{"id":1538016,"date":"2024-03-06T06:55:21","date_gmt":"2024-03-06T06:55:21","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.counterpunch.org\/?p=315254"},"modified":"2024-03-06T06:55:21","modified_gmt":"2024-03-06T06:55:21","slug":"living-on-the-wrong-world","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/radiofree.asia\/2024\/03\/06\/living-on-the-wrong-world\/","title":{"rendered":"Living on the Wrong World"},"content":{"rendered":"\"\"<\/a>\n
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Image by Ben Koorengevel.<\/p><\/div>\n

On this planet of ours, it almost doesn\u2019t matter who\u2019s right and who\u2019s wrong when it comes to our wars.<\/p>\n

Actually, let me correct that thought slightly: it certainly does matter, but what matters so much more is that we humans simply can\u2019t stop fighting them. That is (or at least should be) a stunning and deeply saddening reality. What obvious lessons we seem congenitally incapable of learning! In the previous century, after all, there were two truly global wars,\u00a0World War I<\/a>\u00a0and\u00a0World War II<\/a>, that were estimated to have left significantly more than 100 million military personnel and civilians dead, while decimating parts of the planet. The second of those conflicts ended with the obliteration of the Japanese cities of Hiroshima and Nagasaki on August 6th and 9th, 1945, with the loss of\u00a0possibly 200,000 dead<\/a>, and the arrival in our world of a shattering new weapon, the atomic bomb. After so many centuries of endless warfare, it finally brought humanity to the edge of future annihilation.<\/p>\n

And since those fateful August days so long ago, ever more nations \u2014 with the addition of North Korea\u00a0early in this century<\/a>, the number has risen to\u00a0nine<\/a>\u00a0\u2014 have acquired nuclear weapons, while the nations that had them only continue to \u201cimprove\u201d and expand their arsenals. My own country, in fact, is planning to spend something like\u00a0$1.5 trillion<\/a>\u00a0<\/strong>(yes, trillion!) \u201cmodernizing\u201d its already vast arsenal of nukes deliverable from the land, the sea, or the air, and undoubtedly, in the years to come, from\u00a0space<\/a>. Russia is doing the same and the Chinese are\u00a0hustling<\/a>\u00a0to \u201ccatch up\u201d in their ability to take down this planet in a big-time fashion.<\/p>\n

It is \u2014 or at least should be \u2014 incredible to think that today, 78 years after the first test atomic bomb was exploded in New Mexico, even a relatively modest nuclear war between two countries like India and Pakistan (as opposed to powers like the United States and Russia with monster nuclear arsenals) could induce a\u00a0global nuclear winter<\/a>\u00a0that would be likely to starve to death most of humanity. Worse yet, at this point, that\u2019s undoubtedly not even the worst nuclear scenario imaginable.<\/p>\n

The Most Remarkable Accomplishment<\/strong><\/p>\n

Not so very many years ago, in the period after the Cold War officially ended in 1991 with the collapse of the Soviet Union, I would have found it strange to be writing a piece about nuclear weapons. I mean, yes, they were still obviously around in Russia, and in the U.S. But after the Cuban missile crisis of 1962, those two powers had at least started signing nuclear pacts, including the\u00a0START agreement<\/a>\u00a0in 1991 to reduce the American and Soviet nuclear arsenals significantly. And that seemed so hopeful then.<\/p>\n

Given who we are, I\u2019ve always found it somewhat miraculous that, since those atomic bombs were dropped on two Japanese cities, even as nuclear weapons spread and grew ever more powerful, another never was used (unless you count the above-ground nuclear tests of the 1950s that\u00a0did indeed harm<\/a>\u00a0small numbers of human beings). Now, however, the great powers on the planet are once again in a global nuclear arms race; key arms treaties have been left in the dust of history; rumors are\u00a0rife<\/a>\u00a0about such weaponry spreading into space; and two nuclear powers \u2014 Russia and Israel \u2014 are at war at this very moment (even if not with each other). The Russian leadership has indeed\u00a0threatened to use<\/a>\u00a0what are now called \u201ctactical\u201d nuclear weapons in its conflict with Ukraine, though most of them are significantly more powerful than the bombs that took out Hiroshima and Nagasaki. Only recently, in fact, Russian President Vladimir Putin similarly\u00a0threatened<\/a>\u00a0to use nuclear weaponry against European countries and the possible \u201cdestruction of civilization.\u201d<\/p>\n

And yes, a mildly antinuclear movie, a biopic of Robert Oppenheimer, the man who first developed such weaponry, did come out in this country and was a\u00a0massive hit<\/a>\u00a0(right up there with a nuclear movie of another sort,\u00a0Barbie<\/em>). In a sense, someday, if there are any of us left to look back on this past we\u2019re now living through, the greatest \u201cachievement\u201d of humanity might be viewed as our ever more stunning ability to nuke ourselves and everything else in sight, the works, the whole shebang. Honestly, that might be the most remarkable accomplishment of our species, if, of course, we don\u2019t use them again.<\/p>\n

Oh, wait, I almost forgot! In our strange brilliance, we humans came up with not one but two ways to utterly devastate humanity and the planet we live on. While the first, atomic weaponry, remains an ongoing threat of instantaneous destruction and horror, the second, a slow-motion version of ultimate destruction, the literal broiling of this planet over decades rather than minutes or hours, was launched\u00a0almost two centuries ago<\/a>. It was then that we humans began burning fossil fuels \u2014 coal, oil, and later natural gas \u2014 to power our industrialization and then our world. Today, the heating of this planet continues to accelerate day by day, month by month, year by year, decade by decade.\u00a0Heat records<\/a>\u00a0of a surprising sort are now regularly being set locally and globally, while\u00a0storms<\/a>\u00a0are becoming more devastating,\u00a0droughts<\/a>\u00a0ever more \u201cmega,\u201d and\u00a0forest fires<\/a>\u00a0fiercer, longer-lived, and more destructive.<\/p>\n

And remind me, what have we learned from such a world? Well, the United States certainly learned that it needed a military beyond compare and began pouring what would, in the end, be untold trillions of dollars into it. (As of 2023, our yearly \u201cdefense\u201d spending would add up to\u00a0more than<\/a>\u00a0that of the next 10 countries combined.) Between the end of World War II and this moment, my country would also fight wars in Korea, Vietnam, Laos, Cambodia, Grenada, Panama, Afghanistan, Iraq (twice), and on a smaller (or do I mean larger?) scale its so-called war on terror stretching from Pakistan across South Asia to the Middle East (where only lately the Biden administration has been launching\u00a0multiple air strikes<\/a>\u00a0in Iraq, Syria, and Yemen), and\u00a0deep into Africa<\/a>. Today, in the wake of all that and having assumedly learned something from more than a century of war-making, death, and destruction (and since the end of World War II, not a significant victory anywhere on the planet), my country has \u2014 yep, you guessed it! \u2014 been\u00a0upping<\/a> its \u201cdefense\u201d budget in a big-time fashion, heading for the trillion-dollar mark annually.<\/p>\n

It all makes perfect sense, right?<\/p>\n

Meanwhile, having discovered that nukes were capable of obliterating life as we knew it on Planet Earth, we also came to realize that, by mining for, drilling for, producing, and then burning fossil fuels \u2014 coal, oil, and natural gas \u2014 in a distinctly unprecedented fashion, we were, in fact, engaging in a war not\u00a0on<\/em>, but\u00a0of\u00a0<\/em>terror against this planet and every living thing, us included. The casualties from climate change (and it is indeed changing this planet in an all too disastrous fashion) are growing more numerous, as are the\u00a0refugees<\/a>\u00a0from places that are already becoming too uncomfortably hot to handle. And yet, with that now common knowledge and the last 10 months \u2014\u00a0month by sweltering month<\/a>\u00a0\u2014<\/strong>\u00a0of record heat globally, the\u00a0hottest months<\/a>, one after another, in human history, a leading candidate for president of the United States is running on a platform of, as he puts it, \u201cdrill, drill, drill<\/a>,\u201d ensuring that, should he win, the country that\u2019s already the\u00a0largest producer<\/a>\u00a0of oil and natural gas on Planet Earth will be leading us all ever more directly into hell in a proverbial handbasket.<\/p>\n

A Planetary War of Terror<\/strong><\/p>\n

Mind you, given that, in some fashion, we\u2019re all involved in what can only be thought of as a war of terror aimed at this planet, it\u2019s not just the Trumpists who are all too ready to ignore the reality of what we\u2019re actually doing in the twenty-first century. After all, with the planet on edge and war itself an\u00a0all-too-obvious contributor<\/a>\u00a0to global warming, Russia, Ukraine, Hamas, and Israel are all now engaged in conflicts without any obvious end in sight that won\u2019t just ensure the slaughter of hundreds of thousands of people but help heat the Earth to the boiling point. And let me add that my own president, Joe Biden, has put significant energy into feeding the Gazan war (including hundreds of millions of dollars of\u00a0arms shipments<\/a>\u00a0to Israel), no matter that doing so might\u00a0help turn<\/a>\u00a0our part of the planet over to President Drill, Drill, Drill!<\/p>\n

And lest I sell humanity short by focusing too much on my own country, let\u2019s not forget the\u00a0devastating internal conflicts<\/a>\u00a0in lands ranging from Pakistan to Sudan to Ethiopia, where yet more of us are being slaughtered every day. And who knows where war will break out next?\u00a0Venezuela and Guyana<\/a>? North and South Korea (after all, the leader of North Korea only recently\u00a0threatened the South<\/a>\u00a0with an atomic fate)? Or perhaps the\u00a0South China Sea<\/a>\u00a0or Taiwan? The Biden administration, for instance, only recently\u00a0deployed five<\/a>\u00a0of this country\u2019s 11 aircraft carriers to the Pacific in a clear challenge to China, just in case major wars in Europe and the Middle East weren\u2019t enough for us. No one knows, but given our history, one thing seems painfully certain \u2014 war will undoubtedly break out again and again and again.<\/p>\n

And of course, war can now erupt in new ways, not just the old-fashioned ones. After all, though it\u2019s never thought of in this fashion, the United States is indeed at war right now. And no, I\u2019m not thinking about the vast quantities of weaponry that we\u2019re delivering to Israel (or\u00a0not at the moment<\/a>\u00a0delivering to Ukraine). I\u2019m thinking instead about the fact that my country produced\u00a0record levels<\/a>\u00a0of oil in 2023 and has become the\u00a0world\u2019s largest supplier<\/a>\u00a0of natural gas (and, mind you, that\u2019s with a president who has\u00a0taken crucial steps<\/a>\u00a0to whittle down our use of such fuels).<\/p>\n

And yes, significant moves are being made in Europe and elsewhere (though not in major fossil-fuel producer Russia) to repower humanity in a fashion that will indeed cut fossil-fuel use in a major way, but it\u2019s simply not enough. China, for instance, is\u00a0moving faster<\/a>\u00a0than any other country when it comes to installing renewable energy and so changing its energy landscape. Unfortunately, it still uses\u00a0more coal<\/a>\u00a0and continues to build\u00a0far more<\/a>\u00a0new coal power plants than all the other countries on this planet combined. And consider it anything but strange that the major private fossil-fuel companies are\u00a0still making<\/a>\u00a0absolute fortunes producing products that might as well be slow-motion versions of atomic weaponry and, unbelievably enough, some of them are still expanding their search for more of the same.<\/p>\n

So, both apocalyptic war and war on the planet itself are now, sadly enough, ever more deeply woven into the human constellation. Meanwhile, it seems all too obvious that we can\u2019t stop fighting older-style wars either, killing staggering numbers of people, destroying lands, and devastating parts of this world and those living on it.<\/p>\n

Isn\u2019t it strange that, after all these millennia, we humans just keep on keeping on, that we can\u2019t seem to truly face, no less truly deal with, who and what we are and what we repeatedly do to ourselves, not to speak of the rest of this planet? The logic of what should be done and how we should live with one another seems all too obvious in a world that today finds itself entering an ever more hellish state. It\u2019s time not just for a \u201ccease fire\u201d in Gaza, but for the declaration of some kind of planetary cease fire.<\/p>\n

But can we truly imagine such a thing?\u00a0 Who knows?<\/p>\n

This piece first appeared in TomDispatch<\/a>.<\/em><\/p>\n

The post Living on the Wrong World<\/a> appeared first on CounterPunch.org<\/a>.<\/p>\n\n

This post was originally published on CounterPunch.org<\/a>. <\/p>","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"

On this planet of ours, it almost doesn\u2019t matter who\u2019s right and who\u2019s wrong when it comes to our wars. Actually, let me correct that thought slightly: it certainly does matter, but what matters so much more is that we humans simply can\u2019t stop fighting them. That is (or at least should be) a stunning More<\/a><\/p>\n

The post Living on the Wrong World<\/a> appeared first on CounterPunch.org<\/a>.<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":115,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"footnotes":""},"categories":[22],"tags":[],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/radiofree.asia\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/1538016"}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/radiofree.asia\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/radiofree.asia\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/radiofree.asia\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/115"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/radiofree.asia\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=1538016"}],"version-history":[{"count":1,"href":"https:\/\/radiofree.asia\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/1538016\/revisions"}],"predecessor-version":[{"id":1538017,"href":"https:\/\/radiofree.asia\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/1538016\/revisions\/1538017"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/radiofree.asia\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=1538016"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/radiofree.asia\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=1538016"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/radiofree.asia\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=1538016"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}