📕 subnode [[@neil/climate change as class war with matthew t huber]] in 📚 node [[climate-change-as-class-war-with-matthew-t-huber]]

Climate Change as Class War with Matthew T. Huber

A : [[podcast]]

URL : https://www.gndmedia.co.uk/podcast-episodes/climate-change-as-class-war-with-matthew-huber

Featuring : [[Matthew Huber]]

[[Climate change]] as [[class war]]. Based around the book [[Climate Change as Class War: Building Socialism on a Warming Planet]].

  • ~00:08:47 Professional class have a kind of knowledge-based politics, based on study of environment, etc, something not rooted in daily struggles of life as experience by [[working class]] (by the far the majority class).
  • ~00:11:01 Environmental politics can't just be about land, forest, etc, it needs to incorporate something for the mass who struggle to survive in the market.
  • ~00:17:20 Carbon guilt. Consumer-based tactics vs class-based organising.
  • ~00:32:15 Framing politics solely around reduction of levels of affluence is problematic. Sometimes a vision of more or better is needed.
  • ~00:34:01 A critique of [[degrowth]] as an organising message.
  • ~00:37:16 Huber agrees with a lot of the actual programme of degrowth though. But there's a lot of framing issues.
  • ~00:40:27 Degrowth often says global south should grow, global north should contract - but it misses the inequalities within countries.
  • ~00:41:49 Has a problem with degrowthers anarchist vibe of prefiguration, 'nowtopia', small pockets of non-capitalism that are never joined up.
  • ~00:46:20 Electrification is a place to intervene.
  • ~00:48:23 Renewable industry is problematic in terms of labour rights. There is an aspect of green capitalism there.

I feel like the criticisms of degrowth might be a bit straw man. But strongly agree with the assertion of needing class consciousness and the working class involved in any eco-socialist environmental movement.

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