Environmental Jihad
April 19 – 25 is Digital Detox Week. Here’s some inspiration for your digital cleanse.
In January 2010, as the war against terrorism dragged into its ninth year, the ideological leader of the mujahideen issued a statement that could have been drafted by any Western environmentalist: “Talk of climate change isn’t extravagant speculation: It is a tangible fact that is not diminished by its being muddled by some greedy heads of major corporations.” Osama bin Laden then declared that “there must be accountability and punishment for those who head the major corporations and their political proxies, so that they stop their harmful actions against humanity.”
Hearing the “enemy” express sentiments so similar to our own inner thoughts is challenging. The momentum of environmentalism is stalling, co-opted by industrialists selling the toxic cleaning agents for their own pollutants and by celebrity politicians who smile for paparazzi while sabotaging global accords. Bin Laden’s words breathe a new sense of intensity and potency into a complacent movement because behind his rhetoric – which sounds so much like our own – are terrifying deeds.
Environmentalism has always had a militant shadow. It is apparent in the seminal works of Edward Abbey, whose oeuvre encompasses nature writing at its most philosophically profound (Desert Solitaire), obstinately righteous (Fire on the Mountain) and passionately violent (The Monkey Wrench Gang). The last, of course, inspired the formation of Earth First! and continues to inform sporadic Earth Liberation Front actions. But until now environmental militancy has been minimal, recruitment constrained by its bourgeois Western origins.
Bin Laden’s clarion call changes all that. It marks the beginning of a holy war against the West that many Western environmentalists may come to endorse. Post-Copenhagen it is clear that our nominally democratic society is under the sway of a corporatist, obstructionist oligarchy whose fat cats will jettison any sustainable vision of the future if it hurts their bottom line. And therein lies the significance of bin Laden’s speech: While one can argue divisively about the Israeli occupation of Palestine, the potential for democracy in the Middle East and the viability of alternatives to capitalism, it is both unarguable and unifying that humanity is hurtling toward a precipitous climate catastrophe.
It is, of course, a highly suspect proposition that anyone in good conscience could rally behind bin Laden. He has blood on his hands that can never be washed off, no matter how green the water. And with a political biography eerily reminiscent of Emmanuel Goldstein from George Orwell’s 1984, one must wonder whether bin Laden is actually dead, a creation of the CIA or simply the pseudonym for a group of jihadist writers. The importance of bin Laden’s words, however, is not what they portend for his future but what they suggest for ours.
There seem to be two possible scenarios that could prevent civilization’s collapse. One is that we continue the scientific-materialist project: Embrace geoengineering wholeheartedly and hope that an entirely unnatural synthetic world can save us. The other possibility – and the one that seems increasingly likely – is that a charismatic member of the mujahideen will arise to deliver a challenge that resonates with the materially poor and the spiritually wealthy of every nation of the world.
And when that happens, we will look back on the day we were first exposed to bin Laden’s environmental plea and know that it was the beginning of a new era of solidarity between those who have rejected consumerism and the five billion others who never had a choice.
Micah White is a contributing editor at Adbusters and an independent activist. He lives in Berkeley, CA and is currently writing a book about the future of activism. www.micahmwhite.com or www.junkthought.org
86 comments on the article “Environmental Jihad”
Displaying 41 - 50 of 86
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ken vallario
i've noticed my suggestion to ameliorate your dependence on run-on sentences has been moderated...as i felt it would help you...funny that 'screwing people in the ear with a chopstick' is protected dialogue...
i really resist the comfort of vulgarity, because i think it weakens any good intentions we might have and inevitably works against what you have argued for, which is positivity...
i do like nic's ideas, but i think having to utilize the same amount of effort as i might when reading kant, is not necessarily working to his advantage...
ken vallario
i've noticed my suggestion to ameliorate your dependence on run-on sentences has been moderated...as i felt it would help you...funny that 'screwing people in the ear with a chopstick' is protected dialogue...
i really resist the comfort of vulgarity, because i think it weakens any good intentions we might have and inevitably works against what you have argued for, which is positivity...
i do like nic's ideas, but i think having to utilize the same amount of effort as i might when reading kant, is not necessarily working to his advantage...
Inimicus
Please Nic, at least reread what you write. It is very difficult for the rest of us to understand your version of english.
Inimicus
Please Nic, at least reread what you write. It is very difficult for the rest of us to understand your version of english.
Anonymous
are you fucking serious? to me the bin laden comments show how utterly useless is a politic or ethos that revolves exclusively around being "anti-consumerist", as does adbusters. you wanna hop in bed with fascists, popes and mullahs because they denounce "consumerism" and "western decadence"? this only leads to the conclusion that adbusters itself has the attributes of a religion, at least insofar as its stated concerns are primarily spiritual - and of course, its real concerns are material, such as selling magazines at whole foods and sneakers over the internet. seriously, thanks for making it so blatant. but please stop using anarchist and marxist words and imagery to support your cause which has nothing to do with the actual struggle against capitalism.
Anonymous
are you fucking serious? to me the bin laden comments show how utterly useless is a politic or ethos that revolves exclusively around being "anti-consumerist", as does adbusters. you wanna hop in bed with fascists, popes and mullahs because they denounce "consumerism" and "western decadence"? this only leads to the conclusion that adbusters itself has the attributes of a religion, at least insofar as its stated concerns are primarily spiritual - and of course, its real concerns are material, such as selling magazines at whole foods and sneakers over the internet. seriously, thanks for making it so blatant. but please stop using anarchist and marxist words and imagery to support your cause which has nothing to do with the actual struggle against capitalism.
princess mob
I agree. I'm not actually suprised to see this in Adbusters, as deplorable as it is. This politics based around 'anti-consumerism' is moralism, an idea that our problem is consumerism, some kind of soul-sickness that can be cured by individualistic puritanism: drive less, buy less, consume the 'right' things. It's all about bourgeois appetites, not about redistributing the wealth of the world.
Also, it's not at all suprising that Islamists speak out against capitalism & against environmental destruction. Fascists do too. These are revolutionary movements: they're just not revolutions that would be good for the majority of humanity.
The statement that 'But until now environmental militancy has been minimal, recruitment constrained by its bourgeois Western origins' is only true if the only 'environmental militancy' you recognise is the ELF & co. That is, if you only recognise people who are a little bit like you as being militant. Actually, there have been heaps of groups all over the world - including Indigenous groups in North America - who have carried our heaps militant actions & movements against mining, logging, development & other threats to the land & water & air & ecosystems that they care about & need to survive. And they didn't need a charismatic demagogue to get them to rise
princess mob
I agree. I'm not actually suprised to see this in Adbusters, as deplorable as it is. This politics based around 'anti-consumerism' is moralism, an idea that our problem is consumerism, some kind of soul-sickness that can be cured by individualistic puritanism: drive less, buy less, consume the 'right' things. It's all about bourgeois appetites, not about redistributing the wealth of the world.
Also, it's not at all suprising that Islamists speak out against capitalism & against environmental destruction. Fascists do too. These are revolutionary movements: they're just not revolutions that would be good for the majority of humanity.
The statement that 'But until now environmental militancy has been minimal, recruitment constrained by its bourgeois Western origins' is only true if the only 'environmental militancy' you recognise is the ELF & co. That is, if you only recognise people who are a little bit like you as being militant. Actually, there have been heaps of groups all over the world - including Indigenous groups in North America - who have carried our heaps militant actions & movements against mining, logging, development & other threats to the land & water & air & ecosystems that they care about & need to survive. And they didn't need a charismatic demagogue to get them to rise
RealLiveHuman
Adbusters is the self-proclaimed "Journal of the Mental Environment".. I think this article represents that slogan very well. You're not going to do anything you don't want to do so why act like someone is trying to force you. These are the ideas and opinions of one writer, the present result of his individual perspective, not a code of ethics to be shoved down your throat. So go ahead and label these words whatever you like but don't get caught up in your own stereotypical bias.
RealLiveHuman
Adbusters is the self-proclaimed "Journal of the Mental Environment".. I think this article represents that slogan very well. You're not going to do anything you don't want to do so why act like someone is trying to force you. These are the ideas and opinions of one writer, the present result of his individual perspective, not a code of ethics to be shoved down your throat. So go ahead and label these words whatever you like but don't get caught up in your own stereotypical bias.
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