Climate Change
and Rebellion: an interview with John Molyneux
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interview with John Molyneux
Climate Change and Rebellion: an
interview with John Molyneux
Posted at 11:58h in Blog, Featured, Interviews by roape1974
In an interview with the socialist
writer and activist, John Molyneux, ROAPE’s Leo Zeilig asks him about climate
change, capitalism and socialist transformation. In an important initiative
John has recently founded the Global Ecosocialist
Network (GEN) which brings together
activists and researchers from across the Global North and South. The network
hopes to amplify the socialist voice in the struggle against environmental
crisis. Africa, he argues, is crucial to the fight against climate change.
Can you tell readers of roape.net
about yourself? Your background, activism and politics.
I was born in Britain in 1948 and became a socialist activist and
Marxist in 1968 through the struggle against the Vietnam War, the student
revolt and May ’68 in Paris. I joined the International Socialists in June of
that year. I have remained active ever since. From the mid- seventies onwards I
began writing in the field of Marxist theory, publishing Marxism and the Party (1978) and What is the Real Marxist Tradition? (1983) and
other books, pamphlets and articles. Since the late nineties I also started
writing about art and have a book on The Dialectics of Art coming out later this year.
From 1975 to 2010 I was a teacher at various levels in the city of
Portsmouth – secondary school, further education and then in the School
of Art at Portsmouth University. In 2010 I retired and moved to Dublin where I
have continued to be an activist with People Before Profit and a writer, publishing books
on Anarchism, the media, Marxist philosophy and Lenin for Today. I have also
served as the founder and editor of the Irish Marxist Review.
Can you speak a little about your
involvement in the climate change movement? As a long-standing socialist and
activist, when did you first become seriously aware of climate change – what
was it that impacted on you explicitly?
I don’t think there was any single moment. I think probably it was the
socialist writer, Jonathan Neale, who first fully explained the issue to me
somewhere around the turn of the century. Jonathan served for a period as
Secretary of the Campaign to Stop Climate Change and I was involved in that
campaign in a limited way. But I didn’t find that they were very receptive to
my revolutionary socialist ideas.
However, from quite
early on I was convinced that climate change was going to be an existential
crisis for humanity because I was convinced that capitalism was not going to
stop it. There were, of course, debates about this question. Many people
thought there HAD to be a capitalist solution or at least a solution within
capitalism because they thought overthrowing capitalism was out of the
question. Others, including Marxists, engaged in hypothetical debates as to
whether capitalism might, in theory, be able to deal with the issue.
My view was that
regardless of what might theoretically be possible the actually existing
capitalism we were dealing with was not going to stop climate change or even
seriously try to stop it until it was too late. This was because capitalism is
driven by profit and competitive accumulation at every level and because it is
far too heavily invested in fossil fuels to simply switch to renewables. To
those who say we can’t wait for your socialism, we need change NOW, my reply is
I will fight alongside you for change, but I don’t believe we can wait for
capitalism to go green, it’s simply not going to happen. I hope I’m wrong but
so far, I’ve been right.
I always understood how disastrous climate change was going to be but at
first I thought of it as something fairly far in the future – by the end of the
century etc – and probably outside my life time. But it has become clearer and
clearer that even the IPCCs (the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change) predictions are
too conservative and that the beginnings of climate catastrophe are with us
already.
Recently, specifically last year –
with the extraordinary global protests of school students and many others – the
climate emergency has broken onto the world stage, leaving us all forever
changed. Can you discuss how you interpreted this movement and its
significance, and any weaknesses you see?
The school strikes for climate were unequivocally magnificent and hats
off to Greta Thunberg and everyone else involved. It was wonderful to see young
people stepping forward and on such a global scale. The civil disobedience
organised by Extinction Rebellion, especially in the first London
Rebellion Week, was also a fantastic step forward. Every socialist should
enthusiastically back them and constructively engage with them. I haven’t
much time for leftists who dismiss radicalising young people because of their
lack of ‘the correct programme’ or base in ‘the organised working class’.
But of course,
these movements, like every emergent mass movement, have weaknesses. In
particular it is a weakness that they tend to think of themselves as ‘beyond’
or ‘above’ politics and therefore often discourage political debate. In my
opinion every aspect of climate change and the environmental crisis is
intensely political and some political forces (largely those on the serious or
‘hard’ left) are friends of the planet and the climate movement and others (the
right and far right) are its enemies. Without fetishizing the figure of 3.5%
[XR thinks that mobilising 3.5% of the population is necessary to secure
‘system change’] I think XR’s aim to mobilize those sort of mass numbers is
excellent but I’m not sure that all their methods of organising are conducive
to achieving this.
You have just initiated the Global Ecosocialist
Network (GEN) bringing together
activists and researchers from across the Global North and South. Can you
explain what you hope to achieve?
The developing
climate emergency has generated much increased public awareness of climate
change and the environment generally and a new wave of activism which many
socialists are part of and engaging positively with. However, the current
environmental discourse – internationally – both in terms of the media and most
of the public is dominated by what could be called ‘green liberalism’. A more
radical version of green liberalism is also prevalent among activists along
with a vague ‘deep green’ consciousness. This goes together with an
understanding of system change as essentially a change in collective mind set
which lends itself to illusions in the possibility of converting corporations
and mainstream politicians and the State.
At the moment the
socialist voice in the movement is very limited, certainly not dominant. But
the socialist voice is essential because capitalism is not going resolve either
the climate change issue or the wider environmental crisis. Socialist
transformation of society is objectively necessary. Moreover a socialist
approach is crucial to winning over and mobilizing the mass of working class
people. Unfortunately, in this extremely urgent situation much of the international
revolutionary left is very weak.
Our network is an
attempt in a small way to improve this situation, to amplify the socialist
voice and reach out to new forces. Its initial aim is to bring ecosocialists
together to facilitate the exchange and propagation of socialist
environmentalist ideas along with reports on the development of the crisis and
resistance from around the world. Later it may be able to hold conferences and
issue calls for action.
Marx’s ‘ecological writings’ have
been fairly recently written about by writers like John Bellamy Foster, and
others. Can you explain why a structural challenge to capitalism is essential,
and how Marxism can help in this challenge?
First, I think we should acknowledge the enormously important
intellectual work done by John Bellamy Foster and his collaborators such as
Paul Burkett and Ian Angus. There was a widespread interpretation, including
among Marxists, of Marx as ‘productionist’ and a ‘super industrialiser’ and therefore
anti-environmentalist. They demolished this myth. Speaking personally I owe a
considerable debt to John Bellamy Foster for his book Marx’s Ecology. When I read it after more than 30
years as a Marxist it substantially transformed and deepened my understanding
of Marxism. The concept of the ‘metabolic rift’ is hugely important. I’m very
proud that he is a sponsor of GEN. Ian Angus’s Facing the Anthropocene – he’s another
sponsor – is also brilliant.
I have already
explained above the essential reason why we need a structural challenge to
capitalism but this applies at every level. Production for profit is inherently
destructive of nature whether we are talking about the dumping of toxic waste
round the corner from where I live, to the plastic choking the oceans, to the
deadly pollution of the air – all the way to the overarching challenge of
climate change.
What is more
capitalism will ensure that the response to climate disasters which it is
generating will be callous, cruel, class based and racist. This has been
demonstrated time and again from Hurricane Katrina in New Orleans to Hurricane
Maria in Puerto Rico to the fires in Australia. We need to challenge capitalist
priorities, structures and the system as a whole, not only to stop
environmental degradation and catastrophic climate change but also to deal with
its effects.
ROAPE, a radical review and website
on political economy, focuses on Africa. Unfortunately, we have not covered the
climate emergency in enough detail recently. The mobilisations last year were
weak across the continent, as inspiring as they were. What role does Africa
have to play in the struggle against climate change and how do you see the
Global Ecosocialist Network helping?
Africa is
absolutely crucial to the struggle against climate change. In terms of
immediate effects Africa will almost certainly be the worst hit part of the
world. The drought in Southern and Eastern Africa is already truly deadly and
the extent of poverty in Africa will magnify the consequences of every climate
disaster and extreme weather event. That this comes on top of the fact that
Africa, as a whole, has the lowest per capita carbon footprint of any continent
makes Africa the litmus test of any verbal commitment to climate justice.
Moreover the racist
hierarchy of death in the world will ensure that hundreds or thousands of lives
lost in central or eastern Africa will be less reported and count for less in
terms of Western consciousness than five or ten lives lost in California or
Australia.
Mass mobilizations
in Africa linked to demands for climate justice would be the best possible
antidote to this state of affairs.
It is therefore a
key task of the Global Ecosocialist Network to do what it can to rectify the
disgraceful neglect of the situation in Africa and to stimulate radical
resistance in the African continent.
We are very pleased that Africa is well represented among our initial
sponsors and we have already published an excellent article on the terrible situation in Southern and Eastern Africa by Rehad Desai, the South African
radical film maker, who is also a member of the Network’s Interim Steering
Committee.
What are the immediate tasks for the
network, and how do we expand it?
The most immediate
task is to expand the readership of the website and the membership of the
Network both through individuals joining and organisations affiliating. For
this we need our existing members and supporters to actively promote GEN and
recruit to it. Here it is important to stress that joining GEN is ‘commitment
light’: it does not entail any major obligations in terms of activity, nor does
it impinge on any individual’s or organisation’s existing political practice.
If in the next period we can gain enough members and resources – we have
no external funding whatsoever – we can move to the next stage of convening
some kind of international meeting or conference. Hopefully this would enable
us to put the Network on a sounder democratic footing than it has at present –
obviously doing this on a global basis presents certain problems e.g.
anywhere such a meeting is convened, be it Rio or Paris, Cape Town, Lagos,
Mumbai or Sydney, will be much harder for some comrades to reach than others.
Possibly down the line we can develop multiple regional foci or centres. The
holding of the Cop 26 Conference in Glasgow in November may also
serve as a focus for us.
Meanwhile any
support ROAPE can give us in terms of written input to the website, publicity,
individual membership and organisational affiliation will be most welcome.
John Molyneux is a socialist, writer
and activist and editor of Irish Marxist Review. John is also a founder of
the Global Ecosocialist Network.
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