Saturday, December 5, 2015

#339 / Technology Versus Politics



On December 1st, as world political leaders gathered in Paris to confront global warming, Damon Beres, Tech Editor of The Huffington Post, suggested that "technology" (as always seems to be the claim) is going to solve our problems: 

The future has yet to be decided -- and there's no reason to sit around and wait for bureaucrats to make all the necessary choices.

Beres' column is a quick read, and I am happy about the technological advances he discusses. However, I have two comments in contradiction to the basic thrust of his article: namely, that "technology" is what will really make the difference on global warming.

First, "bureaucrats" don't make the kind of fundamental choices that we are going to have to make if we want to avert a planetary disaster. At least, that's not the way it works in the United States. The political process in our country is one in which, ultimately, "the people" make the fundamental choices, by providing instructions, directly or indirectly, to their elected representatives. It's those elected representatives, wielding the governmental power obtained from the people, who tell the "bureaucrats" what to do. In our society, fundamental choices, and choices about how we allocate our resources, are ultimately "political" choices, not "bureaucratic" ones.

Second, Beres cites Reid Hoffman, a rich guy with a very strong sense of his own greatness, as an authority on global warming, quoting Hoffman to say that our planetary problems will be solved by "breakthrough technologies built and deployed by entrepreneurial companies with global scope." 

Not really! The economic "marketplace" is what got us to where we are. Looking to entrepreneurial capitalism to deal with the problems of global warming is not going to work. At least, that's my view!

Breakthrough technologies can help, of course; no doubt of that. And entrepreneurial companies can do good things. But to make the changes we need to make, to confront the global warming problems that we have caused for ourselves, we actually do have to make the essentially political choice to restructure our world, and to begin conducting ourselves in fundamentally different ways. 

Track down Time To Choose, a movie by Oscar-winning film director Charles Ferguson, to see just how centrally our politics must be transformational. Politics, not technology, is ultimately going to be the decider, because "politics," in the end, is how we make our choices.


Image Credit:
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/entry/green-technology_564f6d2fe4b0258edb315f71

3 comments:

  1. Yes, ultimately, the people have the power in a democracy. But US energy policy is not run according to public opinion. That's because policy is made (written by, voted on, etc.), proximately, by baccalaureates.

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  2. Your view doesn't logically follow.

    First of all, it's a false premise to imply the economic marketplace is a necessary or sufficient condition for anthropocentric climate change. Anyone can burn coal, regardless of the type of socioeconomic system they live in.

    But even if the economic marketplace is a necessary or even sufficient condition for anthropocentric climate change to occur, it wouldn't follow that this particular socioeconomic system couldn't also contain a mechanism for solving the problem.

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  3. You might as well have said:

    "Oh no! My king is in check! The rules of chess are what got us to where we are. Looking to pieces on the chess board to deal with the problem of being in check is not going to work. At least, that's my view!"

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