New paradigm Essential; variegated activist
movement Imperative
Editing by Carolyn Bennett
Hundreds of millions of people embrace a construct of mass
consumption and pursue a lifestyle exported by U.S. capitalism as an ideal of
happiness.
They demand increasing amounts of flashy goods, manufactured
according to the logic of planned obsolescence, private use, waste, and
disposability. Thus they consume more and more resources: energy, raw
materials, food, and environmental services.
This kind of growth feeds new and
future crises in fuel, raw materials, and food; and accelerates greenhouse-gas
emissions and global warming.
The only thing the world of capital can come up with is
delusional promises that technological innovations will solve the problems. To
ensure that nothing keeps the system from prospering, democracy is being
corrupted by the power of money; whenever necessary, democracy is simply
suppressed.
Corrosive, inordinate, concentrated power
Corporations have maintained their capital accumulation and
market speculators have their profits guaranteed. Rich countries are being
affected by stagnation and crisis but majorities are suffering deeply.
The majority world populations are suffering austerity
policies, massive unemployment, the rise of inequalities, and the brunt of stronger
and stronger conservative political currents and extreme-right policies, most
notably publicized are those in the United States and Europe. And in the
current global power structure controlled by vested interests of multinational
corporations, the “developed” and “emerging” countries and powers controlling their
economies have no real intention of challenging the ‘business (model) of
development.’
|
Paradigm Shift
a must |
|
Another Future
a must
is Possible
|
However, there has been an enormous change in global
geopolitics. Global capitalism now works at two speeds: the dynamics of
accumulation in the core countries are disconnected from what are called
emerging markets; thus posing new problems for social transformation. Therefore
it is our belief that the necessary
agenda for global democratic governance presupposes the end of the current
situation, in which corporative interests have taken over multilateral arenas.
|
Somalis |
Vast disparity
Though millions of people in Asia and Latin America are
improving their standards of living and consuming a little more than they used
to consume, social inequality is rising almost everywhere.
Deeply harmful countervailing forces are inherent in the
prevailing model of inequality and income concentration, over-exploitation and
job insecurity, environmental degradation, concentration of land ownership,
growth of slums, ever poorer social services.
Small improvements are talked up and contradictions are
ignored. An ‘all-is-well’ logic obstructs formation of a counter-hegemonic
project. Thus all problems drag on—three years after the deepest economic
crisis since the Great Depression (1929), three years after speculation by
financial giants caused devastating rises in commodities and food prices, four
years after the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) warned of the
urgent need to transition to a low-carbon economy—with no solution in
perspective.
|
Wall Streeters |
Business, the only concern of established powers, proceeds
as usual. No lessons learned; no
structural change. This suicidal trend grows number and intensity.
|
Environmentals |
Shortcomings in uprisings
|
Immigrants |
Indignant citizens are rebelling in many parts of the world
but the dynamics of anti-system forces within, between and among continents and
countries are deeply fragmented, unequal and disarticulated.
There has yet to occur an alliance among difference or variety,
an articulation joining the diversity into a great irreversible movement.
|
Strength in Diversity |
Multifarious activist movement model a must
Change will inexorably require action by the greatest
possible representation of social actors.
We must build a new paradigm of social, economic, and
political organizations whose actions are enhanced by —
|
Peoples Summit |
Judicious, foresighted use of existing material
and technological conditions to establish the necessary, new forms of
production, consumption, and political organization;
|
Grassroots Movement |
Learning from experiences of ongoing
struggles in multifarious, variegated sectors:
- Varieties of broad networks
- Varieties of groups independent of governments
|
Peoples Summit
for
Social and Environmental Justice |
- Varieties of social movements (e.g., among
environmentalists, farmers and urban workers, women, youth networks, popular
movements, indigenous peoples, ethnic minorities facing discrimination, solidarity
economy networks)
Sources and notes
“Another Future is Possible” (by Thematic Social Forum
available in languages in addition to English: Working Paper compiled “of all
the proposals taken from the texts produced by the Thematic Groups at the
Thematic Social Forum of Porto Alegre (January 24-29, 2012). Bringing together
the thematic groups under four core themes is a proposal for articulating the
different themes… Come to Reinvent the World at Rio+20”), June 11, 2012, http://rio20.net/en/iniciativas/another-future-is-possible
http://rio20.net/en/
The next Earth Summit Rio+20 (the United Nations Conference
on Sustainable Development—will be held from June 20-22, 2012 in Rio de
Janeiro, Brazil.
This summit comes twenty years after the first historic
summit in Rio de Janeiro in 1992, ten years after the 2002 Johannesburg; and is
a new attempt by the United Nations, in this new millennium, to advance the
commitment of States and the world community in major transitions of the twenty-first
century.
Meeting at the same time as the Earth Summit Rio+20 is the Peoples
Summit for Social and Environmental Justice.
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Bennett's books are available in New York State independent bookstores: Lift Bridge Bookshop: www.liftbridgebooks.com [Brockport, NY]; Sundance Books: http://www.sundancebooks.com/main.html [Geneseo, NY]; Mood Makers Books: www.moodmakersbooks.com [City of Rochester, NY]; Dog Ears Bookstore and Literary Arts Center: www.enlightenthedog.org/ [Buffalo, NY]; Burlingham Books – ‘Your Local Chapter’: http://burlinghambooks.com/ [Perry, NY 14530]; The Bookworm: http://www.eabookworm.com/ [East Aurora, NY] • See also: World Pulse: Global Issues through the eyes of Women: http://www.worldpulse.com/ http://www.worldpulse.com/pulsewire
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