Calcutta Notebook
F C

Greed leaves no place for singing birds and mur muring rivers. Maximizing accumulation is the force that drives greed. Appropriating nature and labor is the cheapest way greed finds for maximization of accumulation.

In Europe, according to a Pan-European Common Bird Monitoring Scheme survey, 36 species of farmland birds including the skylark and the meadow pipit have declined in their number: from 600 million to 300 million between 1980 and 2009. Britain is one of the worst suffering countries by losses to its farmland birds. The EU enforced farming policies are the catalysts for this catastrophe. Destroying hedgerows, wetlands and meadows has "contributed" to this bird-massacre.

What's the "holy" reason for the destruction? It's more and more; more profit.Ittefaq, a leading Bangla Dhaka daily, reported on May 24, 2012: Industrial wastes, including effluent and smoke from 16 re-rolling mills, 49 brick kilns and other industrial units including paper pulp, fertilizer, textile, dyeing, battery, rubber, plastic factories, more than hundred in numbers, are threatening life and occupation of around three hundred-thousand dwellers in Roopganj, an almost industrial area near the Bangladesh capital city Dhaka. The residents are not feeling safe with air and water. There is noise pollution. Wastes are being drained into the Sitalakkhaa and Baaloo, two rivers running through the area.

These two incidents, part of a process, one from an advanced capitalist country, and another from a peripheral country, are not isolated facts. Now-a-days media around the world carry thousands of similar news and facts that unravel relations between the type of economy and defacing of the ecology and environment. Now-a-days ecological crisis threatening all forms of life in this earth doesn’t require any explanation. Even masters of this on-going ecocide—the owners of capital—don't dare to publicly deny the crisis, their sin.

About two years ago, WWF, the international organization involved in the area of ecology, said in its Living Planet report: A second planet will be required by 2030 to meet people's needs as overuse of Earth's natural resources and carbon pollution have become critical. If all human beings in this world used resources at the same per capita rate as the US or the UAE, four and a half planets would be needed. More than 70 countries were exhausting their freshwater sources at an alarming, unsustainable rate. About two-thirds of these countries experience water scarcity ranging from moderate to severe. In 2007, the world's 6.8 billion humans were living 50% beyond the planet's threshold of sustainability. The report highlighted the rich-poor ecological gap. In 1970-2007, an index of biodiversity showed a world decline of almost 30%. In the tropics, it was alarming: 60%.

No brain with logic will claim that the acts are isolated from the world economic systems. "From the outset," Joe Bageant, author of the book about working class in America Deer Hunting with Jesus : Dispatches from America's Class War, writes, "capitalism was always about the theft of the people's sustenance. It was bound to lead to the ultimate theft—the final looting of the source of their sustenance—nature."

This system, the masters of the system in the center, in the periphery, in between the center and the periphery, try their best to maximize profit by minimizing cost, by appropriating labor, robbing nature, grabbing everything within their reach, putting costs on public. Pollution, destruction of ecology and ruination of nature thus creep into public domain—a human concern.

Acts of the masters are turning into crime, crime against the planet, against posterity, against humanity.
The World Future Council leaders said : "These are crimes against the future... These are crimes that will not only injure future generations, but destroy any future at all for millions of people."

Pushing one billion persons down to extreme poverty, and enriching a few, whose consumption is threatening the planet is one of the major "contributions" of the system. Other than the hungry and starved, there are energy poor, electricity poor, water poor, information poor, basic rights poor, safety poor, they are the poor masses deprived of honor and dignity, and there are the food rich, energy rich, electricity rich, water rich, information rich, luxury rich, power and privilege rich, resource rich, consumption rich, the rich few controlling everything.

Imbalance and inequity at this level can't sustain environment and ecology. Observance related to environment turns hollow and chattering if this aspect of political economy is ignored.

Frontier
Vol. 45, No. 7, Aug 26-Sep1, 2012