Blackspot

Progress Isn’t Green

The corporate appropriation of the green movement suggests that traditional environmentalism is dead.

I remember when the call to “be green” had some revolutionary potential: it served as a rallying point for those of us who felt that corporations were trashing our planet in favor of short-term profits. By demanding that corporations go green, we hoped to draw attention to the long-term consequences an economic model based on infinite growth had on our planet’s finite resources. Although “being green” was never clearly defined, it had something to do with acting in accordance with nature. The implicit argument was that the current way of doing business was essentially not green. Looking around at advertisements today, however, I notice that the corporations who claim to be the most “green” are the same ones that we hoped the environmental movement would defeat: oil companies, large-scale developers and warehouse-size shopping centers.

The other day I passed a huge fleet of machines cutting down trees and digging a massive hole in the ground. Before I could even start to think about the physical destruction of the natural environment, I saw a sign explaining that this was actually “Green Construction.” I felt comforted for a moment and then I realized that I had been tricked: there is nothing green about construction. There are two competing visions of what it means to be green: the original meaning and the appropriated meaning.

The original vision of “green” was that it would represent a cultural and economic shift – a point from which the future would look drastically different from the past. To imagine a green future was to imagine a world that did not resemble our own because we had, as a civilization, turned away from the path of industrialization. The second, more contemporary, meaning of being green is the one appropriated by the mega-corporations. According to this definition, anything permitting the continued, linear progress of industrialization is green. For corporations, any system that will enable humanity to continue to consume and ravish the earth forever is considered green. This definition creates the oxymoronic and paradoxical situation we have today: the top global polluters claim to be green.

We wanted a revolution but corporations want more of the same. So how is it that the green movement was so easily appropriated? My suspicion is that the appropriation of the green movement represents the death of traditional environmentalism. It demonstrates that concern over the desecration of our physical environment is important but not primary.

Advertisers appropriate every revolutionary idea and use them against us. We ask for a “greener” world and we get million-dollar ad campaigns calling our dying world green. As long as corporations are able to lie to us through glitzy advertisements, our desires for change will always be in vain. Only a movement for a clean mental environment, one that silences corporate communication, can give us the intellectual clarity to address the environmental problems that face us as a species.

Let’s clean up the info-toxins polluting our worldview and then stop the physical-toxins poisoning our world.

Micah White is a Contributing Editor at Adbusters and an independent activist. He is writing a book on the future of activism. www.micahmwhite.com or micah (at) adbusters.org

38 comments on the article “Progress Isn’t Green”

Displaying 11 - 20 of 38

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Nicholas

Last line is excellent I must say. Unfortunately in America this going green means buying green products. No one cares that these are the same products as before just sold to us with a new spin. Advertisers aren't dumb, when counter culture becomes culture you kind of have to say damn, they get us again. Activism spread the message and corporations sold it. This only makes things harder on real environmentalists, you cant help the mind which purchased the "idea" that they are making a difference. You have to realize that recycling your cereal boxes wont make a difference, new light bulbs wont change a thing. You are only made to believe that they will.

Nicholas

Last line is excellent I must say. Unfortunately in America this going green means buying green products. No one cares that these are the same products as before just sold to us with a new spin. Advertisers aren't dumb, when counter culture becomes culture you kind of have to say damn, they get us again. Activism spread the message and corporations sold it. This only makes things harder on real environmentalists, you cant help the mind which purchased the "idea" that they are making a difference. You have to realize that recycling your cereal boxes wont make a difference, new light bulbs wont change a thing. You are only made to believe that they will.

Caroline

It is amazing to me that something calling for the fundamental destruction of the current way of doing things can be so utterly silenced, turned around, and made servile.

Caroline

It is amazing to me that something calling for the fundamental destruction of the current way of doing things can be so utterly silenced, turned around, and made servile.

David laurin

My guess is that the multinationals just define green as the colour of money, that way they can sleep easy.

David laurin

My guess is that the multinationals just define green as the colour of money, that way they can sleep easy.

Anonymous

I worked on a Construction Job where the Architect the builder and the owner demolitied a perfectly good, solid brick well insulated,freestanding house that had occupied the house for near on 100 years, they knocked it down to build a new house using new products and new technologies, these technologies are not new a lot of them have been thought of done and used in the past, the old house when it was demolited went into land fill, the new house with new concrete panels, concrete floors, was errected, concrete is 50 % water, where i live there has been drought for the last ten years. This is not green construction, green construction would have been to retain the existing and to be happy with what youve got, "The best things are not things"

Anonymous

I worked on a Construction Job where the Architect the builder and the owner demolitied a perfectly good, solid brick well insulated,freestanding house that had occupied the house for near on 100 years, they knocked it down to build a new house using new products and new technologies, these technologies are not new a lot of them have been thought of done and used in the past, the old house when it was demolited went into land fill, the new house with new concrete panels, concrete floors, was errected, concrete is 50 % water, where i live there has been drought for the last ten years. This is not green construction, green construction would have been to retain the existing and to be happy with what youve got, "The best things are not things"

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