Adopting a strategic perspective on revolutionary transformation

Charles Posa McFadden and Karen Howell McFadden, 2021-01

Our strategic (longer-term) perspective is evidently a revolutionary one, not limited to modest reforms that would leave capitalism as the globally dominant mode of production of essential goods and services. In the ten essays leading to this concluding argument, we have at some length argued that capitalism, with its accompanying ideology, is itself the main barrier to environmentally and socially sustainable relationships for making our way on Earth. Only a revolutionary perspective within each of the people’s struggles offers a path out of the environmental and social crises a dominant capitalism now accelerates.

The recent emergence within the mass popular resistance of a revolutionary movement for an ecologically sustainable civilization is the only path left to a continuing life affirming environment on Earth, at least one that would support human life and the large retinue of life forms and ecological relationships we require for our own existence.

At the same time, we continue to insist that there is no magic wand for bringing into existence an alternative to capitalism. The path to an ecologically sustainable civilization must be a continuous one, punctuated no doubt by significant events. People must have the means to live at every stage of the struggle for a future.

At every point in the people’s struggles, attention needs to be given to the continuing influence of capitalist culture. We will need to remind ourselves frequently that real revolutionaries (in any field of endeavour) do not aim to distinguish themselves from the rest of humanity, but rather to contribute to the process of an essential transition to a society beyond capitalism (and all other class-divided systems for making our way within nature).

Dimensions of the ecological challenge

Exploitative social systems (slavery, feudalism, and capitalism), in addition to being systems of class violence, are characterized by three ecological rifts. One is the metabolic rift, whereby some of the organic material needed to sustain human life becomes waste, that is, matter no longer accessible for the maintenance and reproduction of human and supporting life. Another rupture is the urban-rural divide, whereby humans are removed from naturally productive locations to urban centres which do not have all the natural conditions necessary to sustain human life. The third is the theory-practice divide endemic to the existence of social classes, whereby the classes engaged most closely in productive relationships with nature and natural materials are not equally engaged in the decision-making about how these relationships might best function to sustain human and other life.

Class society emerged and could only exist in a geological period of natural abundance. That abundance is now rapidly being transformed by capitalism into waste, creating conditions of material scarcity for the majority, while sustaining a diminishing minority in unprecedented individual wealth.

These consequences of a class-divided global human civilization have profound implications for the continuation of a sustainable relationship of human civilization with the Earth. Class relationships need to be fully replaced by communal ones so that the damaging consequences can be sufficiently repaired for the Earth to support many more human generations. The consequences for political policy are likely more profound than any political movement has so far been prepared to consider. But time is not on our side. Revolutionaries gain credibility by educating people for the changes that are needed, unlike those political leaders who fail or are unable to share this responsibility.

While the details will have to be worked out by generations of people, the broad outlines of needed social change follow from the identification of the systemic causes of ecological degradation. The following general policy directions should be part of any effort to address the ecological crisis humanity now faces:

  • Use of natural resources must be dramatically reduced, with emphasis on conservation, including durable construction of all structures and manufactured goods and priority to essential goods and services, shared equitably.
  • Organic waste must be retained where it is needed for the reproduction of life, or returned to locations where it is so needed, such as for sustainable agriculture, forestry and as part of the resources needed on land and in water bodies to sustain them as carbon sinks.
  • Class relationships must be ended, replaced by radical democracy to close the theory-practice gap, engaging all as environmental stewards, including bringing their experience and knowledge to bear on all work decisions with environmental consequences.
  • The urban-rural divide must be closed by bringing those currently living in urban areas closer to natural reproduction of life (ruralizing urban life) and by engaging all in the opportunities now available mainly in urban areas (urbanizing rural life).

Comparing an ecological civilization with contemporary capitalism

Table of comparisons:

CONTEMPORARY CAPITALISM ECOLOGICAL CIVILIZATION
Political-Economic Characteristics Political-Economic Goals
1. Legal priority of private profit over public good in the management of privately-owned capital 1. Stewardship responsibilities and usufruct rights, but no private ownership over nature.
2. Finance industry (banking, insurance, investment) conducted as private for-profit business with periodic financial meltdowns throwing millions out of work 2. Exchange of goods and services conducted on the principle "from each according to their ability to each according to their need"
3. Capital accumulation, growth in material throughput in the economy, expanding global population, economic "growth" measured as economic busy-ness, beneficial or not 3. Sustainable relationships with nature, based on conservative use of natural resources
4. Degradation of nature and human life, fetish on acquisition of personal wealth and consumption of superfluous quantities of goods and services 4. Improved quality of life, including human welfare in a healthy environment with a focus on durable goods and consequent reduction in material throughput
5. Vast private wealth accumulation alongside poverty 5. Equitable distribution of income and wealth in a sustainable economy, an end to poverty
6. International military-industrial complex as a major source of resource waste and environmental destruction, a principal recipient of corporate welfare and the main enforcer of trans-national corporate power 6. Conversion of military-industrial complex to peace-keeping, international search and rescue, first responder services during environmental disasters and source of international assistance
7. Trans-national for-profit corporations able to foment a race to the bottom in labor rights, environmental protection and social welfare 7. Locally, regionally and globally coordinated fair exchange of goods and services, based on local sovereignty and bottom-up decision-making, with strict enforcement of environmental and labor laws in the service of a just, sustainable future
Dominant Cultural Characteristics Cultural Values
1. Isolated individuals, exclusivity 1. Human solidarity, inclusivity
2. Corporate “citizenship rights”, economic power translated into political power, hierarchical top-down management of business and government 2. Citizens equal persons, not corporations, inclusive participatory democracy in all organizations and institutions, decision making of, by and for the people
3. A mixture of private and public science, the former constrained by secrecy, patents and copyrights 3. Science fully conducted in the public interest in public institutions, with free flow of ideas, knowledge and information globally
4. Commercial advertising as the dominant form of cultural expression and information 4. Imagination liberated from commerce, with advertising restricted to service in the public interest
5. All the education and justice an individual can buy 5. Education and justice services free to all at every level
6. Waste 6. Conservation

Roles revolutionaries can play in the people's social movements

The change from contemporary capitalism in all its nationally specific variants to an ecologically sustainable global civilization, in all its likely variants, may take many different paths, some with detours, others with water crossings, all with climbs and descents. Whatever the path that circumstances dictate, there will be need for the participation in the people’s movements of those whose aim is to reach an ecologically sustainable civilization, again in any of its local, regional, and national variants.

The following movements become revolutionary ones when they adopt aims and methods like the following.

A labor movement (social unionism) which:

  • beyond the immediate physical survival of working people and their families puts the interests of the global working class before any other short term interests of any of its detachments, joining the fight against poverty wherever it exists and by opposing militarism, racism, sexism, homophobia, xenophobia and all other forms of oppression of people (global working-class solidarity),
  • champions the environment, protecting it for future generations (working class environmental stewardship),
  • behaves thoroughly democratically in its own organizations, including adherence to the principle of the primacy of the rank and file over those in formal positions of leadership, and militantly opposes all manifestations of authoritarianism, beginning in the workplace (working class democracy),
  • fights for a living wage for a reduced number of work hours, enabling working people to spend more time with their families and in voluntary contributions to their communities, thereby expanding the non-market sector of the economy at the expense of an ultimately vanishing capitalist market economy (working class morality),
  • aims for an equal say in all work-related decisions that concern the health and welfare of the community, ultimately replacing “management rights” with the fundamental right of working people to manage their own workplaces (economic democracy).

An environmental movement which

  • opposes private property rights to nature and natural resources, working to replace these with stewardship rights and obligations (environmental stewardship),
  • fights for legislation and constitutional change aimed at a rapid winding down of the fossil fuel economy, and a just transition to an alternative economy based equally on safer, alternative energy sources and conservative, sustainable use of all resources (creating a sustainable economy),
  • links its fight for the environment with a commensurate fight for human equality, including passing along the full costs of the transition to those most able to pay (making the new economy a just one).

A civic movement which

  • works to create resilient communities that prioritize people and nature over private profits (resilient communities),
  • actively builds a culture and practice of community participation in decision-making and action (participatory democracy),
  • uses its electoral victories to create public banks as transitional means to a non-market ecologically sustainable economy, including the transfer from private banks of all public funds and financial transactions, with an investment priority in public institutions and democratic worker managed businesses needed in the construction of an alternative just, sustainable economy, featuring family and cooperative worker owned and run enterprises and initiatives (public banking for the new economy),
  • works for a new era of enlightenment based on community oriented and diverse, vibrant forms of public education, science, communication and culture (the new era of enlightenment),
  • is thoroughly engaged in national and international politics, making local communities beach-heads in the struggle for an ecologically sustainable global civilization, including the ultimate aim of overwhelming the centralized, autocratic economic and political power of the billionaire class (transition towns and communities).

Non-violent democratic political movements which in addition to the above include political parties and policy advocacy organizations which

  • work both inside and outside of parliamentary/governmental bodies and for-profit and non-profit business and non-business organizations to push for the goal of an ecologically sustainable civilization, that is, a just, sustainable global community,
  • emphasize education and culture, including learning, teaching and inspiring as integral to the progressive movements,
  • respect and learn from the knowledge and experience of others regardless of and indeed because of initial differences in understanding and outlook,
  • recognize that the comfort of sectarian affirmation is a dead-end for those who seek a just, sustainable future,
  • accept the challenge of the necessary give and take in every creative, problem-solving endeavor,
  • recognize and act on the recognition that as long as extreme wealth and income inequality continues we cannot match the power of the wealthiest to buy representation from lobbyists, politicians and think-tanks,
  • give priority instead to our strength in numbers, experience and determination,
  • rely on our collective might as volunteers in the struggle for a just, sustainable future,
  • defeat the autocracy of the few by the democracy of the many.

This concluding essay has focused on some of the shapes which contemporary revolutionary activity can take. Many have already made the commitment to active participation in the revolutionary struggle for an ecologically sustainable global community.

To those in process of making that decision, let us conclude with the following observations. More than a mere antidote to the despair that continuing environmental and social degradation can create, the opportunity now exists to participate in struggles that have a realistic possibility of realizing some of humanity’s most cherished aims. This is reason enough for celebration. Joining in the struggle for a just, radically democratic, ecologically sustainable global community is the path of hope, friendship, and a meaningful existence.

Charles Posa McFadden and Karen Howell McFadden, Fredericton, New Brunswick, Canada, www.greensocialdemocracy.org, This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.

Welcome!

Now in our fourteenth year, this website was launched September 1, 2010 in response to the convergence of growing inequality within and between countries and a rapidly developing ecological catastrophe. After several years of further participation in the social justice, democratic and environmental movements of the people and discussions with many of our friends in these movements about draft essays we have posted to this website, we believe we now have a relatively brief, coherent set of eleven arguments that can serve as a basis for further discussion and development by those committed to taking action to reverse the neoliberal tidal wave and move forward to the achievement of an ecologically sustainable global civilization. These were completed by spring 2021. Our further arguments, including updates on our prior posted ones, can be found in the What's New Section which accompanies each page. - C&K McFadden

What's New

Winter 2024

Charles Posa McFadden with assistance from Karen Howell McFadden and Scott Cameron McFadden

The Path to an Ecologically Sustainable Future is that of Class Struggle

Summer - Fall 2023

Charles Posa McFadden with assistance from Karen Howell McFadden and Scott Cameron McFadden

Achieving an ecological civilization is the challenge before us. A knowledge of applicable empirically validated natural and social science laws is the key that opens the door.

Charles Posa McFadden with assistance from Karen Howell McFadden

An alternative to destruction by capitalism: The case for communism

Winter - Spring 2023

Charles Posa McFadden with assistance from Karen Howell McFadden and Scott Cameron McFadden

For a future beyond capitalism

1. A contemporary lens for addressing the existential crises we now face

2. For a future, we must end the systemic causes of destruction and waste

3. Meeting the urgent need for revolutionary political renewal

Fall 2022

C & K McFadden (Sept. 2022): Capitalism is genocide and ecocide

Winter 2022

C McFadden (Feb. 2022) For Canada: On Freedom - A response to the “Freedom” Convoy

C & K McFadden (Feb. 2022) For Canada: A House Divided

C & K McFadden (Jan. 2022): The Need for an Ecosocialist Revolutionary Movement

Fall 2021

C & K McFadden (Sept. 2021) For Canada:  For a future: Organize!

Winter 2020-21

C McFadden (Feb. 2021) How scarcity necessitates a more ecologically sustainable global community and digital technology makes that feasible

C&K McFadden (Dec. 2020) Can Greens avoid the pitfalls of capitalist electoral politics?

Spring 2020

C&K McFadden Canadian electoral politics and the global loss of legitimacy of the neoliberal project

Fall 2019

C&K McFadden Beyond Marx for a 21st Century Revolutionary Perspective

Spring 2019

C&K McFadden To Change the System, We Must Know the System!

Fall 2018 

C&K McFadden, we either escape the internal logic of capitalism or descend with it into barbarism

C&K McFadden, We Need an Updated Manifesto 

Don Fitz, Revolving Doors

C McFadden, The Greens Have It Right

Don Fitz, Is Nuclear Power a Solution to the Climate Crisis  

CANADA

C&K McFadden (February 2022) A House Divided

C McFadden (February 2022) On Freedom - A response to the “Freedom” Convoy

C&K McFadden (September 2021) For a future: Organize!

David Gehl (2018), Fight Climate Change Not War

C&K McFadden (2018), It is time for Canada to do the right thing by its First Nations

George Hewison (2018)WINNIPEG 1919 & THE COLD WAR

George Hewison (2018)Art Manuel - "Unsettling Canada

NEW BRUNSWICK 

Charles & Karen McFadden, An Historic Turning Point on the Journey to Recovery from Capitalism and its History of Colonialism: Reclaiming Wolastoq Ceremony

Charles McFadden, Decolonizing the U.S. & Canada: The People United for a More Just Sustainable Future


REVIEWS 

Charles McFadden Is Canada a force for good in the world, as many imagine? Review of Tyler Shipley (2020) Canada in the World: Settler capitalism and the colonial imagination

Karen and Charles McFaddenCan emergent early 21st century neo-fascism be defeated without coming to grips with late 20th century restructuring of capitalism into a global system Review of William I Robinson (2014) Global Capitalism and the Crisis of Humanity

Karen and Charles McFaddenA Dominant Capitalism or a Sustainable Environment? Why we can't have both. Review of Fred Magdoff and John Bellamy Foster (2011) What Every Environmentalist Needs to Know About Capitalism

 

 

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