On Track for Extinction: Can Humanity Survive?
Robert J. Burrowes, KalimNews, Kalimpong, 15 March 2018: Anyone reading the scientific literature (or the
progressive news outlets that truthfully report this literature) knows that
homo sapiens sapiens is on the fast track to extinction, most likely some time
between 2025 and 2040.
For a taste of the evidence in this regard focusing on
the climate, see ‘Climate Collapse and Near Term Human Extinction’, http://www.globalresearch.ca/guy-mcpherson-on-climate-collapse-and-near-term-human-extinction/5386102 ‘What They Won’t Tell You About Climate Catastrophe’,
http://www.ecoshock.info/2012/11/kevin-anderson-what-they-wont-tell-you.html‘Release of Arctic Methane “May Be Apocalyptic,” Study
Warns’ http://www.truth-out.org/news/item/39957-release-of-arctic-methane-may-be-apocalyptic-study-warnsand ‘7,000 underground [methane] gas bubbles poised to
“explode” in Arctic’. http://siberiantimes.com/science/casestudy/news/n0905-7000-underground-gas-bubbles-poised-to-explode-in-arctic/?nf=News
Unfortunately, of course, the climate is not the only
imminent threat to human survival. With an insane leadership in the White House
in the United States – see ‘Resisting Donald Trump’s Violence Strategically’ http://www.eurasiareview.com/02032017-resisting-donald-trumps-violence-strategically-oped/ – we are faced with the prospect of nuclear war. And
even if the climate and nuclear threats to our survival are removed, there is
still a substantial range of environmental threats – including rainforest
destruction, the ongoing dumping of Fukushima radiation into the Pacific Ocean,
extensive contamination from military violence... – that need to be addressed
too, given the synergistic impacts of these multiple and interrelated threats.
Can these extinction-threatening problems be
effectively addressed?
Well the reality is that most (but not all) of them
can be tackled effectively if we are courageous enough to make powerful
personal and organizational decisions and then implement them. But we are not
even close to doing that yet. And time is obviously running out fast.
Given the evidence, scientific and otherwise,
documenting the cause and nature of many of these problems and what is required
to fix them, why aren’t these strategies to address the problems implemented?
At the political and economic level, it is usually
explained structurally – for example, as an outcome of capitalism, patriarchy
and/or the states-system – or, more simply, as an outcome of the powerful
vested interests that control governments and the corporate imperative to make
profits despite exacerbating the current perilous state of the Earth’s
biosphere and its many exploited populations (human and otherwise) by doing so.
But the reality is that these political and economic
explanations mask the deeper psychological drivers that generate and maintain
these dysfunctional structures and behaviours.
Let me explain why and how this happens using the
climate catastrophe to illustrate the process.
While scientific concern about the increase in carbon
dioxide in the Earth’s atmosphere had been raised more than a century ago – see
‘The Discovery of Global Warming’ https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/discovery-of-global-warming/ – it wasn’t until the 1980s that this concern started
to gain significant traction in public awareness. And despite ongoing agitation
by some scientists as well as climate and environment groups, corporate-funded
climate deniers were able to stall widespread recognition of, and the start of
serious official action on, the climate catastrophe for more than two more
decades.
However, as the truth of the climate catastrophe was
finally being accepted by most people and the climate deniers were finally
forced into full-scale retreat on the issue of whether or not the climate
catastrophe was, in fact, so serious that it threatened human extinction, the
climate deniers implemented their back-up strategy: they used their corporate
media to persuade people that action wasn’t necessary ‘until the end of the [21st]
century’ and to exaggerate the argument about the ‘acceptable’ increase above
the pre-industrial norm – 2 degrees? 3
degrees? 1.5 degrees? – to obscure the truth that 0.5 degrees was, in fact, the
climate science consensus back in 2007.
But, you might ask: ‘Why would anyone prefer to ignore
the evidence, given the extinction-threatening nature of this problem?’
Or, to put the question more fully: ‘Why would anyone
– whether an “ordinary” worker, academic, lawyer, doctor, businessperson,
corporate executive, government leader or anyone else – prefer to live in
delusion and believe the mainstream narrative about “the end of the century”
(or 1.5 degrees) rather than simply consider the evidence and respond
powerfully to it?’
And what is so unattractive about the truth that so
many people run from it rather than embrace it?
Obviously, these questions go to the heart of the
human (psychological) condition so let me explain why most humans now live in a
delusional state whether in relation to the climate, environment issues
generally, the ongoing wars and other military violence, the highly
exploitative global economy or anything else.
People do not choose to live in delusion nor do they
choose their delusion consciously. A delusion is generated bya person’s
unconscious mind; that is, the part of their own mind of which the individual
is normally unaware. So why does a person’s unconscious mind generate a
delusion? What is the purpose of it?
A person’s unconscious mind generates a delusion when
the individual is simply too terrified to contemplate and grapple with reality.
Instead, the person unconsciously generates a delusion and then lives in accord
with that delusion for the (obvious) reason that the delusion does not frighten
them.
This unconscious delusional state is the fundamental
outcome of the socialization, which I call ‘terrorization’, of the typical
childduring their childhood.
Endlessly and violently coerced (by a variety of
threatened and actual punishments) to obey the will of parents, teachers and
religious figures in denial of their own self-will, while simultaneously denied
the opportunity to feel the fear, anger, sadness and other feelings that this
violence causes, the child has no choice but to suppress their awareness of how
they feel and the reality that caused these feelings. As a result, this leaves
virtually all children feeling terrified, full of self-hatred and powerless.
For brief explanations of how this happens, see ‘Understanding Self-Hatred in
World Affairs’ https://www.popularresistance.org/understanding-self-hatred-in-world-affairs/ and ‘Why Are Most Human Beings So Powerless?’ http://www.scoop.co.nz/stories/HL1407/S00067/why-are-most-human-beings-so-powerless.htm
However, and this point is important, each of these
feelings is extraordinarily unpleasant to feel consciously and the child never
gets the listening they need to focus on feeling them. See ‘Nisteling: The Art
of Deep Listening’. https://feelingsfirstblog.wordpress.com/nisteling/
As a result, these feelings are suppressed below
conscious awareness and thisfear, self-hatred and powerlessnessbecome the
primary but unconscious psychological drivers of their behaviour and,
significantly, results in them participating mindlessly in the widespread
‘socially acceptable’ delusions generated by elites and endlessly promulgated
through elite channels such as education systems, the corporate media and
entertainment industries.
Hence, as a result of being terrorized during
childhood, delusion is the most common state of human individuals, irrespective
of their role in society. For a full explanation of why this happens, see ‘Why
Violence?’ http://tinyurl.com/whyviolence and ‘Fearless
Psychology and Fearful Psychology: Principles and Practice’. http://anitamckone.wordpress.com/articles-2/fearless-and-fearful-psychology/
And, as one part of their delusional state, most
people must engage in the denial of reality whenever reality (unconsciously)
frightens them (or threatens to bring their unconscious self-hatred or
powerlessness into their awareness). See ‘The Psychology of Denial’. http://www.countercurrents.org/burrowes060613.htm This, of course, means that they are frightened to
take action in response to reality but also deny it is even necessary.
So what can we do about all of this? Well, as always,
I would tackle the problem at various levels.
If you are one of those rare people who prefers to
research the evidence and to act intelligently and powerfully in response to
the truth that emerges from this evidence, I encourage you to do so. One option
you have if you find the evidence of near-term human extinction compelling in
light of the lacklustre official responses so far, is to join those
participating in ‘The Flame Tree Project to Save Life on Earth’. http://tinyurl.com/flametree
Obviously, tokenism on your part – such as rejecting
plastic bags or collecting rubbish from public places – is not enough in the
face of the profound changes needed.
Of course, if you are self-aware enough to know that
you are inclined to avoid unpleasant realities and to take the action that this
requires, then perhaps you could tackle this problem at its source by ‘Putting
Feelings First’. https://feelingsfirstblog.wordpress.com/putting-feelings-first/
If you want intelligent,compassionate and powerful
children who do not grow up living in delusion and denial, consider making ‘My
Promise to Children’. https://feelingsfirstblog.wordpress.com/my-promise-to-children/
If you want to campaign on the climate, war,
rainforest destruction or any other issue that brings us closer to extinction,
consider developing a comprehensive nonviolent strategy to do so. See
Nonviolent Campaign Strategy. https://nonviolentstrategy.wordpress.com/
And if you want to participate in the worldwide effort
to end violence in all of its manifestations, you are welcome to consider
signing the online pledge of ‘The People’s Charter to Create a Nonviolent
World’. http://thepeoplesnonviolencecharter.wordpress.com
In summary, the primary threat faced by humanity is
not the synergistic multitude of complex social, political, economic and
technological forces that are precipitating our rush to extinction.
The fundamental threat to our survival is our
psychological incapacity (particularly because of our fear, self-hatred and
powerlessness) to perceive reality and respond powerfully to it by formulating
and implementing appropriate social, political, economic and technological
measures that address our multifaceted crisis systematically.
Unless we include addressing this dysfunctional
individual and collective psychological state in our strategy to avert human
extinction, we will ultimately fail and extinction will indeed be our fate.
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