What Is Environmentalism?
by
Michael S. Rozeff
by Michael S. Rozeff
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Wiki’s
definition of environmentalism, which is the usual one, says "Environmentalism
is a concern for the preservation, restoration, or improvement of
the natural environment..." This, however, is far from the
truth. Environmentalism is not a neutral, benign concern for the
environment, as the Wiki definition would have us believe. This
article argues that environmentalism is an activist political
movement, with moral and religious overtones, aimed at alleviating
perceived and fancied human woes falsely attributed to misuse of
the natural environment; a movement which uses the power of state
laws to regulate individual economic choice to the diminishment
of human values and life. This definition differs radically
from the Wiki definition. It defines environmentalism as it is and
as it does, giving us a more accurate concept to consider, think
about, debate, and evaluate.
We need a more accurate definition because environmentalism is
an extremely serious threat to freedom, and freedom is no mere abstraction.
Freedom is absolutely essential to the fruition of human lives and
to the realization of values within the life of each and every human
being. The more that the state enforces the environmentalist agenda,
the more that it restricts freedom; and the more that it restricts
freedom, the more that it destroys human life. Environmentalism
is therefore fundamentally destructive. If we do not understand
it as it is and does, we suffer.
I am clearly anti-environmentalism. Will Al Gore then ask me "Mike,
do you favor dirty air, foul water, pollution, and energy waste?"
Of course not. Most people don’t, but Gore’s question is a straw
man debating trick. How so? Because environmentalism does not essentially
entail clean air and water, low pollution, and energy conservation;
and because these are not the aims of mainstream environmental supporters,
even though these items may well be mentioned as environmental goals
by environmentalists. In fact, environmentalism is better defined
as above: by its immoral and counterproductive means of attaining
strategic objectives such as climate control, energy independence,
and sustainability, that have only a tenuous connection with maintaining
the capital stock of natural resources; and that are incorrectly
connected up, in the minds of environmentalists, with the ultimate
goal of a better life for themselves and their children. Many execrable
movements have high-sounding strategic objectives and ultimate goals;
but if the objectives are falsely connected to the goals and the
means used to achieve them involve abominable methods, then we are
justified in condemning the enterprise. So, Mr. Gore, if my neighbor’s
barbecue wafts smoke into my lungs, does that give any level of
government the right to make everyone buy expensive smokeless barbecue
equipment? Or should I instead have been more careful when I moved
next to him? Or should I close the window? Or should I ask him to
move it a few feet away from my window? Or is the irritation serious
enough to merit a case for a local judge?
Environmentalism does not mean the normal and conscionable human
concern for the God-given bounty and beauty of the creation that
we have been made stewards of. It does not mean voluntary and free
human action to further such concerns. If that were what environmentalism
truly meant, I could not and would not oppose it.
In defining environmentalism, we must recognize that it is not
a monolithic movement. It contains numerous cross-currents and divergent
views. Reasonable environmentalists exist who endorse peaceful and
free-market methods to achieve their goals. But these voices are
weak and out of the mainstream of the movement. They are not what
environmentalism means.
Nor is environmentalism defined at the opposite end by its most
lunatic elements, those communist-oriented primitives who wish to
reduce the world’s population drastically and return mankind to
some sort of (probably mythical) Paleolithic non-industrial life
style. Such proponents wish to end the division of labor; and ending
the division of labor means ending market exchange and private property,
all of which are the major engines that all free peoples use to
improve their lives and create life-enhancing civilizations. (See
George Reisman’s treatment of these relations and his extended essay
on environmentalism in his book Capitalism.)
Hear, for example, such words as these from a primitivist:
"But my working hypothesis is that division of labor draws
the line, with dire consequences that unfold in an accelerating
or cumulative way. Specialization divides and narrows the individual,
brings in hierarchy, creates dependency and works against autonomy.
It also drives industrialism and hence leads directly to the eco-crisis.
Tools or roles that involve division of labor engender divided people
and divided society."
Such primitivists even come to criticize art, numbers, and language.
They routinely use the fruits of civilization, give interviews,
and presumably make money while extolling the hunter-gatherer way
of life. They could easily drop out of the civilization they despise,
fashion a primitive life for themselves, and practice what they
preach. They don’t.
We cannot define environmentalism by such primitivist voices without
thereby constructing a straw man of our own. Instead we need to
locate the mainstream of environmentalism. The mainstream appears
in the decades-long environmental legislation that our Congress
has passed to make us use ethanol or to subsidize fuel made from
garbage or to fund research into hydrogen-powered cars or any number
of hundreds of other similar measures. The mainstream appears in
the environmental legislation passed by 50 state legislatures and
by thousands of cities, towns, and counties.
This brings us to our first conclusion. Environmentalism is
a political movement that uses the state’s monopoly on violence
as its primary means of action. The existence of Green Parties
illustrates this fact. Or consider an organization that epitomizes
environmentalism, the Sierra Club. Its web site instructs readers:
"Raise Fuel Economy Standards." "Restore the Clean
Water Act!" "America Needs a Stronger Senate Energy Bill."
"Keep Public Lands in Public Hands." "Protect Our
Coasts from Drilling." This is only a sample of a long series
of recommended political actions to be put in place by the state.
Mainstream environmentalism is profoundly statist.
This means that (everyday) environmentalism is inconsistent with
libertarianism, no matter how we might characterize its objectives
and goals. It means that libertarian critiques of the negatives
of statism apply to environmentalism. If, starting in 1960, the
U.S. had made determined efforts to free up markets and create appropriate
justice in the face of damages wrought through environmental infringements
on private property, rather than doing the very opposite, using
statist measures and relying on legislative law, the wealth of the
country would have been far above where it now is, and our stewardship
of the creation would have been much greater.
We did not follow the path indicated by American ideals of freedom
and private property. Instead we entangled ourselves in a thicket
of laws and regulations from which there is no easy escape but massive
repeal. Surveying all of the state’s environmental regulations at
all levels of government reveals an absolutely stunning degree of
control by government. It reveals the slow but steady strangulation
of freedom. It reveals the death by a thousand cuts of consumer
control over products produced and sold. It reveals a retrogressive
and destructive anti-freedom and anti-property motion.
To identify mainstream environmentalism, I turn to a mainstream
media voice, namely, Newsweek magazine. Let us consider one
article about environmentalism published in Newsweek on
July 17, 2006. If we closely examine what this article says, as
a kind of case study, we will find that it leads us in many illuminating
directions and helps us define what environmentalism truly is.
The article’s title is "Going Green." The emphasis is
on going. Environmentalism means endorsing "green,"
it means changing our lives so as to "go green." This
is not a matter of attitude, thought, or intellect. It means changes
in concrete activities. It means making those changes in behavior,
lifestyles, and choices that are included in becoming more green.
We discover that environmentalism is an activist movement.
This inference accords well with defining it as a political movement.
It also accords well with the Sierra Club web site which features
the Sierra Club Action Center in which numerous political actions
are urged upon supporters.
The subtitle of the article tells us a little bit about what green
means: "With windmills, low-energy homes, new forms of recycling
and fuel-efficient cars, Americans are taking conservation into
their own hands." The emphasis here is actually not upon the
environment, or at least not directly. It is not on natural beauty,
not on the value of natural vistas, gorges, mountains, stately forests,
wild game, bird life, pure air, pristine lakes and rivers stocked
with fish, or any other such goods that many of us value, indeed
value highly, and that could and would exist in a well-functioning
free-market order. Classic appreciation of the bounties and beauties
of the creation is not what environmentalism is about.
No, instead the subtitle equates conservation with energy-related
activities that typically involve government mandates justified
rhetorically by ill-conceived attempts to save energy and prevent
air pollution. Consistent with this emphasis, about half of the
Sierra Club’s action initiatives relate to energy use (such items
as "Tell Congress to Support Legislation to Stop Global Warming,"
"Tell the Senate to Guarantee Oil Savings!" "Tell
Congress to Support a Renewable Energy Standard," and so on.)
The focus on autos and energy goes back to the early environmentalist
attacks on automobiles and air pollution, among other things. Environmentalism
is simple-minded. The simple-minded "solutions" to such
"problems" were lower speed limits, catalytic converters,
fleet mileage standards, smaller and less safe cars, reformulated
gasoline, ethanol, closing oil refineries, stopping nuclear plants
from being built, and so on; and now the equally simple-minded answers
to other imagined problems are climate control, sustainability,
and energy independence.
But the relations that link energy and resource use with transportation
and other facets of the economy are incredibly complex, not amenable
to blind interferences with multiplely-connected free market and
politically-influenced economic relations. It has never been clear
from the outset of the environmental movement who was being damaged
by whom and how great the damages were. The so-called problems were
ill-defined. Even less clear, but very important, was how much of
the perceived problems was caused by the state. The state’s
own rules and its own failures to enforce private property justice
were and are root causes of resource misuse and pollution.
The individuals in our economy in part take the government framework
as given and make their economic decisions within that framework.
It is by no means a free market framework. Consider for a moment.
Government rules affect transportation (ports, airports, rail traffic,
road ownership, road building, automobiles, gasoline), location
(property taxes, zoning, industrial subsidies, homebuilding subsidies,
building codes), education (school location, taxation), energy supply
(nuclear licensing, regulation, electricity regulation, plus much,
much more), energy use, banking and insurance, only to name a few
items that impact on where people settle, where their work is located
relative to their dwellings, where their schools are located, what
sorts of cars they buy, and how much they decide to travel and by
what means. All of these many state-made restrictions distort economic
activity, producing problems of resource misuse. Environmentalism,
which involves even more state-made restrictions, goes exactly in
the wrong direction and makes these problems worse.
Furthermore, in practical terms, if (for whatever reasons) the
state or a hundred Sierra Clubs with a thousand petitions takes
aim at the automobile and air pollution, there is no rational way
for them as legislators to identify who is responsible for what
so-called problems, much less fashion rational solutions. The complexities
call for judges who can consider individual cases and fashion remedies
where damages are involved.
The legislative solutions that have been imposed are impossible,
costly, and one-size-fits-all, making them simple-minded and perverse.
A law, for example, forbids a restaurant from using throwaway ware.
It does not realize that disposable restaurant ware may be preferable,
that it saves time, water, washing, and spreads fewer bacteria.
Another law makes ships travel at slow speeds to avoid hitting whales.
It does not realize that making ships travel at slower speeds decreases
ship maneuverability and increases whale hits, or that stronger
bow waves at higher speeds signal whales to get out of the way.
There were (and still are) two rational ways to address any and
all conceivable problems associated with energy use and pollution,
and neither one involved the state. These were (i) free markets,
and (ii) a system of justice that recognized suits for damages caused
by pollution and rose to the challenge of adjudicating them and
discovering the appropriate law. By free markets, I mean totally
free markets. Free markets can handle the immense complexity that
stems from trillions of individual economic decisions. Governments
cannot.
There is nothing per se wrong with any energy initiatives
that Newsweek mentions, be they windmills, fuel cells, ethanol,
or electric cars as long as individuals are free to assess them.
We cannot argue with anyone who might wish to implement such choices
as they personally view the options they face and their costs. Indeed,
most individuals regard it as only right, fitting, and proper to
conserve resources, especially their own. People do not ordinarily
heat the streets or replace their wardrobes each week. Nor do they
have to be counseled to conserve or made to do so. There is no need
for government subsidies to encourage energy-saving uses, and such
state actions destroy wealth.
It is only common sense that free individuals operating in free
markets will choose the energy methods that they deem to be cost-efficient
and value-effective. If there is anything we are sure of in economics,
it is that people tend to engage in economizing behavior. Empirically
this does not usually reveal itself as indulgence in vast amounts
of energy waste as an item that brings people inherent utility.
We do not usually see people leaving their car engines run all night
because they enjoy the sound and smell, or leaving their refrigerator
doors open all day for convenience or because they like to pay high
electric bills. If people find that it pays to build roofs with
solar panels, will they not flock to this alternative? Don’t they
rapidly flock to other products that provide them with value? Why
should energy-related products be any different?
The Newsweek article leads off with an anecdote about a
commuter who commutes 24 miles to work. She starts her commute at
5 a.m. and rides her bike for 8 miles. She then takes a bus for
the remaining 16 miles. It is not clear why she does this. Maybe
she likes to, or perhaps this method is economical. We simply do
not know. But when told how little impact that her efforts have
on carbon dioxide, she says that she still wants to be "doing
something." This suggests an internalized feeling of guilt
if she does nothing, or a feeling that it is her duty to do something.
It accords with a quote that leads off the article in which Jimmy
Carter in 1977 says that energy conservation is "the moral
equivalent of war." In other words, environmentalism has gone
deeply enough into people’s minds that they (or at least a significant
number) do not look upon it as a matter of efficiency, cleanliness,
or energy independence, but as a matter of right and wrong. Environmentalism
has attained a moral dimension to its adherents. This turns
environmentalism into a more potent political force.
The article cites Republicans who are entering the environmentalist
fold, being convinced by spectres like global warming, American
oil dependence, and modernization among Asian economies. President
Bush has encouraged this movement toward environmentalism. President
Nixon created the EPA. It is clear that environmentalism is a
mainstream American political movement endorsed by both major parties.
Other persons are cited as supporting environmentalism through
religious links, concerns over food, and concerns over health, including
cancer death. But a more common source of support is said to be
people who read about projections of global climate change over
the next century and worry over how it might affect their children.
This is a case where environmentalism uses false science and/or
falsely uses science to gain adherents. If this reporting is correct,
and I think it is, then environmentalism is a doctrine that blames
various current and fancied human woes on our economic way of life,
relating them to the use of natural resources, and promising deliverance
from those woes by state regulation and control over resources and
economic life. The religious overtones of environmentalism are
clear: Mankind is sinning against the environment, being punished
for those sins, and redemption lies in environmentalism. Environmentalism
is basically a pseudo-religion and a false religion at that.
Next, we learn that sustainability is an environmental concept
that attracts people to environmentalism. Sustainability makes perfect
sense if a person freely evaluates cost factors and determines that
it pays to buy more durable goods or that it pays to eliminate waste
by inventive means. But environmentalism precludes such free market
thinking. Sustainability goes well beyond rational considerations
into the irrational premise that nothing should be used up, which
in turn precludes making cost-efficient transformations of resources
into more valuable forms. In other words, sustainability is at odds
with the basic economics of wealth and value creation. This suggests
that environmentalist doctrine is anti-life, anti-value creation,
and anti-wealth creation. The earlier analysis of the anti-free
market orientation of environmentalism tells us the same.
It is time to sum up. The limited scope of this article was to
sketch a few of the defining features of American environmentalism.
The main conclusions are as follows:
Environmentalism is a mainstream, activist, political movement,
endorsed by both major political parties. It uses and endorses
the state’s monopoly on violence as its primary means of action.
Environmentalist doctrine is anti-free market and anti-libertarian.
Its doctrine cultivates and has succeeded in attaining a moral
dimension among its adherents.
Environmentalist
doctrine blames various current and fancied human woes on our
economic way of life, relating them to natural resources, and
promising deliverance from those woes by state regulation and
control over resources and economic life.
Environmentalist
doctrine is anti-life, anti-value creation, and anti-wealth creation.
May
29, 2007
Michael
S. Rozeff [send him mail]
is a retired Professor of Finance living in East Amherst, New York.
Copyright
© 2007 LewRockwell.com
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