by Noam Chomsky
( October 7,
2012, Boston, Sri Lanka Guardian) With
the quadrennial presidential election extravaganza reaching its peak, it’s
useful to ask how the political campaigns are dealing with the most crucial
issues we face. The simple answer is: badly, or not at all. If so, some
important questions arise: why, and what can we do about it?
Noam Chomsky ( File Photo) |
There are two
issues of overwhelming significance, because the fate of the species is at
stake: environmental disaster, and nuclear war.
The former is
regularly on the front pages. On Sept. 19, for example, Justin Gillis reported
in The New York Times that the melting of Arctic sea ice had ended for the
year, “but not before demolishing the previous record – and setting off new
warnings about the rapid pace of change in the region.”
The melting is
much faster than predicted by sophisticated computer models and the most recent
U.N. report on global warming. New data indicate that summer ice might be gone
by 2020, with severe consequences. Previous estimates had summer ice
disappearing by 2050.
“But governments
have not responded to the change with any greater urgency about limiting
greenhouse emissions,” Gillis writes. “To the contrary, their main response has
been to plan for exploitation of newly accessible minerals in the Arctic,
including drilling for more oil” – that is, to accelerate the catastrophe.
This reaction
demonstrates an extraordinary willingness to sacrifice the lives of our
children and grandchildren for short-term gain. Or, perhaps, an equally
remarkable willingness to shut our eyes so as not to see the impending peril.
That’s hardly
all. A new study from the Climate Vulnerability Monitor has found that “climate
change caused by global warming is slowing down world economic output by 1.6
percent a year and will lead to a doubling of costs in the next two decades.”
The study was widely reported elsewhere but Americans have been spared the
disturbing news.
The official
Democratic and Republican platforms on climate matters are reviewed in Science
magazine’s Sept. 14 issue. In a rare instance of bipartisanship, both parties
demand that we make the problem worse.
In 2008, both
party platforms had devoted some attention to how the government should address
climate change. Today, the issue has almost disappeared from the Republican
platform – which does, however, demand that Congress “take quick action” to
prevent the Environmental Protection Agency, established by former Republican
President Richard Nixon in saner days, from regulating greenhouse gases. And we
must open Alaska’s Arctic refuge to drilling to take “advantage of all our
American God-given resources.” We cannot disobey the Lord, after all.
The platform
also states that “We must restore scientific integrity to our public research
institutions and remove political incentives from publicly funded research” –
code words for climate science.
The Republican
candidate Mitt Romney, seeking to escape from the stigma of what he understood
a few years ago about climate change, has declared that there is no scientific
consensus, so we should support more debate and investigation – but not action,
except to make the problems more serious.
The Democrats
mention in their platform that there is a problem, and recommend that we should
work “toward an agreement to set emissions limits in unison with other emerging
powers.” But that’s about it.
President Barack
Obama has emphasized that we must gain 100 years of energy independence by
exploiting fracking and other new technologies – without asking what the world
would look like after a century of such practices.
So there are
differences between the parties: about how enthusiastically the lemmings should
march toward the cliff.
The second major
issue, nuclear war, is also on the front pages every day, but in a way that
would astound a Martian observing the strange doings on Earth.
The current
threat is again in the Middle East, specifically Iran – at least according to
the West, that is. In the Middle East, the U.S. and Israel are considered much
greater threats.
Unlike Iran,
Israel refuses to allow inspections or to sign the Nuclear Non-Proliferation
Treaty. It has hundreds of nuclear weapons and advanced delivery systems, and a
long record of violence, aggression and lawlessness, thanks to unremitting
American support. Whether Iran is seeking to develop nuclear weapons, U.S.
intelligence doesn’t know.
In its latest
report, the International Atomic Energy Agency says that it cannot demonstrate
“the absence of undeclared nuclear material and activities in Iran” – a
roundabout way of condemning Iran, as the U.S. demands, while conceding that
the agency can add nothing to the conclusions of U.S. intelligence.
Therefore Iran
must be denied the right to enrich uranium that is guaranteed by the NPT and
endorsed by most of the world, including the nonaligned countries that have
just met in Tehran.
The possibility
that Iran might develop nuclear weapons arises in the electoral campaign. (The
fact that Israel already has them does not.) Two positions are counterposed:
Should the U.S. declare that it will attack if Iran reaches the capability to
develop nuclear weapons, which dozens of countries enjoy? Or should Washington
keep the “red line” more indefinite?
The latter
position is that of the White House; the former is demanded by Israeli hawks –
and accepted by the U.S. Congress. The Senate just voted 90-1 to support the
Israeli position.
Missing from the
debate is the obvious way to mitigate or end whatever threat Iran might be
believed to pose: Establish a nuclear weapons-free zone in the region. The
opportunity is readily available: An international conference is to convene in
a few months to pursue this objective, supported by almost the entire world,
including a majority of Israelis.
The government
of Israel, however, has announced that it will not participate until there is a
general peace agreement in the region, which is unattainable as long as Israel
persists in its illegal activities in the occupied Palestinian territories.
Washington keeps to the same position, and insists that Israel must be excluded
from any such regional agreement.
We could be
moving toward a devastating war, possibly even nuclear. Straightforward ways
exist to overcome this threat, but they will not be taken unless there is
large-scale public activism demanding that the opportunity be pursued. This in
turn is highly unlikely as long as these matters remain off the agenda, not
just in the electoral circus, but in the media and larger national debate.
Elections are
run by the public relations industry. Its primary task is commercial advertising,
which is designed to undermine markets by creating uninformed consumers who
will make irrational choices – the exact opposite of how markets are supposed
to work, but certainly familiar to anyone who has watched television.
It’s only
natural that when enlisted to run elections, the industry would adopt the same
procedures in the interests of the paymasters, who certainly don’t want to see
informed citizens making rational choices.
The victims,
however, do not have to obey, in either case. Passivity may be the easy course,
but it is hardly the honorable one.
Noam Chomsky is
an American linguist, philosopher,cognitive scientist, and activist. He is an
Institute Professor and Professor (Emeritus) in the Department of Linguistics
& Philosophy at MIT, where he has worked for over 50 years.
© 2012 Noam
Chomsky
Distributed by
The New York Times Syndicate