We're All Climate Hypocrites Now
eBook - ePub
Available until 23 Dec |Learn more

We're All Climate Hypocrites Now

How Embracing Our Limitations Can Unlock the Power of a Movement

  1. 208 pages
  2. English
  3. ePUB (mobile friendly)
  4. Available on iOS & Android
eBook - ePub
Available until 23 Dec |Learn more

We're All Climate Hypocrites Now

How Embracing Our Limitations Can Unlock the Power of a Movement

About this book

A useful — and sprightly! — effort to get at the choice between individual and systemic action on the greatest problem we've ever faced. — Bill McKibben, author, The End of Nature

Taking a tongue-in-cheek approach, self-confessed eco-hypocrite Sami Grover says we should do what we can in our own lives to minimize our climate impacts and we need to target those actions so they create systemic change. We're All Climate Hypocrites Now helps you decide what are the most important climate actions to take for your own personal situation.

Our culture tells us that personal responsibility is central to tackling the climate emergency, yet the choices we make are often governed by the systems in which we live. Whether it's activists facing criticism for eating meat or climate scientists catching flack for flying, accusations of hypocrisy are rampant. And they come from both inside and outside the movement.

Sami Grover skewers those pointing fingers, celebrates those who are trying, and offers practical pathways to start making a difference. We're All Climate Hypocrites Now covers:

  • How environmentalism lost its groove
  • Why big polluters want to talk about your carbon footprint
  • The psychology of shaming
  • How businesses can find their activist voice
  • The true power of individuals to spark widespread change.

By understanding where our greatest leverage lies, we can prioritize our actions, maximize our impact, and join forces with the millions of other imperfect individuals who are ready to do their part and actually change the system.

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1
We’re All Climate Hypocrites Now

“You can’t be an environmentalist and eat meat,” says the vegan as he steps onto the plane.
“You can’t possibly live sustainably and drive a car,” says the cyclist as she tucks into a burger.
“You can’t be green and not compost,” says the gardener as they plan an extension to their house.
Anyone who has been involved with modern, mainstream environmentalism will be familiar with the selectively applied purity test. Sometimes the gatekeeping is explicit, and sometimes it’s implied. Sometimes we even imagine it as coming from people who have no intention of judging us at all, but who are simply doing a better job than we are at reducing their own environmental impact. Whatever the delivery mechanism, it’s become so pervasive that it has shaped the conscience of those who don’t really consider themselves environmentalists at all. Given the market demographics of folks who read books like this, you are most likely familiar with the predicament that such framing can cause.
On the one hand, you know that we are in the midst of perhaps the worst crisis humanity has ever faced, and you are rightly concerned. On the other hand, you are likely spewing significant amounts of carbon dioxide into the atmosphere every single day. Indeed, while my fantastic publisher does what they can, production and distribution of this book itself — whether you are reading it in electronic or print form — is only made possible by the consumption of fossil fuels and other natural resources.
So what’s a concerned global citizen supposed to do?
For all the great work being done around the world, there is a basic assumption pushed by the dominant culture that a person’s contribution to the climate fight is largely, if not exclusively, measured by their personal carbon footprint. Say one word about the climate crisis, or the need to divest from fossil fuels, and you’ll soon be met with a question about how you traveled to work today, or where the electricity powering your computer comes from. Even if you are just beginning to learn about the issue, there’s a good likelihood that you’ve received more advice on changing your diet, refusing straws, or abandoning consumerism than you have on activism, advocacy, or organizing. In other words, you’ve been told how not to contribute so much to the problem, but not necessarily how you can be most effective in actually fixing it.
In many ways, the problem stems from a logical reading of the crisis we are in. Whether through driving or flying, eating a burger or streaming movies, we — meaning those of us enjoying at least a moderate level of material comfort — are all contributing to the climate crisis. And if it’s our daily lifestyle choices that make us a part of the problem, then maybe we just need to make better choices. After all, if we don’t put our own house in order first, aren’t we basically just climate hypocrites if we start pointing the finger at the Koch Brothers or Exxon Mobil?
Well, it all depends on what you mean by “hypocrite.”

What Does ‘Hypocrite’ Even Mean?

In a fascinating paper published in the journal Frontiers in Communication, a team led by Shane Gunster of Simon Fraser University in Canada looked at how terms such as “hypocrite” and “hypocrisy” show up in coverage of the climate crisis. Analyzing op-eds from both conservative and liberal newspapers around the world, what they found was a remarkable diversity of uses. On the one hand, opponents of climate action would often use allegations of hypocrisy as a cudgel to undermine celebrity activists and “elite” environ-mentalists whose ideas they opposed. Over time, such argu ments have created a tricky dilemma for the climate movement:
This one-dimensional but compelling equation of environmentalism with sacrifice leaves climate advocates in a proverbial no-win situation when it comes to reconciling behavior with beliefs. As author Lynas (2007) wryly observed in a Guardian op-ed, “climate activists I know who do walk the walk (eschewing all flights, for example) look prim and obsessive, as if they are out of touch with the concerns and pressures faced by ordinary people.” Yet the views of those who do resemble “ordinary people,” and therefore fail to pay adequate behavioral homage to the gravity of the crisis, are likewise subject to ridicule and dismissal.
However, opponents of climate action aren’t the only ones engaging with the topic of hypocrisy. Gunster and his team also found plenty of articles from pro-environment voices too, many of them exploring the all-too-familiar gap between activists’ professed values and their everyday behaviors:
The most interesting and provocative explorations of climate hypocrisy were those which simultaneously accepted the claim that individuals do bear (some) responsibility for their carbon-intensive behavior (rather than simply deflect such claims to structures and institutions) but then challenged the assumption that such responsibility is best (and solely) discharged through consumer action.1
It is these, more nuanced discussions of hypocrisy that I believe offer us a path forward. And they do so by pointing to one of the biggest fallacies of our culture.

Rational Choice Is No Choice At All

Economists and politicians have been mythologizing the “will of the market” as a mysterious, all-knowing force for years. Yet the supposedly rational choices we make are heavily influenced — if not quite predetermined — by factors that are way outside of our own individual control. As my friend David Monje, a teaching associate professor of Media and Technology at the University of North Carolina, put it to me when we were discussing an early draft of this book, “Rational choice theory is really, really stupid.”
From taxes to planning laws, and from government subsidies to cultural norms, our society makes certain behaviors easy, cheap, and socially acceptable. Meanwhile, it makes other behaviors so expensive and onerously difficult that only the hardest of the hard-core among us can even hope to stay on the straight and narrow. Sure, each of us plays a role in setting these systems and norms. It’s undeniable, however, that some forces — and some entities — play a larger role than others.
Unless we acknowledge and seek to change the hidden ways that society shapes our decisions, then focusing the discussion primarily on the choices that each of us make in our daily lives is not just ineffective, it’s potentially downright counterproductive.

Undermining the Messenger

Perhaps nobody has had their work more fundamentally undermined by our culture’s limited, individualistic framing of environmentalism than former Vice President Al Gore. When his documentary, An Inconvenient Truth, premiered in 2006, it dramatically raised awareness of the climate crisis and brought in $49.8 million at the box office. Using little more than a PowerPoint presentation, the film introduced climate science to a mainstream audience. Yet rather than grapple with the complex, terrifying facts presented in the film, critics were quick to change the subject.
One free-market think tank, for example, released a report claiming that Mr. Gore’s house used 20 times more energy than the average American family home. And while Al Gore’s spokes-people responded with statistics about his carbon offsets and energy-efficient renovations, the distraction campaign had already worked. Discussion had shifted from the systemic underpinnings of our reliance on fossil fuels and was instead now focused on the personal choices of one specific individual.
“Al Gore’s Inconvenient Truth: a $30,000 Energy Bill,” cried one particularly snarky headline from Jake Tapper over at ABC News.2
Shaming activists for what they are not doing has proven to be devastatingly effective. Not only does it undermine the credibility of the immediate target, but it simultaneously redirects the focus away from the societal-level solutions that could bring about change at the scale and pace that’s necessary.
It also sets the bar almost impossibly high for others who would like to join the movement. How can I, as an individual, demand an end to fossil fuels if I still rely on them to get me to and from work? Who am I to question subsidies for airlines, if I’m still flying to see the family at Christmas? Yet if we pause for a moment to consider how we talk about other societal problems, it becomes easier to see that the basic premise of such supposed hypocrisy is self-defeating bullshit.
If a citizen were to advocate for higher taxes on cigarettes, for example, it would hardly undermine their argument to reveal that they themselves were addicted to nicotine. In fact, it would be one more proof point among many that we can’t rely on voluntary abstinence in the face of a socially harmful and manipulative industry.
To cite another example, if a billionaire were to campaign for higher taxes on the rich — as some enlightened “One Percenters” have actually begun to do — then their case is strengthened, not weakened, by the fact that they can’t fix poverty through their own individual acts of philanthropy. The fact that they find it necessary to advocate for structural changes — changes that would directly harm their own narrow financial interests — demonstrates the systemic ...

Table of contents

  1. Cover
  2. Title Page
  3. Copyright
  4. Dedication
  5. Contents
  6. Acknowledgments: An Incomplete Catalog of Gushing Praise and Profuse Thanks
  7. Preface: The Night I Went Drinking and the World Fell Apart
  8. 1. We’re All Climate Hypocrites Now
  9. 2. Wants and Needs
  10. 3. How “Green” Lost Its Groove
  11. 4. Enough Already
  12. 5. Guilt Trip
  13. 6. Big Oil Wants to Talk About Your Carbon Footprint
  14. 7. Corporate “Citizenship” Reimagined
  15. 8. Swimming Upstream
  16. 9. Focus, Goddammit
  17. 10. What Difference Does It Make?
  18. 11. Climate Hypocrites Unite!
  19. Coda: The Journey Down, Together
  20. What Next? Resources, Organizations, and Actions
  21. Notes
  22. Index
  23. About the Author
  24. About New Society Publishers