Rationally Speaking, We Are All Apocalyptic Now
By Robert Jensen
If we are rational and consider objective scientific
evidence of environmental collapse including groundwater depletion, topsoil
loss, chemical contamination, ocean dead zones, species extinction,
bio-diversity reduction and climate disruption, we need to be apocalypticists,
argues Robert Jensen.
We are all apocalyptic now, or at least we should be, if we
are rational.
Because "apocalyptic" is typically associated with
religious fanaticism and death cults - things that rational people tend not to
take literally or seriously - this claim requires some explanation.
First, a definition: The term is most commonly used in
reference to the Book of Revelation, also known as The Apocalypse of John, the
final book of the Christian New Testament. The two terms are synonymous in
their original meaning - "revelation" from Latin and
"apocalypse" from Greek, both mean a lifting of the veil, a
disclosure of something that had been hidden.
Second, the formulation "we are all (fill in the blank)
now" has long been a way to assert that certain ideas have become the
norm: "We are all Keynesians now," said Milton Friedman in 1965, for
instance, or to express solidarity: "We are all New Yorkers now,"
said many non-New Yorkers after 9/11.
Rather than claiming divine inspiration, we can come to
greater clarity about the desperate state of the ecosphere and its human
inhabitants through evidence and reason. It is time for a calm, measured
apocalypticism that recognizes that the ecosphere sets norms, which we have
ignored for too long, and that we need to develop a new sense of solidarity
among humans and with the larger living world.
So, speaking apocalyptically need not leave us stuck in a
corner with the folks predicting lakes of fire, rivers of blood or bodies
lifted up to the heavens. Instead, it can focus our attention on ecological
realities and on the unjust and unsustainable human systems that have brought
us to this point.
This "revelation" is simple: We've built a world
based on the assumption that we will have endless energy to subsidize endless
economic expansion, which was supposed to magically produce justice. That world
is over, both in reality and in dreams. Either we begin to build a different
world, or there will be no world capable of sustaining a large-scale human
presence.
If that's not clear: When we take seriously what physics,
chemistry and biology tell us about the health of the living world on which we
depend, we all should be thinking apocalyptically. Look at any crucial measure
of the ecosphere - groundwater depletion; topsoil loss; chemical contamination;
increased toxicity in our own bodies; the number and size of "dead
zones" in the oceans, accelerating extinction of species and reduction of
biodiversity; and the ultimate game-changer of climate disruption - and ask a
simple question: Where we are heading? Scientists these days are talking about
tipping points and planetary boundaries, about how human activity is pushing
the planet beyond its limits.
If we look honestly at the state of the world, it is
difficult not to conclude that we are in end times of sorts - not the end of
the physical world, but the end of the First-World way of living and the end of
the systems on which that life is based.
I know that invoking the terms "apocalypse" and
"end times" triggers many people's experiences with arrogant
religious people who preach about deliverance fantasies. My message is not
about a rapture that can be predicted, but about ruptures in the ecological and
social fabrics that are underway and accelerating.
No matter how carefully I craft these statements - no matter
how often I deny a claim to special gifts of prognostication, no matter now
clearly I reject supernatural explanations or solutions - many people refuse to
take this analysis seriously. Some people joke about "Mr. Doom and
Gloom." Others suggest that such talk is no different than conspiracy
theorists' ramblings about how international bankers, secret cells of
communists, or crypto-fascists are using the United Nations to create a
one-world government.
Even the most measured and careful talk of the coming
dramatic change in the place of humans on Earth leads to accusations that one
is unnecessarily alarmist, probably paranoid and certainly irrelevant in
serious discussions about social and ecological issues. In the United States,
people expect talk of the future to be upbeat, based on those assumptions of
endless expansion and perpetual progress, or at least maintenance of our "way
of life." Even those who realize the danger of such fanciful thinking are
hesitant to speak too bluntly, out of fear of seeming crazy.
A calm apocalypticism is not crazy, but rather can help us
confront honestly the crises of our time and strategize constructively about
possible responses. We can struggle to understand - to the best of our ability,
without succumbing to magical thinking - the state of the ecosphere and the
impediments to sensible action in our societies.
This struggle to understand led me to write a short polemic,
We Are All Apocalyptic Now: On the Responsibilities of Teaching, Preaching,
Reporting, Writing, and Speaking Out. The book's message is simple: The big
systems that structure our world, especially capitalism and the extractive
economy, are incompatible with social justice and ecological sustainability.
Those who have opportunities to write and speak out have a responsibility to
articulate the radical analysis necessary to understand the problems and begin
to identify solutions.
To think apocalyptically is not to give up on ourselves, but
only to give up on the arrogant stories - religious and secular - that we
modern humans have been telling about ourselves. Our hope for a decent future -
indeed, any hope for even the idea of a future - depends on our ability to tell
stories not of how humans have ruled the world, but how we can live in the
world.
We are all apocalyptic now, whether we like it or not.
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