Upstream - A History of the World in Seven Cheap Things with Raj Patel and Jason W. Moore
Episode Date: May 11, 2021Throughout history, crises and disasters have always catalyzed new strategies to make the world cheap and safe for capitalism. We are seeing this during COVID through the blatant disregard for the liv...es of essential workers and the refusal of wealthy nations to lift COVID vaccine patents which restrict poorer countries from manufacturing their own supplies. In this 2-part Conversation, we spoke with Raj Patel and Jason W. Moore, who co-authored the book, A History of the World in Seven Cheap Things: A Guide to Capitalism, Nature, and the Future of the Planet. In our conversation, Raj and Jason explore how capitalism relies on cheapness, the era of the capitalocene — which the authors prefer to the more common term, anthropocene — the myth of overpopulation, which has its roots in racism and often borders on ecofascism, and much more. You can read the full transcript of this conversation here. This episode of Upstream was made possible with support from listeners like you. Upstream is a labor of love — we couldn't keep this project going without the generosity of our listeners and fans. Please consider chipping in a one-time or recurring donation at www.upstreampodcast.org/support If your organization wants to sponsor one of our upcoming documentaries, we have a number of sponsorship packages available. Find out more at upstreampodcast.org/sponsorship For more from Upstream, visit www.upstreampodcast.org and follow us on Twitter, Instagram, Facebook, and Bluesky. You can also subscribe to us on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or wherever you listen to your favorite podcasts. Â
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Upstream is a labor of love. We couldn't keep this project going without the generosity of our listeners and fans.
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Thank you. In the United States, we talk about how it is that through centuries of colonial capitalism,
the institutions of race and of gender have been policed
and embodied.
And so today, when you see communities of people of color
disproportionately affected by COVID
and by respiratory disease and by air pollution,
you can see that not as a sort of unfortunate liberal
accident to the otherwise benign unfolding of capitalism,
but actually integral to the way that capitalism works
and has always worked.
And that's important so that we can understand not only why our bodies are inflamed,
but also why it is that our communities and our planet are suffering from the inflammation that comes from the long season of fire that is ahead of us.
You are listening to Upstream.
Upstream.
Upstream.
An interview and documentary series that invites you to unlearn everything you thought you knew about economics.
I'm Dela Duncan.
And I'm Robert Raymond.
In this two-part conversation, we spoke with Raj Patel and Jason W. Moore, who co-authored the book,
A History of the World in Seven Cheap Things, a guide to capitalism, nature, and the future
of the planet. In the book, Raj and Jason explore how capitalism relies on the cheapening
of nature, money, work, care, food, energy, and lives in order to keep going. We spoke
with Raj and Jason about cheapness, the era of the capitalocene, which the authors
prefer to the more common term, the anthropocene, the myth of overpopulation, which has its roots
in racism and can border on eco-fascism, and much more. We hear from Raj in the first
half of the episode and then Jason in the second half.
Hi Raj and welcome to Upstream. Thanks so much for taking the time today and
yeah I'm wondering if you could just maybe start by briefly introducing yourself for our listeners. Thanks so much for having me here. My name is Raj Patel. I'm a research professor at the
Lyndon Baines Johnson School of Public Affairs at the University of Texas at Austin. And I have for much longer than I've been a
professor here, been an activist for transformation and revolution in the food system.
Great. Before we get into the questions around the topics in your book specifically,
I'd like to start by asking you what your thoughts are on COVID and what that's revealed
about, maybe specifically our food system, but also just broadly about our current national
and global economic system.
Well, you know, I mean, it's hard to say anything original about this other than to
observe that particularly in the food system where injustices always reigned supreme, they've
been uncovered and revealed in some fairly stark ways.
So, for instance, look at who it is that's most at risk of getting COVID beyond those who are
in nursing homes and in Texas, where I live, it's going to be people in the carceral system and people
in meat processing facilities. And the sort of carceral logic of people being put in place and
And the sort of carceral logic of people being put in place and being operated on as if they were meat that operates in prisons in the United States and operates in many workplaces
clearly operates in slaughterhouses.
And the disassembly line there is absolutely right.
And obviously it was a COVID hotspot around the world when the disease first broke out.
And the fact that under Trump meat processing was declared an essential service reflects
the power of the food industry to override the lives of workers, obviously, and obviously
of the livestock that are fed into that machine, but broader public health goals in general.
So the food system is set up to make a profit.
It's not set up to feed people.
It's not set up to leave us with a livable planet and COVID has revealed that abundantly.
Let's get into one of the big concepts and one of the ideas that you write about in your book.
There's a lot of talk about the Anthropocene and you introduce the concept of the capital O scene.
I'm not sure if that's how you pronounce it, but the capital O-scene, and yeah, I'm wondering if you could explain sort of what that
turn means, its significance, and how you sort of distinguish it from this
idea of the Anthropocene. So the capital O-scene, and that's how I do
pronounce it, was coined by my co-author, Jason W. Moore, and the reason we use it in
the book is because there's so much talk about how humans have destroyed the planet and how, you know, there's an
indelible human trace in the fossil record. And that's true if there's any civilization after humans and they scrape the fossil record, what will they find?
They'll find radioactivity from nuclear weapons tests, they'll find plastic, there's gonna be more plastic than fish in the oceans by 2050, and they're going to
find things like the traces of our meat industry, of our food industry, they'll find chicken bones,
trillions of chicken bones. But it would be inaccurate to say that there's something innate to humans
that caused that. An anthropocene suggests that it's just sort of like humans being humans,
and of course humans will go around and detonate atomic weapons and
manufacture so much plastic that it outweighs the fish and the sea and so on.
But it's not human nature, if ever, there were such a thing to do this. It is the outcome of capitalism,
because humans obviously predate capitalism, and humans didn't leave such an indelible trace in
the fossil record. So it's important to point the finger where the blame squarely lies.
That's why we use capital scene rather than anthropocene,
because it's also the case that there are many humans
who are not merely not responsible for these traces in the fossil record,
but who have actively fought them and resisted them.
And whether it's indigenous civilizations
or whether it's peasant movements around the world,
there are lots of human civilizations that are not okay with what capitalism has done.
But to use the term anthropocene is to tar them
with the same brush as the capitalist
who are abundantly happy with all of this.
Yeah, I really appreciated that distinction.
I think it's a really important one.
And you also, so you argue in the book,
you and your co-author argue that we're coming
to the end of the capitalist scene era? Well, to understand that, you and your co-author argue that we're coming to the end of the capital
scene era?
Well, to understand that, you've got to get into the argument that we're making about
capitalism.
And a capitalism we suggest is a system that won't pay its bills, that can't pay its bills.
And by that, what we mean is that capitalism is always on the hunt through its frontiers for ways of avoiding paying
for things like labor or for resources or for care work. And so through
successively dodging the bills that come home to roost, capitalism has found new frontiers.
And what we can talk about that in a second, But what we're talking about when we talk about the end
of the sort of moment of capitalism
is to point to the fact that all the things
that capitalism takes for granted,
all the frontiers through which capitalism has managed
to dodge paying its bills are now coming due.
The most obvious moment of that is in the crises
of extinction that we are living through at the moment.
And the ecosystem it collapsed, there's been a result of the fact that capitalism just thinks of
the world beyond humans as an infinite resource and an infinite dustbin.
You know, we can pump whatever we like into the atmosphere, we can
spew whatever we like into the seas, we can befowl the air in any way we see fit because
ultimately it's free and capitalism doesn't have to pay for it.
And unfortunately in all of the ways that capitalism has been using the more than human world
around us, that is backfiring.
It's coming to a really rather abrupt end.
And in the same way that we're facing the sort of systemic ecological crises, we're also
facing crises in terms of the other cheap things that capitalism takes for granted, you know,
cheap work, cheap care, cheap food, cheap fuel, cheap money and cheap lives.
And in all of these respects, there is a moment in which the standard patterns of capitalist
exploitation have in some ways run out of things to exploit.
And by pointing to all of these, what we're suggesting is that we are hitting for a fairly
large systemic crisis of capitalism.
And this isn't a reason to celebrate necessarily.
I mean, you know, what comes after capitalism needn't be great when when capitalism had
one of its paracisms and one of its periodic crises in the 1930s, what emerged in other
places was fascism.
And you can certainly see that emerging everywhere from Brazil to India right now.
So it's not the case that anyone who despises capitalism ought to be celebrating the end of
it just because whatever is not capitalism is good.
But what we're suggesting is that if you look at what's been going on in say Brazil or
in India, you can see within these countries a moment in which ecological crises are being
reconfigured into moments of fascist dominance.
Yeah, we do see that. are being reconfigured into moments of fascist dominance.
Yeah, we do see that.
More and more people are becoming aware of the inadequacies
and just awful outcomes of the current economic system
and are fighting for a better one,
but there is no guarantee that it's gonna end well.
I think we're all sort of at the precipice right now,
just sort of holding our breaths.
You mentioned briefly in your last response the cheap things, the seven cheap things that
you mentioned in your book which is titled a history of the world in seven cheap things.
I think one of the best examples that you used to illustrate this idea of cheapness within
capitalism is the chicken nugget.
And I'm wondering if you could explain the chicken nugget sort of how it unpacks this idea of cheapness within capitalism is the chicken nugget. And I'm wondering if you could explain the chicken nugget
sort of how it unpacks this idea of how nature, work,
care, food, energy, money, and lives have been
cheapened in the capitalist scene.
The very short version is like a two minute viral
Facebook video that we put together when we launched
the book, but the slightly more expanded version is this.
As I've already mentioned, if there is another civilization
after humans, what they'll find is chicken bones.
And that's because the chicken industry has been
profligate around the world in essentially taking
this red jungle foul from the jungles of Southeast Asia
and mutating it using government resources
and private sector resources.
We now have a bird that's been bred with breasts so large
that the bird can't walk.
Now, that is an example of cheap nature.
I mean, you take what we like and dispose of it in any way
that we like, and that's why there will be trillions
of chicken bones, there are, trillions of chicken bones
in the world around us already.
But chickens don't turn themselves into nuggets by magic. You need work.
And cheap work is the second cheap thing that we talk about. Now, by cheap work, what we
need is the exploitation of labor. And the chicken industry has been very creative about the ways
that it exploits labor. I mentioned the prison system before. And prisoners in the United States
are used as low-cost workers in
the chicken meat complex. But there's a particularly striking example from Oklahoma, where chicken
executives there wanted to kill two birds with one stone, and what they did was set up something
called Christian alcoholics and addicts in recovery. And the idea was that this was a diversion
center for people who had been caught up in the Sackler Purdue opioid epidemic. And the idea was that this was a diversion center for people who had been caught up in the
Sackler Purdue opioid epidemic. And instead of these people being sent to jail, they were sent to
this rehab facility. And the rehab facility involved praying to Jesus by day, and then by night,
when workers are very hard to recruit and pay for, under standard capitalist regimes, these recovering
addicts were put on the chicken production
line, and the great advantage for the chicken executives were that these addicts didn't
have to be covered by OSHA, they didn't have to be covered by health insurance.
And so when they lost a finger or two or when they were injured, this was just part and
parcel of the treatment.
And this recapitulates really one of the first forms of forced labor that happened in
the Americas when the Spanish first colonized
and enslaved indigenous people, what they did was that, you know,
offer a regime in which indigenous people were worked often to death by day. And if they survived
on Sunday for a little bit, they could pray to Jesus for the salvation of their soul. And really,
this is just that, but modern. And that cheap labor is running out as we're saying here.
Workers are organizing, we're not for the pandemic,
we'd have seen a more consistent, I think,
upward tick in demands from workers.
And we can talk at some point about the alabama strike
or the failure of Amazon workers in alabama to unionise.
But there's more there around workers and working class power
in terms of wage raises.
And you can see that cheap work, even in China, is starting to be pushed back.
Workers in China are organizing and rebelling against the regime to cheap labour and post
upon them.
Now, when workers get injured on the job, the chicken industry doesn't really care, we
would rather fire them.
So what happens to those workers that they are often forced to be cared for by the community
that surrounds them?
And that invariably, under capitalism is gendered work. It's usually coded as women's work to be involved in reproductive labourer, to be careful by the community that surrounds them. And that invariably under capitalism is gendered work.
It's usually coded as women's work to be involved
in reproductive labor, to be involved in care work,
to be involved in emotional labor.
And that work is essentially unpaid for,
work capitalism to pay for it,
it would amount to two thirds of global output,
at least as measured in 1995,
the most recent figure we can find.
Now, cheap nature, cheap work, and cheap care
require other cheap things.
So for example, and the irony here
is that in order to work at very low wages,
you need cheap food.
So low calories provided at low cost for workers,
not terribly nutritious, but produced industrially
so that workers, mega salaries, can enable them to survive
to at least make it through the day
and take care of their families in some moderate way
and not at all, lavishly and not at all in some cases.
And cheap food is becoming more and more expensive.
We're seeing again, the sort of global rise in food prices.
You also need cheap energy in order to make
the chicken production facilities work.
You need cheap carbon.
And we're seeing again, after the pandemic,
as upward rise in the cost of fossil fuels.
And all of this requires low interest loans, a cheap money, in order to be able to carry on.
And although interest rates are really as low as they've ever been, the sort of logic of neoliberal
capitalism still demands low interest loans in order to be able to grease the wheels of capitalism.
And when all of this goes wrong for capitalists, then they require cheap lives.
They require the callous offshoring of work onto communities that are considered
worth less than white communities, whether that's the idea of the white male liberal,
and I'm not using liberal in the left sense, but just liberal in the idea of liberal capitalism.
That white male liberal subject has been at the center of capitalism since its invention.
And white supremacy is sort of
indelibly baked into certainly North American capitalism,
but certain kinds of supremacist ideals
is to be found everywhere where capitalism reigns,
whether that's increasingly Hindu supremacism in India,
or the variants of white supremacism you see in Brazil,
or recently a certain kinds of nationalist Chinese supremacy.
All of these are problematic, and are ways in which other humans,
their bodies are constructed in red in different ways.
And there is increasingly an outcry against all of those kinds of cheap things,
so cheap nature, cheap work, cheap care, cheap food, cheap fuel, cheap money, and
cheap lives, and all of those are kind of running out.
And that's why your chicken nugget, which is produced in ways that require, you know,
all of these things, is a symbol of what it is that's wrong with capitalism.
Can you talk a little bit about the idea of overpopulation, what are its origins, how's it been used to frame
discussions around hunger and resources and other issues within global capitalism?
So, you know, I mean, although Thomas Malthus is the first person really associated with this,
and, you know, the person who kind of abstracts the feckoned working class and says, look, because the working
class is, you know, they're just eating and shagging and reproducing. And at some point,
this population bone will outstrip food supply. This is an idea that really sort of gets
its wings through strange kinds of white supremacists thinking in the 1960s that people now refer
to as the tragedy of the commons. Garrett Hardin was the odious thought experimenter whose idea of the commons is something that
people still refer to today.
And the idea here is when you think of the tragedy of the commons, you think of unowned
land where people will just crowd together and exploit the land to hell.
This idea that unless private property and enlightened ownership can safeguard a resource,
it's always going to be extracted and destroyed.
That isn't actually how the commons operated, and commoning was precisely about having a vocabulary
in a practice of things like stinting where you didn't consume something, and gleaning
where those who had excess produce were happy to let it fall
into the hands of those who are hungry. And there was a moral economy to the commons that allowed
the commons to flourish and to be a source of survival for the peasantry. And in order for
capitalism to flourish, the commons needed to be destroyed. And so the tragedy of the commons
gets it sort of backwards that rather than having a second working class that is going to just overpopulate and destroy and consume away,
it is in fact capitalism that is feckless and entirely craving and looking for
perpetually for new resources to be able to exploit and move on from,
whereas communities that are able to manage and control their own resources
do a very good job of managing and controlling them without the state and without the private sector.
So the danger with the discourse of overpopulation is that it blames the victim. It blames the poorest people for conditions, the architecture for which have been firmly put in place by a capitalist class and are enforced by their police. What's your response to somebody who would argue that we are actually pushing planetary
boundaries in the terms of how many humans are on the earth and how much space we're taking
up versus the idea that it is potentially possible for there to be billions and billions of
people on the earth with distribution of resources that allows
us all to live fairly good lives and also be in harmony as much as possible with the planet.
You see the discourse everywhere and all of a sudden everyone is trying to suppress and
or nurture their inner Thanos. And the fact is that if the planet was inhabited by people who had the
consumption level of Tanzanians, we wouldn't be beyond planetary value. So I'm entirely happy to
recognize that there are limits to what our capitalist ecology can sustain. And the planet
does have physical limits in terms of the cycling of carbon and of nitrogen, and
we've gone way beyond that.
But I can say that, and at the same time, recognize that it's not population, that is responsible
for that, in the same way that it's not the anthropocene that has responded, you know,
it's not all humans that are responsible for this situation we find ourselves in.
It is entirely possible to imagine a world in which everyone consumes enough to be able to live a healthy
and fulfilled life and for me to find overpopulation discourses entirely racist. I don't have to
explain anything there. I mean, I can just point to the fact that when we look at who it is that's
doing most of the overconsumption, it is the global north, it is rich people, and it is
disproportionately white people who are, you know, who find themselves consuming more than
their fair share of global resources. And when you put it like that, then all of a sudden
the conversation around other population becomes a little more awkward, because really what
that leads to is what we need is birth control for white people. I don't mean, you know, basically
you need to snip them at birth
and the world will become a better place.
And if I start talking in those terms,
you get to see that, in fact,
the other population discussion is coded
with certain kinds of racial animals.
So I'm all for the idea that people who have been over-consuming,
not only need to consume less,
but need to pay reparations for the damage they've caused.
And at the same time, I can say that,
over-population discourses are ways in which
a rich capitalist class that is disproportionately white
gets to talk about the failures of communities
of people of color without ever acknowledging
that the wealth of white people has been accumulated
through centuries of racial capitalism.
So just a couple more questions.
I'm wondering, so this show's called Upstream.
I'm not sure if you're familiar with the Upstream metaphor.
You go upstream to see what the root of the problem is.
And I'm wondering if you were to go upstream and think about sort of really systemically
the root causes of a lot of the crises
that we're facing today, like what do you see
as the upstream problem?
What's the root of a lot of the issues
that we're dealing with?
I've just finished writing a book that will be out
in a couple of months' time with my friend and comrade
Rupert Maria, She's a medical doctor,
she's a physician at UCSF and together we've explored precisely this question. We've thought about
diagnosis as really a way of telling stories and when you diagnose, for example, someone with
COVID, you can just point to the spike on the virus and see how it's interacted with the lungs
and the damage at the subsequent inflammation has caused.
And then you can say, well, okay, that's fair enough. But why is it that there are,
who is it that's really affected by this? And we observe that in the United States,
it's predominantly low-income communities and communities of people of color. And then we can ask,
well, why is that? And then we can say, well, there's a liberal response that is, wow,
if you look upstream of that, you can see that there's racism, a structural racism.
And then we also, where did that come from?
And then we get into awkward questions
about colonial capitalism.
And in the United States, we talk about how it is
that through centuries of colonial capitalism,
the institutions of race and of gender have been policed
and embodied.
And so today, when you see communities of people of color
disproportionately affected by COVID and by respiratory disease
and by air pollution, you can see that not as a sort of
unfortunate liberal accident to the otherwise benign
unfolding of capitalism, but actually integral to the way
that capitalism works, and as always worked.
And that's important so that we can understand
not only why our bodies are inflamed,
but also why it is that our communities and our planet are suffering from the inflammation
that comes from the long season of fire that is ahead of us.
So what we point to not only the inflammation that comes from colonial capitalism,
but also the anti-inflammatory activities of resistance of people fighting back,
of communities where there are indigenous communities
that are given protective power by the stories that they tell about their relationship to the rest of the
web of life. And those kinds of anti-inflammatory resistance are the real source we think not only
of a deep medicine, but also of hope for the rest of the planet. And those kinds of practices
are ones that are, I think, what you get when you look upstream and you're happy to embrace
the fact that it is colonial capitalism that has got us here. And if that's the case, then
decolonizing has to be the medicine to the situation in which we find ourselves right now.
You've been listening to an upstream conversation with Raj Patel.
We'll be right back with Jason W. Moore. I'm gonna get you to the next one. I'm gonna get you to the next one. I'm gonna get you to the next one.
I'm gonna get you to the next one.
I'm gonna get you to the next one.
I'm gonna get you to the next one.
I'm gonna get you to the next one.
I'm gonna get you to the next one.
I'm gonna get you to the next one.
I'm gonna get you to the next one.
I'm gonna get you to the next one.
I'm gonna get you to the next one.
I'm gonna get you to the next one. I'm gonna get you to the next one. That was decaying by capitalist casualties. Now, here's our conversation with Jason W. Moore,
an environmental historian,
historical geographer,
and professor of sociology at Binghamton University.
So, yeah, welcome to Upstream Jason. It's great to have you.
Thanks, Robbie. It's great to be here.
Great. So, yeah, I guess before we get into my questions around the topics in your books, I'd like to
start by asking you what your thoughts are on what COVID has revealed about our current
national and global economic system.
Well, it's a great question, and it reveals, of course, that capitalism's imagined control
over the web of life, including human webs of life, is always just that.
It's an imaginary.
And of course, it's been one in terms of the control of disease, an extraordinary history
in many respects.
But what we have over the past year and change now year and a half is a test case in really seeing just how much predatory capitalism,
which it's always predatory, so I don't want to be redundant, just how much capitalism
has really consumed and degraded its underlying conditions of reproduction, of the healthcare
systems, of the workers who make it possible, of the industrial food systems and so on and so forth.
It's also revealed the sacrifice zones,
which the sacrifice zones as we are seeing in India
at this moment are the same sacrifice zones as always.
They are the zone of what's called nature, not civilization.
And that's been a way, not just of thinking about the world,
but of rendering human beings
as workers, as workers in all sense of the term, are disposable.
And especially those who are in the colonial and now post-colonial world have always been
regarded as part of nature and therefore cheap and disposable.
In the United States, where it reveals is not just
as my friend, Raj Patel likes to say a coming out party
for American inequality, but also a kind of great revealing
of the balance of class power in the United States
at the moment.
We have a situation where in contrast
to the rest of the rich countries in the world,
the ruling class has been content not only
to let everyone die and go hungry, but also this willingness to just pulverize the working class and make
them pay it every single step. My favorite snapshot of this is maybe some of your listeners
recall this that early in the pandemic, I think it was at Purdue, a chicken meatpacking facility where the largely
female workforce went out on strike just to protect their access to the job in case
they needed to call in sick because of COVID.
And that, for me, reveals the extraordinary power of the American ruling class at this
moment and their commitment to making the rest of us pay.
Yeah, and so you mentioned India, one thing that's dominated news headlines recently has been the
patents on COVID vaccines, particularly the fact that countries like India who are just being
devastated by COVID right now have been pleading for months to have the WTO, you know, the world trade organization,
lift the patents on COVID vaccine
so that they can prevent potentially millions of people from dying.
So, yeah, finally, after blocking this request for months,
the Biden administration caved under pressure
and what was probably a horrible PR situation for them.
And they announced they're in support of, you know,
temporarily lifting these patents., but of course, the
World Trade Organization operates by consensus and several wealthier nations, including
Japan and even Brazil, which is being hit super hard by COVID right now, too, are still blocking
this.
And despite the Biden administration's announcement, they still haven't said anything about
waving intellectual property rights for coronavirus,
therapeutics and diagnostics.
And so, yeah, I'm wondering if you could maybe unpack that
a little bit and sort of contextualize it
with an hour current global economic system
is just really obsessed with profit
and could care less about actually saving lives.
Right, well, we are living right now
in the belly of the beast, the greatest
imperial power in the world, the greatest imperialist power the world has ever known. And its job at
all costs is to protect the bottom line for its shareholders. So let me just say the obvious, we live
in the United States, President Joe Biden, Biden is not just the architect
of one of the key pioneers, spearheads of the crime bill,
of welfare reform, of NAFTA, of all the rest,
but he was also from many decades,
the senator from MBNA, after the credit card company,
Delaware is home to many credit card company headquarters. So he is very
much operating to sustain the bottom line for the capitalist class in the United States in general,
but for big finance capital and of course big pharma as well. He's been very clear even before
the pandemic hit. He was opposed to Medicare for all. He would veto Medicare for all.
He would refuse to accept the idea that healthcare is a human right.
And so what we're seeing in terms of the difference between Trump and Biden is meet the new boss,
same as the old boss, they will both defend the right of big pharma to issue favorable quarterly reports to its shareholders,
regardless of the human cost.
Now, the alternative, of course, is a place like Cuba, where the Cuban government has developed a vaccine,
and indeed it's been sending doctors all around the world,
sent doctors to Lombardi in northern Italy at the heart of the pandemic.
Their last march has been doing so for many decades.
But this dynamically you identify with India
in Brazil in particular.
Not only do they have in common both their own versions
of Trump, that is, ethno-national proto-fascists
in Modi and Bolsonaro, respectively.
But this is a long story of Big Pharma.
We can go, certainly go back to the worst days of AIDS in the 1980s and 90s
And it's been the same story
A lot of your work explores how capitalism creates cheapness and
I'm just wondering if you can talk a little bit about this concept of of cheapness and how it relates to
capitalism
Absolutely. So the first thing we want to understand is the capitalism works because it doesn't pay
its bills.
And then we need to ask, well, how is it that it can survive without paying its bills?
Well, it has four or five centuries moved to new frontiers, new frontiers of cheap nature.
The four major elements of this are labor and then paid work.
That's one food, energy, and raw material.
So labor food, energy, and raw materials are these four cheaps. Now the second thing that
I want to say out of this is that cheap does not mean the two or three dollar hamburger
that you can get at a fast food restaurant. That's not the kind of cheap that we're talking
about. We're talking about the interlocking power of the greatest states, the greatest empires,
and their bankers, their industrialists, their planters, their 1% to do two things at once,
and it's quite significant to the moment of climate crisis.
Those two things are to reduce, in price, the big four inputs, these four chiefs of labor,
food, energy, and raw materials.
So there's an economic moment that's politically imposed.
That's important because we often think of capitalism as an economic system.
It has an economic logic, but it is essentially a system of political power sustaining and
creating the conditions for a good business environment.
That is, the cheap and price always requires geopolitical and geocultural power, especially forms of racism
and sexism. So that leads to the second moment of cheapness or cheapening as a project to cheapening
prices strategically linked to degradation, to cheapening as in the sense of degrading and
disrespecting the lives and labors of women nature and colonies to borrow a phrase
from the great German social theorist, Maria Mies. So there are these two moments. One is ethical
political and about domination. And the other is to reduce in price. And if we pause for a moment,
we can look at both of those and understand they're very, very intimately connected. We can make all
sorts of readily available observations
about the feminization of poverty
and the racialization of poverty in the United States,
but elsewhere.
Of course, let me say the problem is poverty,
not that it's racialized and feminized,
and the racism and sexism makes possible
a series of justifications of inequality.
Now that's one part of it.
Now the other part is what's nature.
And I often talk in my work about the web of life because the web of life forces people to ask,
well, what's the web of life? When you say nature, everyone thinks they know what it means. It means
the forest and the fields and the birds and the bees and the streams and the atmosphere. And yes,
all of those are webs of life. But humans are part of that web of life too,
a factory, an office, a call center.
These also are ways of organizing life, power, and profit
within within webs of life at every turn.
So that's one of the elements of it.
The other is that from the very beginning
of the modern world, from the era of Columbus in 1492 onward.
Almost immediately you had a great divide that was at one sense ideological,
in another sense, deeply practical.
And that ideological divide was between the civilized, the Christian, the bourgeois,
the educated, etc. and nature, which included not just all those things I just mentioned, the birds and the bees and the forests and the fields,
but also
practically everyone who was either a worker or a potential worker. So practically all women
Africans, sloths,
indigenous peoples, Celts, many peasants were regarded as barbarian uncivilized savage and so forth.
And so in the English language, our language of civilized and savage, what today we call
society and nature, comes immediately and directly out of Henry VIII's renewed attempt
to control Ireland in 1541.
There's a longer lineage with the modern history is typically from 1541. The
date's important because this is when all of these terms enter our language, European, society,
civilized nature. All of these words come in at this very moment, in the century after 1541,
more or less. And the English, of course, regarded the Irish as savage, as wild, as needing to be civilized, and then proceeded to act accordingly.
The result was in Ireland never in mind in the New World, but just in Ireland about half to two thirds of the population
was either wiped out or driven from the island two different times and two centuries.
Once in the middle of the 17th century, another famous with the so-called potato famine, which was, in fact, an imperialist famine in the 1840s.
So we need to keep in mind that when we think about the world, when we see the world in
terms of society and nature, we are seeing the world through the logic of the imperialist,
through the logic of the banker of the capitalist.
And that, in fact, is the thinking that has contributed to today's planetary crisis.
So those are different dimensions of cheapness
that we need to unthink and rethink
in order to develop an effective politics
of planetary justice.
So you coined the term capital of scene,
and so I'm wondering what is the capital of scene,
and how does it differ conceptually from this idea that we have of the Anthropocene?
It's a great question. And first let me give credit to the person from whom I first heard this word, who is Andrea Small, a very well-known Marxist thinker.
And Andrea, and I have now very starkly different conceptions of the capital of the scene that I won't walk through in great detail, but essentially,
here's the great divide. I'll put it in the form of a question.
Do we find the origins of today's planetary crisis in the so-called
British Industrial Revolution, centering on the steam engine and coal?
Or do we find the origins of planetary crisis in the era of 1492 and the
prodigious global conquest, but also the most radical and rapid environment-making
revolution in human history since the dawn of agriculture. And Raj Patel and
I know that you've talked with Raj made it clear that what we are looking at in 1492 is the dawn of a new
civilization, a new world ecology with a hyphen. That capitalism itself is an ecology of power,
including systems of domination like racism and sexism, a system of accumulation,
in a very, very modern sense, and a system that transforms all of life either into profit-making
opportunities or into the conditions for profit-making opportunities. And what I like to say is that if your
politic, if your sense of the origins of crisis go back to the Industrial Revolution, then the answer
is to shut down the fossil fuel plants, the coal-fired steve plants, convert
to green energy, et cetera, et cetera.
But if your diagnosis of the problem is that planetary crisis begins to emerge in 1492,
which incidentally leads to the first great episode of modern or capital-Ogenic made
by capital climate change in the 17th century, the famous episode of climate change
in the 17th century, which comes out of the New World
Genocides, which comes out of the drive for cheap labor
and slaving.
Right there in that nutshell, you can
see that what I've implicated is the origins of what
I call the climate class divide, climate patriarchy, climate
apartheid.
In other words, we need to look at the system of imperialism
and inequality in the world,
including its constitutive dynamics of racism and sexism
as fundamental to climate justice politics today.
There leads very, very different kinds of politics emerge
out of these two senses of the origin of the capitalism.
So the capitalism is, people say, oh, it's an ugly wordists. So the capitalist scene is people say,
oh, it's an ugly word. Well, the anthropocene is an ugly word too. But I say an ugly system doesn't
deserve a beautiful term. It deserves an ugly moniker. So the capitalist scene is above all an
account of the origins of capitalism. And it is a provocation to now over 50 years of mainstream environmentalism
saying that the problem is man versus nature, technology versus nature, or something to that effect.
And those are not only misleading ideas of mainstream environmentalism that are now reproduced
in what I call the popular Anthropocene. They are, in fact, directly contributory to the drive towards the planetary inferno.
And let me just make one more note of this.
When we talk about anthropocene, two senses of the term
are often confused.
And they're confused by the practitioners
of the anthropocene discourse itself.
There is an anthropocene that is about,
it is about so-called golden spikes
in the geological layers.
So a golden spike, for instance,
has been proposed for the anthropocene
of nuclear testing or plastics or chicken bones,
but also of the carbon drawdown in the atmosphere
after the new world invasions,
the genocides of the new world.
This is the so-called orbit spike,
another golden spike of the genocides in the New World, this is the so-called Orbis spike, another golden spike of the Anthropocene that the Geographers
Lewis and Maslin proposed. So there's a geological story that the
capitalism scene absolutely accepts, and there's a popular story which is
basically the old story of man versus nature plus technology that begins in
the Industrial Revolution. And that's not only a false history, but it leads to profoundly misleading politics.
So you wrote an essay for the Progressive Review
titled, World Accumulation and Planetary Life,
or why capitalism will not survive
until the last tree is cut.
I'm wondering if you can unpack what you wrote about
in that essay and why you think that it's often easier for us to imagine the end of the world than it is for us to imagine the
end of capitalism?
Well, the short version is that in all of us there are traces of the bourgeois imaginary
and sometimes more than just traces.
And that bourgeois imaginary, it goes back to a very modern form of naturalism.
Its mature form begins to take shape with Thomas Malta,
so the end of the 19th century.
And it essentially says that inequality is about natural laws.
It's not about class dynamics and class power,
and the unequal distribution of the social surplus.
It's about moral virtue.
It's about man's natural tendencies, etc., etc. So we have
a point of view that ramifies through both anthropocene discourses, but especially the
popular anthropocene, which asks questions like to quote a very famous article, are humans
now overwhelming the great forces of nature? Now that is a question that is entirely consonant with the way of thinking
of the conqueror and the financeer and the planter. There is no such thing. There's no human nature in
that sense as a historical actor. Of course, humans have a capacity to make symbols, to have a collective
memory, to do lots of very distinctive and interesting things, just like all species have distinctive capacities
because that's how evolution works.
But essentially, it's harder to imagine the end of capitalism than the end of the world
because we have been trained to think in terms of human-sources nature.
That's an extraordinarily dangerous way of thinking in the present, but let's also be aware that that
essential model which develops
through the early centuries of capitalism between the 15th and 18th centuries, but then really
matures in the era of Maltus right at the end of the 18th century has been a
conceptual and ideological hammer in the tools of capitalist and imperialists.
And what I like to point out is that we have seen at least three and maybe today a fourth
Maltese moment. And each time in the late 18th century Maltese is famously writing in the midst
of the world revolution of the West, the Haitian French revolutions, the revolt of the Irish,
the Tupacamaru revolt in Peru,
we could go down the list for a long time.
Within England, there is the emergence
of a working class radicalism,
sometimes called a Spensian radicalism,
in which much of England in the 1790s was on the brink
of open class war, the seizure of
food wagons, etc. etc. So we need to remember that the Maltusian imaginary of humans versus nature
and the invocation of natural law began in this period as a direct response to working class
and peasant revolt on a world scale. Now it comes up again at the end of the 19th century in the era of eugenics.
Again, natural law is a way of explaining disorder
and inequality.
Eugenics takes place during the Second Industrial Revolution,
the Scramble for Africa, and in the American context
where it was very powerful in relation to mass immigration
from Eastern and Southern Europe.
Then again, in 1968, when Ehrlich appears with the population bomb saying hundreds of millions of people are going to starve.
There's a food crisis. There are too many people.
Well, this is also published in the moment of the greatest revolt,
the greatest worker socialist national liberation revolt in the history of capitalism.
It's no accident. And then of course the anthropocene comes in and says,
essentially, the same thing.
It makes a naturalistic argument for the character of human affairs.
And then you can see it's prognosis.
It's prognosis is, well,
geoengineering and technological fixes.
In other words, not social justice, not democratization,
not popular mobilization, but let's have more business
as usual under the conditions of a capital accumulation.
So we have this very, very treacherous history
that has creeped into our imagination.
And then also, finally, not only Marxism,
but also environmentalism,
had a profoundly shallow historical imagination.
And so, there's not the sensibility that unfavorable climate shifts, say over the past 2000 years
or so, have been profoundly destabilizing to class societies from Western Rome, to feudal
Europe, to 17th century capitalism, and we'll wait and see what's happening, but we can
already see how climate
which is not causing all of this with is more like a thread that's in everything. Climate is
unraveling the whole sweater just to stick with the metaphor of modern capitalism and people don't
want to see it or don't know how to see it because our historical memory and many respects is erased.
are historical memory and many respects is erased. You mentioned Paul Ehrlich and Thomas Malthus,
and those are both two people who wrote a lot
about overpopulation and, or just population in general.
And I'm wondering, whenever I post something
about overpopulation or the myth of scarcity,
things like that.
There seems to be somewhat of a divide on the left, and I think one extreme side of that
is sort of eco-fascism, which is the idea that you put nature or ecological concerns ahead
of human concerns.
I'm wondering, what are the origins of, you know, the idea of overpopulation and how has it
been used to sort of frame discussions around hunger, resources, and other issues within
global capitalism?
Well, such a rich question, and we need to go back to where we left off on the last part
of our conversation is the absence of his historical imagination. The absence of historical knowledge
of how population history actually works.
So the first thing that I would say about Malta's
and this goes all the way through to Paul and Anne Ehrlich,
I should credit his wife Anne Ehrlich
as being the uncredited co-author of the population bomb.
Also a member of the Federation of Americans for Immigration
Reform, which has been sometimes classified as the hate group. I just want to make that
public service announcement, along with people like Gary Hardin of Tragedy of the Commons
fame. But what all of those people have in common is the complete and total erasure of actually
existing population dynamics. And so what they are doing very much
out of this way of thinking that I've called bourgeois naturalism
is to find some abstract
and therefore a historical natural law
and apply it to human history.
Now, we know that human social formations
are eminently able to adjust their populations
under conditions of relative equality. So, one of the great examples of this is the crisis
of the Roman West, which was one of the of human history's greatest slaveholding societies,
certainly to that point, came crashing down in the late fourth and fifth centuries,
as enormously complex, but it was in an era
of the greatest duration drought in 2000 years.
That was part of what was driving migrant people,
so-called barbarians into Western Europe,
but it was also immediately followed up
by what historians now call the Dark Age,
just cold period.
And what we saw across Central and Western Europe
was the total collapse of Roman class structure,
saving a very few zones like around Paris
in very attenuated form.
But essentially, the collapse about Latifundia,
Roman Olegarkey model, and in its place,
peasantries came to reestablish village life and class distinctions went away.
There were still gradations of relatively more prosperous and relatively poor.
But along with that came starkly new and more equal gender relations.
As a result, those peasant modes of production, if you will, pursued not only much more
diverse livelihood strategies
and therefore grew healthier even in an unfavorable climate,
but also adjusted their fertility.
Because as we know now, women have always known
how to control their fertility,
and it's a question of how patriarchal class systems
seek to surveil and oppress and police women
into a pronatalist regime.
Well, the conditions of that pro-natalist regime
in the late Roman West went away
and there was a significant and meaningful
readjustment of fertility.
This is not an uncommon phenomena.
Indeed, we've seen that as working mothers
have been proletarianized across the rich countries
of the world over the past 70 years or so,
the birth rates have fallen dramatically.
So as more opportunities for women in particular situations grow, of course, it's being
radically confronted these days around precisely some of the blood and soil questions you just
highlighted. But there is this sense of, well, people can't regulate their own fertility.
There is this sense of, well, people can't regulate their own fertility.
Mark's once urged that we understand the special, that is the historical loss of population. And by the way, that could apply as well to the meat industrial complex today.
It's not just about human population, but what Mark said is, hey, you have to look at the specific historical dynamics of family formation and population growth or contraction.
And that's been completely wiped off the map by the Neomaltusian sensibility.
And sadly, even many on the left have no interest in the actually existing history of the capital of Shingen,
and its special laws of population.
That includes some very, very prominent theorists
like Donna Harroway, this has many useful things,
but if you're gonna talk about population
and you don't talk about family history
and how that looks different in different parts of the world
and different times and places according
to the development of capitalism,
then you have essentially opened yourself up
by appropriation from Neomaltusians?
I guess we've explored quite a few of the problems and the challenges that we're facing and
wondering what kinds of political movements, grassroots, or not necessarily just grassroots,
but just more generally, what kind of movements do you see arising that are challenging the many crises
that we've sort
of been talking about in this interview?
Well, it's a great question, and this is going to sound nitpicky, but I want to suggest
it's anything, but our need your response, because this is how we're taught to think about
capitalism, is that it's an economic system.
In fact, especially when it comes to your question and social movements, which need to be
based on a conception of the working class,
a broad conception of the working class,
were taught to pretend that, for instance,
labor markets are not politically controlled and instituted.
But labor markets are totally politically mediated.
Yes, there are some supply and demand dynamics,
but if you look at it in a world historical sense,
labor has been the one part of nature arguably the most tightly controlled, and those layers
of the world's working class that are feminized and racialized are super exploited.
That is, even more tightly controlled in which wage rates are enforced, not by economic logic, but by geocultural, that is,
in legal mechanisms, but also, of course, by direct political power. That was the whole point
of colonialism. These days, people talk about settler colonialism as if it wasn't fundamentally
about the creation of a working class that could provide very, very cheap labor under very, very brutal conditions. And so, we want to have a sense of what are the movements and what do they need to engage with
in order to forge a politics of planetary justice? And it's a difficult question to ask because
after about four decades of neoliberal triumph, even many social movements have taken to celebrating social power
and disavowing political power.
And that's a problem because class struggles
are resolved at the level of the state.
This was the explicitly acknowledged point
of people like Maggie Fatcher and Ronald Reagan
and every other neoliberal political leader
that's followed in their wake, that they were
going to use the power of the state to hot house the conditions for a good business environment,
which means first and foremost to suppress the conditions of reproduction for the working
class and the wage rates for the working class.
And so I point this out because we need to begin to nurture a political imagination of what it will
take to decarbonize the world and to forge a politics of planetary justice that includes
climate justice but also looks to other movements of reclaiming the commons in many different
senses, urban and otherwise, food sovereignty and food justice of indigenous movements and so on and so forth.
And so what I like to point out is that out of this evaluation of capitalism as a system of cheap nature,
we need to understand that there is a complex layering and interdependency of not only the working class, the proletariat, but also human unpaid work,
what I call the themitariet, and then the work of nature as a whole, the bioteriet. And we need
to begin to look at the constitutive connections between all of those in order to forge dynamic
politics of working class solidarity within countries, but also across countries.
And we've been poisoned by neoliberal ideology
in telling us that we cannot look at the political experiences
of successful national liberation experiments.
We cannot look at those because those were failures.
And that's just empirically false that it was not all bad.
We can draw a balance sheet. We can look at these experiences.
But again, not to be romantic
by any stretch of the imagination, but let's look at Cuba. Let's look at the experience of Cuban,
if you don't want to call it socialism, call it post-capitalism, call it something else,
but of the Cuban National Liberation Project to provide health care not just for themselves,
but worldwide to provide literacy, to navigate the end of
cheap Soviet oil in 1991 to pioneer a pharmaceutical industry that could be deployed in the interest of
the vast majority of the world instead of the 1%. Those are not small things. And I think that what I
would urge many people in the social movements disillusioned with politics
to say, yes, of course, we're disillusioned, especially in the United States where we have
a one-party state with two faces.
Yes, of course, but that doesn't mean that we don't need a political strategy.
And so how do we link these local struggles to an actual climate politics, which has,
by the way, a project that has been totally disabled
by the big, big green environmental groups
in the United States, which have always, at least,
since the early 80s, been in bed with the billionaire class. You've been listening to an upstream conversation with Raj Patel and Jason W. Moore, who co-authored
the book A History of the World in Seven Cheap Things, a Guide to Capitalism, Nature, and
the Future of the Planet.
Upstream The music is composed by Robert Raymond, and the cover art for this episode is by Adjut Propdall, that's at
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