Friday, September 25, 2020

Justice: What and Whence?

 

We in the United States are experiencing a surge in demands for justice, mostly prompted by the videotaped murder of George Floyd by a Minneapolis police officer last May. The outpouring of rage and grief by both African Americans and white sympathizers was immediate and nation-wide; even world-wide. While there is much to be said about such a response (and indeed about the varying responses from our elected officials such as the President), I am interested here rather in the basic concept behind the outrage. In a word, I am interested in what we understand as justice, and where the concept derives from. It turns out that major thinkers, including some of the greatest minds in the western tradition, have been pondering this question for millennia. 

            We can begin, as usual, with the ancient Greeks. Plato in The Republic and Aristotle in his Nicomachean Ethicsboth discussed the problem at some length. Without getting too deeply into the weeds, we can say briefly that Plato has Socrates argue that the essence of justice is harmony—harmony between the parts of a human, and a corresponding harmony between the parts of a city-state. Socrates makes the argument, self-interested to be sure, that a city-state will be well-run if a philosopher (or philosopher-king) makes the important decisions. Why? Because a philosopher is the only one disinterested enough to understand, and to aim, like an expert navigator guiding a ship, toward the good. Of course, the question immediately arises, what is the good? But Plato seems to imply that it is both an unknowable and self-evident and formless ideal.

            Other thinkers, like John Stuart Mill, have not been so content with this kind of vague ideal. Mill argued for something we all might ascribe to: that what is just is what has the best consequences for the most people. Simple and solid. For John Locke, however, justice in society is what accords with “natural law”—that is, giving to groups or individuals what they deserve. Then there are theories that align justice with the idea of fairness, basically an impartial distribution of goods, with no concern for deserts. But on what basis is this to be decided? John Rawls proposes two basic measures for just distribution: distribution based on, say, hard work; and distribution based on simple humanity, which everyone has. Karl Marx was an adherent of this latter idea: that is, goods should be distributed in a just society according to the principle, “from each according to his ability, to each according to his need,” regardless of what is earned, or what one’s social status might be.  But property rights theorists strongly object to this redistributive justice idea. Robert Nozick, for example, considers that all attempts to redistribute goods according to some ideal, without the consent of their owners, are theftand that even taxation (to achieve some kind of fair redistribution) is a form of theft. 

            There are more theories, to be sure, but the basic question remains: where do these ideas of justice, of fairness, of equality before the law, come from? Many people would argue that justice comes from, and is only achievable by the Divine: Justice is mine, saith the Lord; except that the actual words are “Vengeance is mine” (Romans 12: 17-19, from Deuteronomy 32:35). It is notable that here, justice seems to be equated with the primal concept of vengeance, or punishment. This is all well and good, if one is content with the idea that justice comes from God (the word "just" occurs eighty-four times in the Bible, and "justice" occurs twenty times), and that’s that. But even Plato in Euthyphro elucidated the dilemma with this question: does God command the morally good because it is inherently good, or do we consider it good because it’s commanded by God? The implication is that if it’s commanded by God, we can’t really understand the good, or justice; whereas, if it’s because justice is inherently good, then it exists independently of God and therefore can and should be subject to human judgment. 

            But there is one other aspect of vengeance or justice belonging only to God that bears some scrutiny. Giving the right to exact vengeance only to God is a kind of sign of the advance into complex society, a way of curbing the impulses of each human trying to take vengeance into his or her own hands. It is easy to see that this kind of primal, individual vengeance, in larger societies, can lead to escalating and uncontrollable cycles of violence—one killing, say, leading to another in retaliation, which leads to another vengeance killing, ad infinitum. So it is that the prerogative of vengeance or justice becomes limited—to the powerful god, leader, king, lord of the manor, and finally to the state. Justice becomes, to a degree at least, limited to certain entities, and thereby becomes more or less impersonal, or objective. An injured party is no longer permitted to seize someone who has committed a crime against him and punish or kill that person outright. In complex societies, the state reserves for itself the exclusive right to punish, to exact vengeance, to kill; and its offices for doing so are given the name and attributes of Justice—usually, in name if not in practice, blind or equal justice under the law—depending always on whatever set of laws pertain in a given society.

            Before getting to legal justice and its implementation, however, perhaps we should look further into the idea that justice is “natural,” that is, stemming from nature. And here, there have been some recent studies that are of great interest—though not so flattering, perhaps, to the human need to feel unique. Several studies have been done in recent years to investigate whether nonhuman primates, in particular, exhibit a sense of “fairness” similar to that of humans. Franz DeWaal has experimented and written extensively about this, and his studies, documented in, among other places, his 2013 book, The Bonobo and the Atheist: In Search of Humanism Among the Primates, (Norton: 2013), reveal what he maintains is the evolution of fairness (the rudimentary germ of justice) among primates. DeWaal and his associates engaged capuchin monkeys in a variation of what, for humans, is called the Ultimatum Game—where one player, the proposer, has a sum of money to split, either fairly or unfairly, between himself and the other player, the responder. When humans play the game, they almost universally favor splitting the money evenly; brain scans of those facing the unfair distribution of rewards “reveal negative emotions, such as scorn or anger,” and often a refusal to accept an unfair split at all. With monkeys the reaction to unfair distribution is strikingly similar. If two monkeys, unrelated but cooperating partners, are given unequal rewards for a task—one receives highly-prized grapes; the other receives not-so-highly-prized cucumber slices—the deprived monkey (the one given the cucumber) simply refuses to play, and often destroys the game. DeWaal comments: 

Refusing perfectly fine food because someone else is better off resembles human performance in the Ultimatum Game. Economists call this response “irrational,” given that something is always better than nothing…If these responses are irrational, however, it is an irrationality that transcends species… Fairness and justice are therefore best looked at as ancient capacities. They derive from the need to preserve harmony in the face of resource competition. We share both stages of fairness with the apes, and the first stage with monkeys and dogs (DeWaal, The Bonobo and the Atheist, 231-34).

 

In short, Franz DeWaal and many others now have found that, especially in ‘higher-order’ species that cooperate in hunting, fairness in reward distribution outweighs what economists would judge to be rational (is it not better to accept some money or food as opposed to none at all?). This is not only common but appears necessary, probably because it ensures sustained cooperation between rivals in a life-giving pursuit. Since humans, too, are pre-eminently a cooperating species (having evolved in hunter-gatherer groups), the sense of fairness and justice that has evolved goes very deep, and runs along a similar line of emotional rather than what we call rational judgment.

            What we can conclude, then, is that an evolved sense of fairness predates humans in evolution, and informs human notions of what is just. Justice means that people with whom we have some relation (e.g., all members of our family, tribe, community, nation, continent, and ultimately, of the species homo sapiens), are felt by most of us viscerally (if not intellectually) to deserve fair treatment, or justice.  Without fair treatment, whether it is from the economic system or the justice system, we can expect either refusal to play or refusal to cooperate. And we can see that this refusal comes about when the perceived unfairness or injustice passes a certain threshold. Most humans, that is, can tolerate some injustice as “just the way it is:” the system is stacked, and always has been, against the poor, the marginalized, the foreigner, the differently colored or gendered or endowed. But when the injustice gets beyond a certain point, then those at the receiving end of such injustice either refuse to play the game (rejecting the rules) or seek to overturn or destroy the game altogether. You then have peasants’ revolts, or the French Revolution, or urban riots in the streets, or whatever form the refusal takes. 

            And this is where the notion of the reigning power having the exclusive right to mete out vengeance or justice comes in. For when many people begin to see that the system is rigged—usually in favor of those with some inside access to information, or to the reigning monarch, or to the officials in charge of overseeing the fair distribution of goods, or the fair enforcing of justice—then that system begins to be seen as corrupt or irrelevant or of no value except to those insiders whose goods or property are being protected. Indeed, the late Howard Zinn maintained that the highest court in the U.S. justice system was essentially useless to the average American. In a 2005 essay, he maintained that the only way justice has ever been implemented for the mass of people without power, was when they took to the streets and demanded change. Then, and only then, would the Supreme arbiters of Justice, regardless of affiliation, move to align themselves with the significant shift in opinion. Otherwise, they would simply maintain the status quo best suited to the powerful with whom they identify (Howard Zinn, “Don’t Despair About the Supreme Court” The Progressive, Oct. 21, 2005, www.progressive.org). 

            Where does that leave us, then, regarding the concept of justice and its utility? We can, I think, certainly agree that in modern complex societies, it won’t do to have individuals taking vengeance for each wrong committed against them (as we see often in gangster movies, or dramas about rogue cops who implement rough justice on their own): there would be slaughter in the streets on a regular basis. Still, we must admit that we usually cheer when the “bad guys” can no longer hide behind the law, and get their comeuppance directly, though we also know this won’t work in actual practice. We know this because of what has actually happened in the streets of America, both historically and  recently—where vigilante groups have either threatened or killed those they deem “outlaws” or violators of what they deem “good” social behavior. We have also seen it too frequently on the part of the police when they gun down or choke or otherwise inflict mortal injury on people they deem either dangerous, or just insufficiently responsive to their commands. Too often, these law officers are excused from liability for their murders (as has just now happened in the Breonna Taylor case). Too often, also, public servants in high office judge it a good thing that this punishment is meted out—as for example, when the President of the United States, the chief law enforcement official in the nation, actually said on Fox News that the killing of Michael Reinoehl by U.S. Marshals sent to arrest him (Reinoehl was accused of killing Jay Danielson in Portland), was “the way it has to be. There has to be retribution when you have a crime like this (The Oregonian, Sept. 13, 2020).” This is an astonishing statement. For what it appears to justify is extra-judicial murder—with the officers acting as judge, jury, and executioners. No trial. No legal rights. No presumption of innocence. No right to witnesses or examination of proof or the right to face accusers in a court of law, all basic rights of Americans enshrined in the Constitution and the Bill of Rights. Such rights and protections have long been established in most states as fair exchange by citizens for giving up personal vengeance and conferring it on the state. They mean that neither the state nor any of its rulers any longer has the right to seize people and execute them without at least a show of these legal procedures—all of which together symbolize and represent Justice. For a chief law enforcement officer to express approval of officers killing a suspect without any procedures at all—that takes us backwards several degrees to kings and dictators taking the law into their own hands, and simply killing their enemies. Which is little better than mass vengeance killings. Too much of this kind of practice and a state is likely to lose all its legitimacy—which is to say all pretense of justice.

Thus, we see that defining justice is difficult enough when we are talking about legal or court-of-law justice. But when we are talking about implementing social justice, the difficulty is compounded. That is because, as was hinted at above, the just distribution of a society’s goods gets into very knotty problems. Who should get what from a just society’s production? Many people in our culture would argue that only people who work should get a fair portion of a society’s goods, and that the amount each gets for his toil must be determined by the marketplace. But that leads to the situation the United States is in currently. That is, people who do little that can be called work—at least traditional work—are receiving an overwhelming portion of the society’s goods, i.e. wealth, preeminently from their investments in the stock market. And a few at the top—Jeff Bezos, CEO of Amazon, or Mark Zuckerberg, CEO of Facebook, or other dot.com billionaires—earn more in an hour than average workers earn in a year—with the workers doing actual physical labor, while the dot-com-ers gather dividends from the automatic workings of the market.  The statistics are forbidding: some 2,000 men of this kind have gathered to themselves more net worth than over 60% of the world’s population combined. This is inequality—which many would call ‘injustice’—of the most visible and insulting kind. And it raises the question about a society’s priorities; questions about what a society values, and on what basis does it reward its members. 

These are all question of social justice—which many would deny even has legitimacy as a concept. But many others would maintain that these are the real questions that matter in any society. They lead to the root question about which is more important: property or people. And whether preserving and protecting property—regardless of how it has come to be owned (Balzac once observed that behind every great fortune lies a great crime)—is so much more important than preserving and protecting individual life, protecting the entire planet’s ability to support life.  For that is the other aspect of justice that is looming over our world these days. Do those who earn billions have any obligation to not just contribute to the well-being of those who work for them and actually create their wealth, but to the rest of life, to the planet and its health? For the most part, especially in recent years, the answer to this question has been, a resounding NO. Such considerations are “externalities,” is the economists’ argument, and businesses have no obligation to take them into account, nor take responsibility for the damage they cause. And of course, the type case is multi-national oil companies and their responsibility (or not) for the alarming rise of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere, and hence global warming. Is it fair and just, that is, for companies and their leaders to make billions in profits from a product that is leading to the displacement and probable death of millions of human beings? The same question could be asked of countless corporations that produce plastics that are polluting the oceans and our cells; of farming giants whose production of meats leads to the pollution of vital water supplies; of giant farms whose use of pesticides leads to the demise of critical insects and pollinators; of manufacturers whose production and use of paper destroys virgin forests; and on and on. What is the responsibility of these critical parts of any society, and what is the responsibility of a society in general for the well-being of all of its members? Can it be that the most important job of any society is to simply protect the property if its wealthiest contributors, and let the health of overwhelming numbers of poorer people care for itself? Growing numbers of people think not. Many now think that a just society would and should make health care a universal right. Many others think that societies can be designed to put the well-being of all their members—not just the wealthy, and not just physical but mental and social well-being as well—at the forefront of their duties. Such a society would include, for example, care for family well-being by providing flexible work-time to allow mothers to spend more time with their growing children; worker cooperatives to give employees more control over their workplaces (including profit-sharing and company governance), giving greater meaning to their working lives; the obligation of all producers to  take responsibility for what happens to their products when they are worn out and disposed of; all of which could help with the gross inequality and resulting mental and physical health problems increasingly plaguing modern capitalist societies like the United States (see Tabita Green, “What a Society Designed for Well-Being Looks Like,” 9/18/18, resilience.org). These and other changes are not that radical either; many Scandinavian nations already have many of these practices in place, and their so-called happiness and health and longevity indices far surpass that of the United States and other nations which leave all such allegedly ‘socialist’ considerations to the marketplace. 

All this doesn’t even begin to broach the subject that is so noisy these days—the question of how to change the system that has left African Americans and Native Americans and people of color in general at the bottom of the social ladder for so long. It has been traditional to say that each of these groups has the same rights and advantages as the rest of American society, and only need to use their bootstraps to raise themselves to equality. But that rationale has all but collapsed with the rise of the Black Lives Matter movement, which makes it quite plain that the justice system in America, if it exists at all, is far from blind when it comes to skin color (the numbers of black and brown people in our prisons should be a national scandal—see Michelle Alexander’s The New Jim Crow for a searing account of this). For it is clear that this has never in all American history been the case, and, with so many murders of black men that the incontrovertible evidence of video has demonstrated in recent years, that it is perhaps less so now. Police are several times more likely to see people of color as a threat, and resort to their weapons to subdue them, than they are with white suspects—even those carrying automatic weapons, with evidence of their having used them. And when such cases get to the courts, the difference between what happens to those with ample money to hire expert lawyers, and those who must depend on public defenders, is a graphic and a visible blot on the entire system. Nor does the overt prejudice of many white judges help. All of this to say that, though our system claims that American justice is blind and we’re all equal before the law, the evidence proves the opposite:  that justice American-style depends on who you are, what connections you have (when I was in college and working a summer job, I got vivid evidence of this: a bunch of us got drunk one night, and swam in the club swimming pool, throwing chairs in and generally creating mayhem, after which the police seized a few of us and were about to throw the book at us, until one of the guy’s parents, a local judge, intervened; we got off with nothing more than a mild warning, and a “boys will be boys” eye roll), and how much money you can afford for bail and/or lawyers.

What then are we to conclude? Does justice even exist here on earth? And even further, does the arc of the moral universe bend toward Justice, as Martin Luther King famously claimed? Or must we wait for the Last Judgment for everyone, including the evil-doers, to get  their just deserts? Or for karma, as in Buddhism, which may take more than one lifetime to take effect, to work? Often enough, in our world, that seems to be the case. The real world, the samsaric world, is hopelessly corrupt. The good too often die young; evil-doers and those with no discernible morals or ethics, seem to thrive. We still maintain hope that they will get their comeuppance in this life; we identify with films and dramas in which poetic justice prevails and the good are rewarded, while the evil ones suffer as we believe they should. But does this truly ever happen? 

It’s hard to provide a firm conclusion here, but we can say, I think, that true justice is rare, just as the truly just man is rare. And so we are left with the consolations of philosophy; or religion (in which justice will come in the afterlife); or karma, in which the effects of evil deeds are to be fulfilled several lifetimes from now, when rebirth as worms or rodents or other disagreeable characters fulfills the iron law of karmic retribution from which no one escapes. Until then, though, most of us will have to find some way to adapt: either by accepting the fact that justice is not for this world; or by working—generally regardless of any great expectation of success—to make the justice systems we have better, fairer, and more just. Or by working to slowly or rapidly overturn the entire system in an effort to begin anew. Something like that may be happening now, and for my part, I do not hope, but do wish fervently for its success. Whether that can happen in time to stave off several impending catastrophes is something else again; but do any of us, if we truly believe in justice for all, really have a choice? 

 

Lawrence DiStasi

 

 

Tuesday, September 15, 2020

Recycling Plastic: Yet Another Corporate Con


I have written about plastics several times in recent years, and each time I have expressed my frustration with the intractability of dealing with this ubiquitous material that only humans make. But now, after reading the latest exposé of the plastics industry, I am not just frustrated, I am feeling betrayed and really pissed off. That’s because what the NPR report by Laura Sullivan (“How Big Oil Misled The Public Into Believing Plastic Would Be Recycled” Sept. 11, 2020) reveals is that the recycling that all of us have long thought was at least mitigating the problem, by turning much of the plastic waste clogging our world into many repurposed plastic products we could use, was an elaborate con. A con that lured many of us, who have dutifully separated our plastic waste for years, looking for the triangle symbol at the bottom, and feeling relieved that it could be recycled rather than thrown away, have gone for hook, line and sinker. I personally have tried to gather my plastic bags into little sacks (I have several in my living room right now) that I can drop off at Safeway’s bins to be turned, I always believed, into plastic benches or something else useful. This so they wouldn’t clog up the oceans or beaches or our landfills—already groaning from the ever-increasing amounts of waste, including plastic, that we bury. This became especially urgent when we learned from reports two years ago that China and India would no longer accept our plastic waste at all. So the nice Recology (even the name is reassuring) trucks that come around weekly to collect my waste sport two separate bins—one for recyclable material, including appropriate plastic—and the other for regular waste destined for the landfill. And that belief that what was able to be recycled was being recycled has eased my earth-respecting conscience some. 

            Laura Sullivan’s report blows this all out of the water. It turns out that not only is none of this recycling happening where plastic is concerned, that it’s all been a ploy to quiet our minds about all the plastic being consumed, but that the oil companies that produce plastic have known, since at least the 1970s, that recycling plastic simply could not work. Here are the words from the report uncovered by NPR:

We found that the industry sold the public on an idea it knew wouldn't work — that the majority of plastic could be, and would be, recycled — all while making billions of dollars selling the world new plastic (NPR report, Sept. 11, 2020).

 

That pretty much sums it up; but the details, many of them from industry insiders who were in charge of the deceptive advertising, are staggering. Listen to Larry Thomas, former president of the Society of the Plastics Industry, about the logic of the con in which he was involved: “If the public thinks that recycling is working, then they are not going to be as concerned about the environment” (ibid). And so the industry set out to fool the public into thinking, through artfully-designed advertising, through secretly financing recycling companies and ‘recycling machines,’ that plastic could be recycled—all so that people would feel better about the cascading mountains of plastic being used for virtually everything in our world. Indeed, the oil industry used a playbook similar to the one used earlier by the cigarette industry, with an identical outcome in mind: ease their minds about plastic, as industry eased their minds about cancer, and sell billions more of our product. And they knew, all along, industry documents show, that it was all a lie, an elaborate con, because of the singular brute fact:


All used plastic can be turned into new things, but picking it up, sorting it out and melting it down is expensive. Plastic also degrades each time it is reused, meaning it can't be reused more than once or twice (ibid).

Since it’s cheaper to produce new plastic from oil than to do all this laborious sorting (which in any case results in ‘recycled’ products that can only be minimally reused), that is precisely what the oil and chemical industry giants like Exxon and Chevron and Dow and Dupont have done: produce ever-increasing amounts of new plastic. And meanwhile, their public relations geniuses have come up with the bullshit about recycling, and codes on the bottom of plastic containers, so people will dutifully check the triangles to see which level of recycling they signify—all of which has done nothing, zero, nada. Because in all the time John Q. Public has been recycling, the truth is that “less than 10 percent of plastic has been recycled” (ibid). Less than 10 %! Into this breach, meanwhile, the oil companies have plunged with always new plastic products and new plants (the latest a $6 billion facility in Sweeney, Texas, by Chevron Philips) still making billions on the manufacture of new plastic:

The oil industry makes more than $400 billion a year making plastic, and as demand for oil for cars and trucks declines, the industry is telling shareholders that future profits will increasingly come from plastic (ibid).

 

Your read that right: the oil industry’s future profits will come from plastic. If this doesn’t make you angry, I don’t know what will. 

 

            What we really need to do, though, is examine the roots of this plastic menace, because we are all deeply involved, if not complicit. That’s because those roots run deep in the human psyche. What, to begin with, does plastic do for us; e.g., what human need does it satisfy? The answer is pretty simple: our lust for permanence. We want to be invulnerable to decay; we want protection from it and from the elements; we want homes and pipes and car parts and clothes and containers and tools that last; that won’t mix with the always corrosive effects of the natural world. That is what deeply frightens us after all: the habit that organic matter (including our own bodies) has of rotting, spoiling, yielding to the thousands of mites and worms and bacteria and fungi that feed on it. And so we try to insulate it as well as we can (all structures built now are draped in a protective layer of plastic). And for millennia, there was simply no good way to do that, no material that was proof against the natural cycle. But then along came oil, and then along came plastic. Able to be molded into whatever shape and size we wished, plastic was seemingly impervious to decay. Eureka! Our problems solved. Shirts didn’t need to be ironed: dacron and rayon solved all that. Pipes didn’t need to be molded out of iron that sooner or later failed: plastic pipes lasted almost forever. All our containers were easily molded from plastic that didn’t break when dropped. Now we have computerized 3-D printers that can forge any shape simply from a drawing—to make plastic guns and plastic machine parts and plastic animals and plastic little men. Our world has become a world made almost entirely of plastic, or if not made of it, then wrapped in it. Packaged in it. 

            Only there eventually emerged this little problem. Plastic did, indeed, last almost forever. It was proof against decay, because being unnatural, no natural creature fed on it. I once saw a comparison of electron-microscope images of organic matter, and alongside them, of plastic. The organic matter had structure, logical orderly structure. The plastic was chaotic, a mess of fibers jumbled together. In a word, unnatural. We know this instinctively. We are organic creatures and we respond automatically to others of our kind—organisms. And we know, equally organically, that plastic does not belong in our world. To put the matter in terms we can easily understand, and which important thinkers like Daniel Schmactenberg are now using: organic matter is part of nature’s system—a closed-loop system. That means, simply, that nothing is wasted. Everything in nature goes through its life cycle, and dies, whereupon it is used as food by some other organism in the fully-integrated system. Trees fall and die, are fed on by fungi and insects, which is to say, they rot, and become humus, which in turn feeds other organisms. The same is true of animals when they die, and humans when we die (if we’re not removed from the system by burial in a plastic container). The loop is closed: everything is used by everything else; nothing is wasted. This both pleases us aesthetically—a flower is beautiful to the extent that it dies and we know that the essence of its beauty is its evanescence—and terrifies us existentially. We know we are temporary creatures, like all other organic life, we know we will die, and that knowing leads inevitably to ego-driven fear. But again, that evanescence is also what makes every human life precious. 

            Plastic, on the other hand, is part of an open-loop system. A human-created system. It does not partake of the organic round. It is not consumed by fungi or bacteria or anything else we know of (though there are some innovations claiming to have developed bacteria or fungi that do consume plastic), at least not for thousands of years. It is what economists call an “externality”—something that the corporate world of capitalism disposes of but takes no responsibility for—like the waste generated by monstrous factory farms that pollute our waterways, or the waste produced by electronics manufacturers, many of whose components, not incidentally, are made of plastic. That means the system is open: outside the closed, recycling, integrated loop of nature. It does not become part of the whole that keeps going forever on its own. Its discard is a full stop. For this reason, our landfills are being overwhelmed with plastic. Our oceans are filled and overflowing with huge gyres of degraded and degrading plastic. The tiny plastic balls that result from this ‘photo degradation’ are mistaken by fish and seabirds for organic morsels that they normally feed upon. And so we have the terrifying spectacle of birds dying with their stomachs full of indigestible plastic bits; of fish dying in the same way; and of humans eating fish that contains some of this indigestible plastic—that has now become part of us. Indeed, a recent report in wired.com presented these alarming facts:


…in 11 national parks and protected areas in the western US, 1,000 metric tons of microfibers and microplastic particles fall from the sky each year, equivalent to over 120 million plastic water bottles—and that’s in just 6 percent of the country’s land area. Last month, another group described how the ocean is burping up microplastics, which then blow onshore via sea breezes. And last year, still more scientists reported that 7 trillion microplastic particles flow into the San Francisco Bay annually (Matt Simon, “Who’s to Blame for Plastic Microfiber Pollution?” wired.com, 6/22/20.)

 

Where do these microfibers come from? Why, mainly from those wonderful no-iron clothes we all wear and love. So convenient. But there is a price we pay for convenience, and we had all better heed it because, as Matt Simon puts it, it‘s those


cheap synthetic clothes that during each wash shed perhaps 100,000 microfibers, which then flow out to rivers and oceans through wastewater. (Consider that 70 years ago, the textile and clothing industries used 2 million tons of synthetic materials; that figure had skyrocketed to almost 50 million tons by 2010.) Everywhere scientists look, these microfibers turn up; they’re blowing into the Arctic and to the tops of (formerly) pristine mountaintops (ibid). 

 

So yes: we have the convenience of synthetic clothes to wear; but we also have these microfibers that research is beginning to show have become parts of the very cells of fish, and have affected their reproductive capacity (“From Fish to humans, a Microplastic Invasion May Be Taking a Toll,” Andrea Thompson, 9/4/2018, scientificamerican.com). One study with hamsters injected with microfibers shows that they can lead to blood clots. So are we all now contaminated with plastic—from the fibers in the air we breathe, from the soil in which we grow our crops (and many of which are fertilized with sewage sludge laced with microfibers)? It is beginning to seem likely. And while no direct studies, for ethical reasons, can be done on humans, the prospects do not look good for us, if the ubiquity of plastic is not cut off. 

            The deeper problem, as always, is the system in which the manufacture of plastics, and the economics of that manufacture, are embedded. That system is corporate capitalism. The essence of the system, as most people now know, is profit; and not simply profit, but the elevation of profit over every other consideration. Profit over people more or less sums it up. This is what drives oil companies to not simply produce oil for cars and electricity generation and factory production, but to counteract the growing movement to shift from fossil fuels to more sustainable forms of power by a consistent program of deception—muddying the science with countervailing views about global warming so that average people will remain baffled and unconvinced of the urgency of change. And the fossil fuel giants do this knowing that the fate of all life hangs in the balance. How is this possible? First by treating carbon pollution—directly caused by their product—as an externality. ‘We are not responsible for what happens after the product leaves our facility.’ And second, by appealing to the needs of stockholders (mainly themselves) that profit must reign supreme. Even at the cost of all life on the planet? Even so. Profit is the irreducible minimum of every capitalist enterprise; and it has been made into an idol, unassailable, permanent, and given the unimpeachable attribute of being an integral part of human nature. Which of course it is not. Humans existed for millennia without it. But our current economics casts it in this light. And the advertising which is meant to convince us of this—using specious and false logic—drums this profit mantra into the mind of every human on the planet. And so far, it has worked. Why else would Americans be satisfied with the obscene spectacle of the wealthy few possessing more wealth than the rest of the population combined, able to conspicuously consume and waste while the majority can barely eke out of living? Simple: because they have convinced most of us that this is the natural way of things. Inevitable, perfect, what god or nature has intended.

            Now, though, there is plastic—infiltrating our very cells. Now there is global warming, caused, without doubt, by humans and their industrial civilization. Now there is the real threat that humans, homo sapiens the species, will indeed become what Daniel Schmactenberg fittingly calls a “self-terminating species.” It is a forbidding term; a frightening term; but one that is stunningly apt at this time. It suggests, that is, that unless we change our systems to model them on nature’s closed loop system, change our very ways of thinking to restore organic life to the top of our pyramid of concern, we shall end ourselves, not as individuals, but as a species. That is what is at stake: not the existence of the planet as is commonly stated (the planet will survive without us as it did for millions of years), but our very survival as a species. Homo sapiens sapiens. Wise humans. Which often seems like a joke. For would a wise species come up with plastic? With a power source whose externality threatens all life? 

            But perhaps we should say that the term really points to an ideal yet to be achieved. 

That some day—and it had better be soon—homo sapiens will be wise enough to no longer put all our energy into trying to make what is ineluctably temporary, permanent. No longer be fooled by the promise of plastic. No longer be fooled by viciously deceptive advertising that gulls us into believing that we can invent a material that can be of the natural system, but outside its natural cycle. Wise enough perhaps to know that it cannot be done—not without severe consequences, that is. Perhaps we will get there. For now, though, it might have to be enough to condemn, with all our being, these evil hucksters that have sold us on plastic and recycling. Condemn them and throw their evil product back in their well-pampered faces, and tell them in no uncertain terms that their nasty little game is over, their reign is over, and they had better revise their ethics and their thinking very very fast. Or there may not be the opportunity for revision or remorse or repentance or atonement ever again.  

 

Lawrence DiStasi

Friday, September 11, 2020

Projection

One of the most common psychological mechanisms of our perilous time is projection. Simply Psychology defines it as a “psychological defense mechanism proposed by Anna Freud in which an individual attributes unwanted thoughts, feelings and motives onto another person” (www.simplypsychology.org).  A simpler way of putting this is: 

“It’s not me that has the problem or quirk or nasty habit, it’s you.” 

It should come as no surprise that the current President of the United States uses this mechanism routinely, almost automatically. His constant criticism and ridicule of others can usually be seen as stemming from attitudes or actions that he himself is guilty of. For example, just recently he criticized his opponent, Joe Biden, as a “stupid person.” One can easily see that he has projected the almost universal criticism of himself onto Joe Biden. We can see the same mechanism operating in his endless tirades against mail-in ballots as hopelessly corrupt; for it is clear that Donald Trump himself, given the chance, would cheat on a mail-in ballot; which, in this case, is demonstrated by his having recently recommended that his voters should, in fact, use mail-in ballots, and then go to their polling stations and vote again. Voting twice is clearly illegal, but the point is that it demonstrates how Trump thinks everyone will act if given the opportunity—everyone with his limited ethical sense, that is. And how about his excoriating of Joe Biden for nepotism in procuring a board membership for his son Hunter in Ukraine, while Trump has long since set up Ivanka and the rest of them in the White House as “advisors.” Or lambasting Black Lives Matter protesters as “violent thugs,” when his supporters, at his urging, openly carry AR15s—one of whom actually shot three protesters, killing two of them?  Or hinting that QAnon-generated conspiracies are believable, and that only he, the president, the savior, can save children from the satanic ‘Hollywood liberals’ who seek to sexually abuse them (this from the man who openly describes his daughter as a juicy piece, and who hung out with notorious teen enslaver Jeffrey Epstein) and even eat them? The list about the president is endless, but we don’t have to remain with him. We can go further afield to look with the same lens at the scandals involving fundamentalist icons. How many famous (or infamous) preachers have we now discovered committing the very sins of the flesh which they routinely inveigh against? Take Ted Haggard, founder and former pastor of New Life Church in Colorado Springs CO, who also served as president of the National Association of Evangelicals in 2003, and has preached repeatedly against sexual sins, especially same-sex marriage. In 2006, Haggard was accused by a male prostitute and masseuse of paying him for sex for three years running, whereupon Haggard was removed from most of his official posts. The same, of course, could be said of countless Roman Catholic priests, who preach on Sunday about avoiding the sins of the flesh, and then sexually abuse their altar boys, whenever they get the chance, which turns out to be quite often. In each case, we have a projection of what is interior (usually hidden), to an exterior target that can be vilified.

            We might even say that the basic mechanism of projection forms the main strategy of the whole right-wing movement. Right-wing conservatives are generally people who have a suspicious attitude toward human nature. That is, they perceive most humans as weak animals who are generally inclined to do bad things; brutish and nasty things. This being the case, societies, according to them, must enact all kinds of laws and prohibitions to keep these damaging human impulses in check, for without them, the “law of the jungle” would prevail: the strong would dominate the weak and anyone else they could overpower. And the pattern would prevail up and down the chain of society. Men would abuse women and children; leaders would abuse their subjects; anyone in power would abuse their underlings; all would engage in illicit activities run riot—sex, drugs, and rock n’ roll. And, to be fair, there is a grain of truth in this. But the main motivator of this attitude is not the truth, not real knowledge of human nature, but projection. Those who espouse this view, either overtly or covertly, are usually projecting the subconscious impulses that they can hardly admit into their consciousness, onto others whom they castigate as libertines and liberals and amoral socialists. It seems especially satisfying to do this with marginalized populations. ‘Jews steal babies and use them for their sacred blood rituals.’ ‘African Americans are by nature libidinous and lust after all women, white ones in particular.’ ‘Southern Italians ditto. Latin Americans double ditto.’ ‘All of them are prone to disobedience of the law, and hence inherently criminals, because it’s in their blood.’ The truth is that, pre-Civil War, it was the white southern slave masters who were truly libidinous, witness the commonplace result—millions of their mixed-race progeny who also became slaves. And witness the widespread lawlessness of corporate heads and their insider deals, which the wealthiest of these corporate bigs exploit without a backward glance, while demanding law and order and the merciless incarceration of petty thieves and small debtors and drug addicts (except when the addicts are white; then they require our understanding). The truth is that such morally righteous defenders of the status quo are the biggest violators of all, for it is their own impulses, sometimes known, often unknown, that drives them to project them outward onto convenient scapegoats. 

            The interesting thing about Trump, though, is that, unlike with common projection, where the aim of attributing an impulse to others is to keep the act or tendency suppressed from one’s own consciousness, his projection involves actions that he has committed already, or intends to commit. In other words, the president often seems not to be hiding these impulses to protect his ego (which is the classic reason for projection in the first place), but rather knows what he has done or wants to do, and consciously shifts the blame onto someone else, usually an opponent or rival. This appears to be the case, for example, in his mail-in ballot diatribes. He knows that Republicans have used every trick available to suppress the vote, to discard ballots from urban dwellers on flimsy grounds—to cheat, as journalist Greg Palast has insisted they cheated in 2016. Trump has even admitted that his party could not win if everyone (especially those untrustworthy minorities) got to vote. So it’s not that he wants to keep the cheating impulse from becoming conscious; it already is conscious. The same is true of his comment that “the only way we’re going to lose this election is if the election is rigged” (said at a campaign rally in Oshkosh, WI, August 17, 2020). He seems to know instinctively that what he really means to say is that he, Donald Trump, will rig the election if he possibly can. 

            Of course, one can never really know whether a person consciously knows that he or she is being truthful or dishonest or self-protective when employing projection. And it is clear that Trump’s narcissistic ego is so fragile, so childlike, that it needs a great deal of protection—which accords with the observation that “projection is considered ‘primitive,’ because, being an easy defense to do, it happens early in childhood development first” (Grant Hillary Brenner, Psychology Today, 9/9/2018)But it is also clear that, in the president’s case, at least, his ego consciously deflects blame as a primary impulse for an action he knows full well he is already guilty of—as for instance, his recent determination to defend his early lies about the deadly dangers of Covid-19, insisting that the lies were presidential attempts to shield the American people from the despair they’d feel if he told them the truth. The president, that is, seems constitutionally unable to take responsibility (much less blame) for anything that does not reinforce his sense of himself as exceptional, as a genius who never makes mistakes. While the truth is that he has made some doozies—constantly downplaying the risks of Covid-19, as the death toll among Americans has risen to nearly 200,000 as of early September. But he cannot accept that mistake (even though it was recorded on tape by Bob Woodward) and, therefore, cannot reverse the course he has set for himself and the nation. No, like the habitual liar and projector he is, the president prefers instead to blame China, or the now-sidelined Dr. Anthony Fauci for his own failures, all while bragging about his administration’s performance (actually the worst in the world), and predicting an imminent vaccine that will rescue him from the infamy that will surely be his legacy. 

            This constitutes the real toll that a nation pays for having narcissists, who habitually use the mechanism of projection, in charge of the affairs of state. The toll is mass death, the toll is the crippling of the most important functions of the nation, all of which are meant to protect the public, not the ego of its leader. And we are soon going to see if enough Americans wake up to this mortal peril before it is too late.

 

Lawrence DiStasi