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”
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Anonymous
this is an utterly substance-less comment that fails to address anything i said at all. so i'm not sure why my earlier comment pointing this out was deleted while this one gets to stay up. i think the views and tendencies expressed by adbusters, whether or not kalle lasn is shoving them down my throat personally, are symptomatic of the rising new regime of "green" capitalism. "radicals" that want to pick on a single facet of modern life as such can make all sorts of appalling alliances, whether with medieval conservatives like al qaeda and the catholic church, or new wave corporate overlords like whole foods. that adbusters does all this while maintaining some kind of "anarchist" or "anti-capitalist" aesthetic: bad joke or merely savvy marketing? to me it's a bit of both.
Anonymous
this is an utterly substance-less comment that fails to address anything i said at all. so i'm not sure why my earlier comment pointing this out was deleted while this one gets to stay up. i think the views and tendencies expressed by adbusters, whether or not kalle lasn is shoving them down my throat personally, are symptomatic of the rising new regime of "green" capitalism. "radicals" that want to pick on a single facet of modern life as such can make all sorts of appalling alliances, whether with medieval conservatives like al qaeda and the catholic church, or new wave corporate overlords like whole foods. that adbusters does all this while maintaining some kind of "anarchist" or "anti-capitalist" aesthetic: bad joke or merely savvy marketing? to me it's a bit of both.
Anonymous
This is most likely the worst article Adbusters has ever published. Intellectually corrupt, insipid, and pathetically contra-verrr-shallll for no perceivable purpose other than to discredit environmentalism.
Anonymous
This is most likely the worst article Adbusters has ever published. Intellectually corrupt, insipid, and pathetically contra-verrr-shallll for no perceivable purpose other than to discredit environmentalism.
nic
i think it is quite nice, you are being rude, instead of that, why not attempt to say something inspiring? i don't see how it could possibly discredit environmentalism, to me it evokes the sense of, do more, do something drastic, perhaps we don't have to harm anyone as others may see fit, however, why not destroy what destroys you? isn't that rational? aren't those people which shell out products which average folks blindly support accountable for harming our very planet, for leadin extinctions via habitat annhilation and dephiling waterways.. christ, look at the trash vortex in the ocean, how can you not be furious and want something terrible done to make it stop right away, they won't fucking listen to reason, so why not just silence them? no, we are just whimps, too afraid to fight for our planet, our very fucking creator, what if someone came at your parents? threatened their lives? which you let them die so as to keep up your pacifistic credibility?
nic
i think it is quite nice, you are being rude, instead of that, why not attempt to say something inspiring? i don't see how it could possibly discredit environmentalism, to me it evokes the sense of, do more, do something drastic, perhaps we don't have to harm anyone as others may see fit, however, why not destroy what destroys you? isn't that rational? aren't those people which shell out products which average folks blindly support accountable for harming our very planet, for leadin extinctions via habitat annhilation and dephiling waterways.. christ, look at the trash vortex in the ocean, how can you not be furious and want something terrible done to make it stop right away, they won't fucking listen to reason, so why not just silence them? no, we are just whimps, too afraid to fight for our planet, our very fucking creator, what if someone came at your parents? threatened their lives? which you let them die so as to keep up your pacifistic credibility?
AnonymousCanadian
what is this, high school night? smoke a joint and cool your impotent rage homie.
fact is, anyone can sound like an authority if they thesaurize their writing. all academic fakers know that game. bafflegab obfuscation. try it sometime in your next 9th grade english class essay, you'll get an A for sure. works for the flunkies in university too. only for them they are actually selling their soul because in five short years they will be pulling a salary from the same establishment they decry.
AnonymousCanadian
what is this, high school night? smoke a joint and cool your impotent rage homie.
fact is, anyone can sound like an authority if they thesaurize their writing. all academic fakers know that game. bafflegab obfuscation. try it sometime in your next 9th grade english class essay, you'll get an A for sure. works for the flunkies in university too. only for them they are actually selling their soul because in five short years they will be pulling a salary from the same establishment they decry.
AnonymousCanadian
i must agree. this micah character is going to flunk out his thesis if he keeps this up.
however our comments will be cleansed from the system so nobody will ever know our dissenting opinions.
AnonymousCanadian
i must agree. this micah character is going to flunk out his thesis if he keeps this up.
however our comments will be cleansed from the system so nobody will ever know our dissenting opinions.
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