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Forum Post: Memo to the Occupy Wall St Movement

Posted 12 years ago on Oct. 6, 2011, 4:19 p.m. EST by anonrez (237)
This content is user submitted and not an official statement

Original: http://www.postcarbon.org/blog-post/523782-memo-to-the-occupied-movement-a

Here’s a fact that's hard for most Americans to swallow: economic growth is over. Given the finite nature of our planet and its resources, the recent trend of global economic expansion was destined to end. No stimulus package or slashing of social programs is going to flip the economy back to an expansionary trajectory. We’ve hit the proverbial wall, and this will be the defining reality of our lives from now on.

The growth-seeking political-economic system has failed us. Today that system is dominated by Wall Street. “Goldman Sachs rules the world,” trader Alessio Rastani told us in a now-viral BBC interview. I met people like Rastani in researching my book, The End of Growth. At one lavish conference, 800 global investors packed a hotel ballroom to consider climate change. There was no talk of how to avert or mitigate floods and droughts. Instead, the discussion focused on profiting from warming with — no joke — weather derivatives. These folks were just doing their job, despite any private feelings of concern, remorse, or dread. And each was getting paid enough to single-handedly fund a midsize school district.

Both Wall Street and Washington are trying to do something impossible: grow human consumption forever in a world of limited energy, minerals, water, topsoil, and biodiversity, all while protecting and expanding the riches of the top one percent. If economic growth is over, that means we can no longer count on a rising tide to lift all boats. Under these conditions, extreme income inequality is not just unfair, it is socially unsustainable.

It’s strategic to bring protest to Wall Street rather than Washington. We must go directly to the crime scene — not with a request for reforms, but with an arrest warrant from the people.

You courageous people in the #occupy movement are absolutely right in saying the system is broken, greedy, and unfair. But when our discussion turns to replacing the current system, we’ve got to embrace a bigger view of reality than the one held by stock traders and politicians. It's not just our wealth they want to control, it's our vision for what is both possible and necessary. We need a post-growth economy that works both for people (all of them) and for the rest of nature: a localized economy based on renewable resources harvested at nature’s rates of replenishment, not a fossil-fueled global economy driven by the imperative of ever-higher returns on investment.

There will be life after growth — and it can be a better life if our nation’s priority is the quality of life of our people and the integrity of the biosphere, rather than stock prices and corporate profits.

With support,

Richard Heinberg Senior Fellow, Post Carbon Institute www.postcarbon.org

14 Comments

14 Comments


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[-] 3 points by yari (32) from Syracuse, NY 12 years ago

It is definitely time to redefine our priorities and how we plan to attain them.

[-] 2 points by alwaysazbull (26) 12 years ago

I agree that we need to think more strategically and find a deliberate solution. But first we need to get rid of the dry-heave we call Washington and Wall Street. We are all full of rage: conservatives, progressives, independents. We need to start all over again with the Bill of Rights and Constitution and go from there. Obama, the Tea Party, Goldman Sachs, the Fraudulant Reserve, all need to be sat in a corner in a time out and We The People will take it from there.

[-] 1 points by anonrez (237) 12 years ago

I couldn't agree with you more.

[-] 2 points by PeterBoyle (8) from Mt Gilead, OH 12 years ago

Read the Mission Statement of our Constitution (the Preamble)...it says it all and not one mention of corporations or unending growth.

We the People of the United States, in Order to form a more perfect Union, establish Justice, insure domestic Tranquility, provide for the common defence, promote the general Welfare, and secure the Blessings of Liberty to ourselves and our Posterity, do ordain and establish this Constitution for the United States of America.

[-] 1 points by anonrez (237) 12 years ago

Something to think about - are we just here to demand a bigger piece of the pie? Or are we questioning the value of the pie itself (i.e. perpetual economic growth, consumerism, etc).

[-] 0 points by HankRearden (476) 12 years ago

False paradigm.

It's not a pie. Wealth is created, and wealth is consumed. It flows like a river.

There are all kinds of schemes to dam it up, divert it, or dip into it. And most of them are based on one kind of bogeyman or another, intended to scare people into accepting some justification for controlling them and getting them to give up their wealth. Like this one.

You don't get to 'divide up' what I create. If you try, I'll stop producing, and the flow will dry up. Once there isn't anything left for you to steal, I guess you can go back to the paradigm -- an empty pie plate, all of it eaten and nobody making any more.

[-] 1 points by anonrez (237) 12 years ago

Hank, I think you're missing the point here. Wealth is dependent upon the natural world, which has hard physical limits which our civilization is running aground upon.

Perpetual growth is a cancerous madness which is neither possible nor desirable. The drive for infinite expansion and for wringing more and more profits out of every feature of the world is the paradigm which is destroying the future of the 99%.

[-] 1 points by HankRearden (476) 12 years ago

The requirement for perpetual growth stems from the fact that our currency is issued as debt with compounding interest. Return to commodity money as outlined in the constitution, and the problem is solved. And no need to take over the entire economy, either.

[-] 1 points by anonrez (237) 12 years ago

I agree 100% with you on the fiat money = debt equation. I don't know where anyone said something about "taking over" the entire economy (who's doing the taking over?)

[-] 0 points by HankRearden (476) 12 years ago

Sorry, I was leaping to an unwarranted conclusion.

That's usually what comes out in the next breath after the perpetual growth thing is brought up. Sorry.

[-] 0 points by HankRearden (476) 12 years ago

Cash in on that fear!

(But some of us aren't buying the fear.)

[-] 0 points by Sinecure (5) from Clifton, NJ 12 years ago

Abolish the federal reserve and bring back the gold standard.

[-] 1 points by anonrez (237) 12 years ago

Did you even read what was posted?

[-] 2 points by alwaysazbull (26) 12 years ago

The reason Mother Nature is taking it in the rear is because corporations have the rights of a citizen, but aren't held accountable like a citizen. Plus, the way our economy is set-up, big business gets all the tax-breaks and the little guy has no power to make a difference. The politicians are bought. The corporations don't give a crap about the environment unless they can extract resources from it for a profit.