This article was originally posted on Global Research on September 14, 2011.
From what makes an effective resister to effective resistance strategies, in Deep Green Resistance,
Aric McBay, Lierre Keith and Derrick Jensen lay out the reasons for and
methods of bringing down industrial civilization. The goal is saving
the biosphere, and with it, Homo sapiens.
In Endgame,
a two-volume tome that everyone should read, Jensen writes, “Bringing
down civilization means depriving the rich of their ability to steal
from the poor, and it means depriving the powerful of their ability to
destroy the planet.” He backs this up with his Twenty Premises.
DGR agrees: “It means thoroughly destroying the political, social, physical, and technological infrastructure that not only permits the rich to steal and the powerful to destroy, but rewards them for doing so.”
The breakthrough documentary, The Corporation,
reveals that corporations are psychopathic with a single value:
Increase profits no matter the cost to cultures, ecosystems or the
planet as a whole. In tandem, Andrzej Łobaczewski’s Political Ponerology shows
how hierarchies like corporations and governments draw psychopaths, so
that today they dominate positions of power throughout the world.
Yet,
social justice advocates maintain with near parallel psychopathy that
those who lack a conscience can be shamed into good behavior by waving
protest signs or signing petitions.
DGR
elaborates on overall strategy and specific tactics. It shows
conclusively how past strategies and tactics “ranging from ineffectual
to ridiculous” have failed.
Lighting
candles, waving protest signs, or lobbying power as if it has a
conscience has not stopped the ongoing destruction of Earth. At best,
arrested protesters get publicity. But the business of destroying our
planet proceeds unabated.
No
one with integrity would deny that the chemical, pharmaceutical,
nuclear, and resource extraction industries, along with industrial
agriculture and wars, are squarely to blame for the mass die offs over the past year. Even the USDA admits to killing a million birds a year, deliberately.
The
situation has become serious. Nearly three-fourths of scientists today
acknowledge the Holocene Extinction (our time period), during which 150-200 species a day are going extinct. Citing Harvard entomologist Edward O. Wilson, the 200-a-day figure is hammered throughout the text.
In
addition to global and local economies, the ecological catastrophe of
this ongoing mass extinction threatens every kingdom of life.
Yet, having a thousand or 10,000 protesters arrested in
front of the White House will not stop drilling for oil in the tar
sands. Big Oil is going full steam ahead. DGR condemns such futile
tactics. Instead, direct action is needed. The oil infrastructure is
vulnerable, the authors assert. Any number of well conceived tactics can halt production, if that’s what you sincerely want to do.
To
prove this, DGR points out that Ken Saro-Wiwa and his nonviolent group
were likewise unable to stop Royal Dutch/Shell’s ongoing destruction of
Nigeria. After he and eight others were executed, a militant group (MEND)
has since stopped a third of oil production in the Niger Delta. They
did this with acts of sabotage and direct violence against drillers.
Their motto is, ‘if you stay here, you die here.’
Similar
tactics could be applied in the Gulf of Mexico, where 1,500 oil rigs
are destroying an entire sea, directly affecting three nations. The
Macondo blowout still spews oil today (see here and here). The ongoing health effects still make the news, as Florida Oil Spill Law continues to publicize.
Gulf Coast
residents would gain by following the rules of guerrilla warfare in
defense of their health and livelihoods, as well as their environment.
No matter how much (or how little) monetary compensation is given, the
problem won’t go away until the rigs are shut down.
The
growing Dead Zone in the Gulf has long been blamed on agrochemicals.
How hard is it to prevent those chemicals from reaching crop dusters?
Going to the source, sabotage of genetically modified crops is a common tactic of militants protecting the biosphere.
Hell, I’d be happy if militants blocked the delivery of fluoride to my city’s water plant. Even better, a group of conscious insiders could simply not add the agro-industrial waste. Probably more important, a halt to fracking would certainly help the biosphere, including us humans.
And I can’t tell you how many times I’ve fantasized about firing a missile at the jets laying chemtrails over
our skies. Nature helped recently. No chemtrails were laid during
Hurricane Irene. For the first time in rural Florida, I saw thousands
of stars and an arm of the Milky Way. A friend in New Jersey noticed
the same thing. She cried.
DGR
recognizes that tactics must be weighed morally and for their strategic
effect. Not all effective actions require defensive violence.
Tim
DeChristopher understands this. By bidding for public lands with money
he did not have at the time, he was able to stop an illegal auction of
mining rights to public lands being held by federal agents. Though no
bureaucrat has been punished or criminally charged, DeChristopher was
sentenced to two years in federal prison. (Read his court speech and letter from prison.)
DGR
also recognizes that most people will not commend such actions, and
warns potential underground resistance fighters to expect broad
condemnation for any violence done in defense of the planet. But DGR
has little patience for such collaborators – the first half of the book
is a harsh criticism of the Left, coupled with a dismissive posture
toward the Right.
This
is the book’s only weakness. The writers are caught in the false
Left-Right paradigm that keeps the masses divided along an archaic
French dichotomy that has little to do with today’s political realities.
DGR cannot recognize that anyone on the “right” cares about a healthy
environment. Yet, it applauds the Vermont secession movement and the
local food sovereignty movement, both of which are substantially peopled
by conservatives and libertarians who believe in smaller government and
who recognize that only a healthy environment will provide healthy
food.
Forgiving
that over-simplification, readers will gain much from the historical
review of cultural resistance, and from the extended discussion of
guerrilla strategy which comprises more than half the book. DGR
analyzes past resistance movements, pointing out their strengths and
shortcomings. Several charts emphasize their points.
“The
task of the activist is not to navigate systems of oppressive power
with as much personal integrity as possible; it is to dismantle those
systems,” writes Keith.
We’re
not going to vote, chant, protest, lobby or pray our way out of global
catastrophe from eco-collapse. The global industrial system must
collapse, instead. DGR admits that most environmentalists lack even a
rudimentary understanding of arms and military tactics. Training will
be required.
As
part of their grand strategy, DGR recognizes the need for aboveground
parallel institutions to support the work of frontline militants and to
provide for communities as civilization collapses. This work is already
ongoing. Transition towns, local money, sustainable localized
foodsheds, parallel voting systems and much more have already begun.
Alliances
will need to be forged between militants and aboveground activists, but
given today’s panoptic police state, a strict security culture must be
in place, they caution. Again, training will be required.
There
is so much more to this book – and all of it important, including the
discussion of white privilege and patriarchy. Both are part and parcel
of industrial civilization. Even if you’re not about to don the robe of
anarchy, the book should at least convince you to support the work of
those who do.
Meanwhile,
several dozen species went extinct today. In a world ruled by
psychopaths who are systematically destroying the planet and who use
violence to suppress resistance, the futility of nonviolence becomes
apparent. Power does not relinquish anything without a fight.
It is up to us to effectively stop them. Deep Green Resistance shows how.
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