Standards of Environmental Good and Evil: Why Environmentalism Is Misanthropic
by
George Reisman
by George Reisman
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It is very
common for people to talk nowadays about environmental good and
evil, but with virtually no explicit statement of the standards
by which something is to be judged environmentally good or evil.
People are unaware that a standard is always present and that there
is more than one such standard. There are in fact two diametrically
opposed and mutually exclusive standards of environmental good and
evil. The following example will bring them out.
Thirty years
ago, the land under the house I live in, in Southern California,
was empty desert. Had I wanted to sleep in the same location that
my bedroom now stands on, I would have had to bring a sleeping bag,
take precautions against rattlesnakes, scorpions, and coyotes, and
hope I could find a place for my sleeping bag such that I wouldnt
have rocks pressing into my body. If it rained, I would get wet.
If it was cold, I would be cold. If it was hot, I would be hot.
Going to the bathroom would be a chore. Washing up would be difficult
or impossible.
How incomparably
better is the environment provided by my house and my bedroom. I
sleep on a bed with an innerspring mattress. I dont have to
worry about snakes, scorpions, or coyotes. Im protected from
the rain, the cold, and the heat, by a well-constructed house with
central heating and air conditioning. I have running water, hot
and cold, a flush toilet, a sink, a shower, and a bathtub, in fact
more than one of each of these things, and I have electricity and
most of the conveniences it makes possible, such as a refrigerator,
a television set, a VCR, and CD and DVD players.
Its obvious
to me that the existence of my house constitutes an enormous improvement
in my environment compared with living at the same location on the
bare ground, and that the same is true of the existence of virtually
all houses in relation to the environment of their occupants. Its
further obvious to me that the process of improving the environment
in this way starts with developers and contractors who bring in
bulldozers and other heavy construction equipment to clear the tops
of hills, level and compact the land, build streets, and utility
connections, and construct houses.
Yet those who
are called environmentalists describe the exact same
process of development and construction as harming the environment.
Why? Because they have a profoundly different standard of environmental
good and evil than the one that is present in my example. The standard
that is present in my example is that of human life and well-being.
What is environmentally good according to this standard is the promotion
of human life and well-being, notably, housing construction and
the existence of houses. What is environmentally evil is what impairs
human life and well-being, such as preventing housing construction.
The environmentalists
call the construction of houses evil because, as I say, their standard
of value is very different. Instead of taking human life and well-being
as their standard of value, they take nature in and of itself
as their standard of value. Nature, they say, has intrinsic value,
i.e., value in and of itself, apart from all connection with human
life and well-being. Thus, in their view, hillsides and empty land,
as they exist in a state of nature, together with their wildlife,
have intrinsic value. And it is those alleged intrinsic values that
are harmed by development and construction. In other words, the
harm the environmentalists complain about in such cases is harm
only from a non-human, indeed, anti-human perspective.
Here is a classic
statement of the doctrine of intrinsic value by one of its leading
environmentalist supporters:
This [mans
remaking the earth by degrees] makes what is happening
no less tragic for those of us who value wildness for its own
sake, not for what value it confers upon mankind. I, for one,
cannot wish upon either my children or the rest of Earths
biota a tame planet, be it monstrous or however unlikely
benign. McKibben is a biocentrist, and so am I. We are
not interested in the utility of a particular species or free-flowing
river, or ecosystem, to mankind. They have intrinsic value, more
value to me than another human body, or a billion
of them.
Human happiness,
and certainly human fecundity, are not as important as a wild
and healthy planet. I know social scientists who remind me that
people are part of nature, but it isnt true. Somewhere along
the line at about a billion years ago, maybe half that
we quit the contract and became a cancer. We have become
a plague upon ourselves and upon the Earth.
It is cosmically
unlikely that the developed world will choose to end its orgy
of fossil-energy consumption, and the Third World its suicidal
consumption of landscape. Until such time as Homo sapiens should
decide to rejoin nature, some of us can only hope for the right
virus to come along. (David M. Graber, in his review of Bill McKibbens
The End of Nature, in the Los Angeles Times Book
Review, Sunday, October 22, 1989, p. 9.)
The doctrine
of intrinsic value is present in such statements as the North Slope
of Alaska is a sacred place that should never be given
over to oil rigs and pipelines. It is present in such statements
as, There is a need to protect the land not just for wildlife
and human recreation, but just to have it there. It is present
in all instances in which forests, rivers, canyons, hillsides, or
any other natural formation is presented as automatically deserving
to be preserved, irrespective of its value in being put to use by
human beings. And, of course, it is present in all the numerous
cases in which human life or well-being have been sacrificed for
the sake of the preservation of this or that species of animal or
plant. Such cases range from the sacrifice of the property rights
of human beings for the sake of snail darters and spotted owls,
to the sacrifice of untold millions of actual human lives. This
last has occurred as the result of the resurgence of malaria because
the use of DDT was prohibited in order to preserve the alleged intrinsic
value of some species of birds.
It is crucial
that people recognize the distinction between the two standards
of environmental good and evil and that the standard of the environmental
movement is fundamentally that of the intrinsic value of nature,
not that of human life and well-being. Given its standard of value,
it is certainly not possible to accept as sincere or well-motivated
any of the claims the environmental movement makes of seeking to
improve human life and well-being, whether in connection with its
allegations about global warming, the ozone layer, acid rain, or
anything else.
Indeed, environmentalisms
acceptance of the doctrine of intrinsic value implies a profound
hatred of man and a desire to destroy him. Such statements as those
of Mr. Graber, that I quoted above, expressing a wish for a virus
to come along and kill a billion human beings, are not at all accidental.
They are logically implied by environmentalisms standard of
value.
Acceptance
of the doctrine of intrinsic value, as I wrote in Capitalism,
inexorably implies a desire to destroy man and his works because
it implies a perception of man as the systematic destroyer of
the good, and thus as the systematic doer of evil. Just as man
perceives coyotes, wolves, and rattlesnakes as evil because they
regularly destroy the cattle and sheep he values as sources of food
and clothing, so, on the premise of natures intrinsic value,
the environmentalists view man as evil, because, in the pursuit
of his well-being, man systematically destroys the wildlife, jungles,
and rock formations that the environmentalists hold to be intrinsically
valuable. Indeed, from the perspective of such alleged intrinsic
values of nature, the degree of mans alleged destructiveness
and evil is directly in proportion to his loyalty to his essential
nature. Man is the rational being. It is his application of his
reason in the form of science, technology, and an industrial civilization
that enables him to act on nature on the enormous scale on which
he now does. Thus, it is his possession and use of reason
manifested in his technology and industry for which he is
hated. (p. 82)
The primitive
hunter-gatherers who were modern mans remote ancestors left
virtually no mark whatever on the rest of nature. The alleged intrinsic
values destroyed in their gathering and eating nuts and berries
and in their hunting, killing, and eating animals were quickly and
automatically replenished by nature. The pre-industrial farmers
who were modern mans more recent ancestors left an imprint
on nature that was essentially limited to plowed fields and primitive
villages. And though somewhat more enduring, it was still very limited
in extent. Great limitation of extent characterizes the enduring
mark left by the pyramids, the ruins of towns and cities built in
antiquity, and the stone castles of the Middle Ages.
In contrast,
the modern man of capitalism clears entire forests and jungles;
he drains swamps and irrigates deserts. He changes the balance of
nature by decimating and destroying entire species of plants and
animals and, though not often mentioned, radically increasing the
populations of others, whose characteristics he alters to suit him.
He establishes mechanized farms, large numbers of major towns and
cities, indeed, giant metropolises. He builds factories, roads,
bridges and tunnels, dams and canals. He digs mines, sometimes moving
entire mountains in doing so, and drills for oil and gas, often
reaching depths of several miles. From the perspective of environmentalism
and its doctrine of intrinsic value, these activities, which leave
a large and enduring mark on a vast swath of the rest of nature,
constitute the destruction of intrinsic values on a massive scale
and thus characterize modern man as the doer of massive evil.
Keeping all
this in mind, it follows that it is absolutely perilous for human
beings to allow themselves to be guided by policies recommended
by the environmental movement, especially when doing so would impose
great deprivation or cost, such as would be entailed in having to
make radical reductions in carbon dioxide emissions to combat global
warming. Nothing could be more absurd or dangerous than to take
advice on how to improve ones life and well-being from those
who regard ones wealth and happiness as a source of harm,
who accord one the status of vermin, and who wish one dead as the
means of preserving natures alleged intrinsic values. Indeed,
not only Mr. Graber, but also other prominent environmentalists
have expressed a wish for human deaths on a scale that far surpasses
all those caused by the Nazis and Communists combined.
The danger
of accepting environmentalist claims, it must be stressed, applies
irrespective of the scientific or academic credentials of an individual.
If an alleged scientific expert believes in the intrinsic value
of nature, then to seek his advice is equivalent to seeking the
advice of a medical doctor who was on the side of the germs rather
than the patient, if such a thing can be imagined. It is the equivalent
of a Jew asking the medical advice of a Dr. Josef Mengele.
All advice,
all policy recommendations emanating from the environmentalist movement
must be summarily rejected unless and until they can be validated
on the basis of a pro-man, pro-wealth, pro-capitalist standard of
value. Such a standard will never imply such a thing as the destruction
of the energy base of industrial civilization as the means of addressing
global warming.
The environmental
movement is the philosophic enemy of the human race. It should be
treated as such. If we value the material well-being and, indeed,
the very lives of billions of our children and grandchildren, we
must treat it as such. We must treat environmentalism as our mortal
enemy.
November
18, 2006
George
Reisman [send him mail]
is Pepperdine University Professor Emeritus of Economics, and is
the author of Capitalism:
A Treatise on Economics. Visit
his website.
Copyright
© 2006 George Reisman
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