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LILY COLE

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WCW - Episode 8

Lily Cole: Welcome to Who Cares Wins, with me Lily Cole.

Patti Smith: I was working with the Dalai Lama about 20 years ago, and he said the most important thing is our environment. The most important thing is what's happening to our water, what’s happening to our soil, what’s happening to our species and our air.

Jonathan Safran Foer: People know what's going on and they care about what's going on. And yet we're battling inaction, not indifference, but inaction. Having the right attitudes or the right opinions or saying the right thing, we can confuse ourselves and believe that we're participating in a way that we're not actually participating.

Joshua Oppenheimer - Primo Levi writing about the Holocaust said, there may be monsters among us, but they're too few to worry about. What we really have to worry about are ordinary people like us.

Farhana Yamin: It was the first time as a sort of straight-laced policy nerd, I could cry and grieve and say this is happening.

Julia Samuels: Psychologically we talk about a breakdown being a breakthrough.

Wade Davis: The goal of the path of life is not a destination. It's a state of mind.

Lily Cole: At the heart of every issue that intersects with the environment you find contradictions tensions and divergent perspectives, and these issues are complex and changing. Most of us want a happy life and a healthy planet. But many people have different ideas about the right way to travel towards it. In this new podcast series, I'll be sharing parts of my research from my book Who Cares Wins, interviewing some of the leading and conflicting voices in contemporary debates, such as technology, food, gender, politics and looking at how they intersect with our environment.

I see myself a bit like sellotape, ribbon or string holding together divergent voices and sort of asking, ‘who cares who wins?’

In this week's podcast episode, the last of this series, I will explore the mental dimensions of environmentalism, the role our psychological response has in solving the situation or exacerbating it and how we might personally deal with the difficult emotions that arise when we confront the science. Fundamentally asking how can we care when caring feels so difficult? How much should we care? Alongside the rise in awareness of our environmental situation in recent years, there has also been a rise in people experiencing eco anxiety, depression, grief, and solastalgia. On the other hand, many argue that there's also a collective denial going on; a cognitive dissonance that many of us embody in order to function in our daily lives.

In this episode I'll speak to a psychologist and activist and several storytellers about the psychological dimensions of our situation. Does dissonance make us complicit in others suffering? What role does empathy play? How do we care without suffering? And might we find the cause and the cure connected if we discover that the same things we seek from mental health, solve our crisis.

I’ll begin this journey with Patti Smith, the poet and musician, reflecting on what she learned from the Dalai Lama.

Patti Smith: Well, I mean, I've always been concerned since I was a child about our environment, especially growing up in the fifties when plastics came into play in the world. And I was always worried about pollution, even though I didn't quite understand the tremendous impact. And now of course, I believe it's the number one concern of our planet. I think if everyone, all the different factions of the world, if everyone said, okay, there are many different issues we have, but first we have to unite on this one nonpolitical issue, is in our environment; what’s happening to our water, what’s happening to our species, what’s happening to the bee population. Different species are becoming extinct. You go down, the sea is becoming more and more polluted. It's just, it's heartbreaking.

I was working with the Dalai Lama about 20 years ago and there were several of us in a room and were led to ask him questions directly. Adam Yauch from the Beastie Boys, asked him what he thought the number one thing that young people could do for a better world, should we work to save Tibet? And he said, no. He said all of these compared to the biggest issues or self-interest issues, the most important thing is our environment. The most important thing is what's happening to our water. What's happening to our soil. What's happening to our species and our air.

And I think about that all the time. We all have to do what we can, every little small contribution. You know, people think, oh, if I use plastic bottles, that won't matter. Oh, I'm just one person. If I litter or if I don't recycle. But if it was one times one times one, to 100 million, what a change we could make! Unless you get people to rekindle that love and want a clean stream, want their children to breathe clean air, want to smell the sharp salt of the sea, they won't really care.

Lily Cole: So assuming we agree that we should care, what do we do when we do care? How do we act? How powerful are we? How responsible are we? When publishing my book this summer, I spoke alongside the writer, Jonathan Safran Foer, whose new book, We are the Weather, argues that each of us has tremendous power to have an impact in the climate crisis three times a day, by looking at our diets and specifically by eating less animal. And when I read the book, I was struck by his exploration of the psychological aspects of our challenge.

Jonathan Safran Foer: I think one of the things that we often don't talk about, or we just lose sight of is that doing what we need to do to correct the path that we're on, we always think of it as a diminishment. We always think of it as a sacrifice and a series of a series of sacrifices. I'm going to have to eat less. I'm going to have to travel less. I'm going to have to, you know, put solar panels on my house, which is going to cost money. I'm going to have to do this. And what's rarely talked about is, I mean, on the, on the most crass level, the fact that this is going to create many, many, many jobs and invigorate many, many economies, and leave us in a much stronger place than we are now. But on a personal level, I don't know of anything that feels better, really anything in the world than closing the distance between who you are and who you imagine yourself to be.

You know, I don't know anything that feels better than making a decision, even a, a difficult one that does involve some amount of sacrifice, in the interest of your values, in the interest of like your personal aspirations. And anybody who's had any experience with making a change in his or her life based on values knows that it is really joyful. It is not a bad feeling. It is not depressing. So my hope is that as these boulders start to roll down these mountains, we're going to realise that we're left in a much happier place, not just with the healthier planet, but a happier planet.

So much of the problem that we have now is with how we tell these stories. It's actually not really an issue of asking people to change their values. It's not even an issue of informing ignorant people for the most part. And this has been shown out in an awful lot of polling in America. People know what's going on and they care about what's going on. There's no like political group that has a monopoly on caring. There's no age group. There's no racial group, but it's becoming universal. And yet we're battling with inaction, not indifference, but inaction.

And the struggle has been to find good ways to talk about it. And I think Lily did a really, really excellent job of finding a good way to talk about these things, whose book I think is really wonderful. And it strikes an almost impossible balance of being both rigorous and also really accessible. And even in certain ways, despite how intimidating the subject is, it’s sort of fun to read it out. Does that make sense?

In terms of optimism I don't even know that I interrogate my own feelings that much anymore. Sometimes I can't help but feel really pessimistic. One of the points that I tried to make in my book is that we ask maybe more questions about our feelings than we do about our actions. And sometimes our feelings can conceal inaction, you know, having the right attitudes or the right opinions or saying the right thing in the right situation. Being armed with the right information. We can confuse ourselves and believe that we're participating in a way that we're not actually participating.

LC: So I set up an analogy at the beginning of the book using the kind of old fable, which is, it turns out not true when you Google it, but there was a story told many times, it's familiar. If you put a frog in boiling water and it jumps out, we put a frog in warming water and you slowly warm it to boil and it will stay until it dies. And I always thought that was a kind of perfect metaphor for the way that we're living, as we get more and more information that tells us, we are essentially an existential threat, threatening our own existence, that we have all of these crises around the corner, and yet we don't change our behaviour really very much. That's one of my things I loved about ‘We are the weather’ is you talk about the kind of collective spell of disbelief. The idea that we, we think we believe the information, but we obviously don't actually believe it because if we actually believed it, we would take action.

JSF: I think that that's part of it. I think also to like extend the frog metaphor, I would jump out of boiling water were I in it obviously, but whatever it is that I say, however, it is, I want to see myself or how other people see me, I might actually be perfectly willing to boil other people. And I think that's one of the things that we're now contending with in terms of climate change. It's one of the things that COVID has maybe shed a different kind of light on, is that there are issues with belief and collective disbelief. But maybe in a sense we have it, right. Like we collectively believe that we are safe. And most of the people who say that actually are safe from climate change. The issue is that people whose lives are already at risk halfway around the world and who don't have the same kind of access to vehicles for storytelling, and certainly people who live in the future.

So, you know, we responded in this really unprecedented way to COVID. And it's interesting to question why. Why is it that entire economies shut down and borders closed in response to something that we know actually far less about than we know about climate change and whose stakes are obviously smaller.

I think the answer is because we felt ourselves in the boiling water. People acted out of personal fear. If Boris Johnson had said, we need to close down the English economy, otherwise people in Bangladesh are going to get coronavirus, my guess is that's unlikely that the economy would be shut down. If Boris Johnson said, and we can include Trump here too, because Lord knows we're not any better, “You need to wash your hands, scrupulously. Otherwise people in Bangladesh are going to get coronavirus”. I don't think most Americans would wash their hands scrupulously because it would then require an empathic leap. Which, you know, it's a tragedy that it's hard to make, but it seems to be hard to make for most people, not for bad people, for most people.

And climate change requires an empathic leap because it's radically unlikely that anybody who's watching this is going to die of climate change, even though people are already dying of climate change. So how do we connect our actions and inactions with people who aren't us, you know, when the effects are happening to people who aren't us and that’s a very, very difficult leap to make.

LC: I think it's a very valid perception and I agree that the perception that people like us are not going to die of climate change is probably part of the reason why there's been so little action, especially from countries like developed countries in the global North. But actually I think it's a fallacy because you already see the last four out of the last five years in England are the hottest on record in the world. Like where is that trajectory going? Covid arguably is a climate change impact. Most scientists, the WHO have come out and said that infectious diseases that humans have are zoonotic they're caused by diseases, jumping from animals to humans as a direct consequences for humanity's relationship with the natural world.

The fact that there’s less and less wild space and the way that we intensively industrialised animal agriculture. So I would argue that you don't see climate change as just climate change, you know, you see it as the environment and the environment being a holistic system that has many, many, many, many factors that actually what COVID has illustrated is that we're not, even the wealthy countries, are not kind of able to protect themselves from fundamentally the fragility of these systems.

JSF: I agree. Maybe what I should should've said is the way you put it, which is the perception of personal safety. I think that there can be a danger in all of this, because it becomes so fraught with emotion and so fraught with personal insecurity, like fears of being called out, fears of being hypocritical, fears of there being a distance between the people that we describe ourselves as being, or think of ourselves as being and the people that we actually are. And that those fears lead us to conclusions that are, or to places that are where we're no longer even referring to the environment. We’re referring to ourselves and our own psychological life.

LC: So how do we make an empathetic leap to other people alive today to future generations, even to our future selves?

What can we learn from communities who are already on the frontline of the crisis? I spoke with Joshua Oppenheimer, the filmmaker who was twice Oscar nominated for his documentaries, The Act of Killing and The Look of Silence, which tried to understand the psychology behind the genocide in Indonesia. Joshua has now shifted his lens to the climate crisis through two film projects.

Joshua Oppenheimer: I’ve been developing a film project with a community in the North of Greenland. This is a tiny community that, the world through which they travel and exist, it’s melting away and it's disappearing and they're kind of evermore isolated in this outpost. And it appears at first blush like it's wilderness. You think of it more as Greenland as wilderness, but it's more visibly scarred by human activity all over the planet, really, but certainly to the South of it, than anywhere else. And to see also the same version of geological time and human time.

There's a Fjord behind the village that since this woman was 20 and she's now 40, the teacher in that village, this is basically a short period of this woman's life. But in this short period, this Fjord has opened by 10 miles. There's like a 10 mile bay that has emerged in a period of a human being's life, where she has barely changed visibly. Time has brought no change to her body while it has opened a 10 mile long fjord behind her.

Lily Cole: I write about this concept of solastalgia and I think it comes Greenland originally. It was a neologism that was made up to kind of capture the emotions of environmental grief and loss.

JO: Homesickness for when you can't go home anymore.

LC: Yeah, exactly. How many years have you been going though to that community?

JO: For over three years. And now you can see the glaciers retreat and you see formations of ice just disappear. The last time I was there with was the summer of 2019, it was the hottest temperature they had ever experienced. And there were sort of forest fires or peat fires in Southern Greenland.

LC: A lot of people don't realise that global warming accelerates towards the polls.

JO: There’s four degrees centigrade warming in Greenland versus less than two in the world as a whole.

When I was a child my and my parents were going through a divorce I would sort of hide from the chaos and the arguing by sitting actually in the toilet, I must admit with an atlas that was by the toilet. And I was fascinated by the ice cap in Greenland. And there's one little village there called Savissivik. I always wanted to go to that village, and I was not going to do that unless there was a good reason. And then I met someone from the neighbouring village and was thinking of doing something. What could I develop about global warming that would really show how this was sort of a warning for all of us, for an entire community is destroyed by that.

And that's why I started going up there for this, because I have this fascination with ice and the glaciers, since as long as I can remember. I would really take notice if the ice disappeared. Now, there were these arches of ice and ice covered up peninsulas that were connected only by ice to the mainland. But summer two years later, these peninsulas were no longer peninsulas at all. They were islands and the breakup of the ice, which in that community means, there's no snowmobiles up there, but, and as the ice breaks up, and if it's late to form, people travel by dogs that over the ice, there's no roads from village to village.

In this small community, people are just stuck waiting for the ice to get thick enough to carry their dogs. And this past year, probably the person who will be at the centre of the film, his whole dog team fell through the ice and drowned. So he was without eighteen dogs because the ice was just rotten. It's because of the sea water and the oceans take a long time to warm.

So the other thing that has horrified me reading about this, about this oceans are so vast that they take about 40 years to catch up to the amount of carbon in the atmosphere. So the warming of the oceans that is rotting the ice there now is actually, its a carbon emissions up to 1980s. So if we stopped emitting now we would still have the next 40 years of carbon. Of course some carbon will be removed by trees and plants, but we would still see warming for decades.

LC: Yeah. This is what a lot of climate scientists talk about is that there's locked in warming that we haven't even experienced yet. That's why it's so dangerous because we don't know the tipping points and we don't know the feedback loop. What are their responses and reactions? How were they emotionally experiencing it?

JO: I think it’s horrifying. It’s this community that is pretty much built on subsistence hunting and fishing. It's what they know. And it's what they've always done. And the idea that they don't know what world they're preparing their children for, I think it's really difficult. And that whatever world that is, if it's not in that village or if the skills, that the hunting skills that people are teaching their kids in that village, are not going to be applicable because the world is so drastically changed, that they also have the sense of their home is being tremendously, temporary and precarious.

But it's a place where they've been forever for as long as they're folklore, it gives them a kind of record of where they were and that sense of grief about, how can I be a parent to my children, when the world that I'm preparing them for is being destroyed.

LC: I rewatched the act of killing last night and hadn't seen it in quite a few years. And for me, the power of that film is the fact that these people are not psychopaths and actually understanding them and trying to not have empathy is a hard word, but almost have empathy or insight into why people make those choices, is why that film is so beyond being kind of beautiful, and riveting, why it's so powerful. Was that part of your intention?

JO: I don't think empathy is too strong a word. I think actually it's not strong enough. I think compassion is the right word. I can have compassion for Anwar without sympathising with what he did. I can even have sympathy for him as a human being, given how he's destroyed himself and what he must live with. Compassion and sympathy are things that one must earn - that other human beings have to earn either by virtue of who they are ethnically or racially or sexually, or by virtue of their class or education or by virtue of their deeds. I think that we owe compassion and sympathy to all of human beings, no matter how monstrous their actions.

Primo Levi writing about the Holocaust said, there may be monsters among us, but there are too few to worry about. What we really have to worry about are ordinary people like us. And I think that is the only hopeful position, because if the perpetrators are monsters, then what can we do but try and somehow identify them and corral them, neutralise them somehow. And then we become the monsters. But the optimistic views that everyone, the most greedy, the most selfish, the most self-absorbed narcissistic person is actually a human being like us. And worthy of our compassion. Because only by trying to understand how people make those choices, do we have any possibility of preventing these things from happening, of building societies where these things that happen all too often, actually one day become unthinkable.

LC: I wanted to ask you also about cognitive dissonance because it's something I've been exploring a bit in terms of the climate crisis. There's really beautiful book, if you haven't read it called, We are the Weather, by Jonathan Safran Foer, where he very poetically kind of makes the argument that none of us really believe what's happening. And he, in a way, subverts that to say that it may turn out many years from now that the climate deniers, you know, who were often kind of painted as the baddies in a way, that the climate deniers are the good guys, because they were just ignorant. Whereas the people who believed it, but didn't change, they’re the ones who were actually doing something evil in a way.

JO: It’s a minor thing, but I don't really believe that the climate deniers, most of the climate deniers, are free of this cognitive dissonance. I think the denial is their particular way of coping with their own powerlessness or rationalising their own interests or their own inertia that they don't want to make change or they feel powerless to make change.

LC: Yeah. No, that's a good point. That's a good point. But yeah, I was thinking that about that when watching the film again, The Act of Killing, because I feel like what you're exploring a lot in that film is cognitive dissonance. Is this spell, this kind of illusion that the community is under of rationalising and accepting, and even maybe celebrating that past. And then it, through the course of your work in that film, it feels like you start to reveal that that's a facade and that that isn't actually that truth. Do you feel like there was a kind of cognitive dissonance that allowed those horrors to continue?

JO: I think that very, very much so. Now I'm working on a film, actually about a musical issue. No, about a very wealthy family in a bunker, that the father was an oil executive, and he has built this bunker for his family. It's about how we're actually walking toward the abyss with our eyes wide open, but our hearts shut. When you look at the cognitive dissonance in The Act of Killing, it's interesting. I think that my point is that it's not merely the celebration of the genocide by the perpetrators and by the politicians is a lie. It’s dissonant with what they know in their hearts, but that it's a defensive lie. I think that's a really interesting vicious cycle.

What interests me is that if you celebrate a wrongdoing defensively to protect yourself from guilt, to run away from regret, to escape the potential torment of regret, then actually it's not coming from an inhuman place. It's actually coming from the same human morality in the sense that guilt is painful. Guilt hurts us. It's not because we are psychopaths or we don't feel guilt or we're merely selfish, but to protect ourselves from guilt, we justify the things we do that are wrong so that we can live with them. And then once you do that, that demands like with any lie, the first thing you do is deny it.

And then you double down like any lie demands that you harden your position. A good illustration of it is I've always imagined as how Anwar in The Act of Killing didn’t start as a killer.  One day he was asked to kill his first person and he was cajoled and pressured into doing it and having done it felt sick with guilt, was nauseous. Anwar has a weak stomach. You can see in the film, went home, had nightmares, was miserable. Came back the next day pale and unwell because he was maybe afraid not to. And his commander said, ‘you don't look too good. Are you all right?’ And he said, ‘I don't know. I'm not feeling so well’.

And the man, his name was Roshimon, actually patted him on the back and said, ‘no, no, what you did was great. It was the right thing to do. And it was, and you actually are helping to save our nation’. And gave him all sorts of reasons, justifying what he did and Anwar clung to those reasons because they allowed him to live with himself. But then the next time when Roshiman tells him now kill this room full of 10 people, he faces a terrible choice. Either he does it and continues to tell himself it's the right thing to do. Or he says no, but admits it was wrong the first time.

This is I think for many of us, the experience of cognitive dissonance. We can tell ourselves stories that allow us in extreme cases to live with ourselves and maybe more often just to feel comfortable with our lives. To be able to get on with it, to be able to wake up in the morning and feel like our life is not completely insane. And I think that there's, that's part of the cognitive dissonance around climate change. Even those of us who know, who do believe fully in the catastrophe that's unfolding right now, somehow the scale of it, our awareness of the enormity of change that's required very, very quick, yesterday, to even bring this thing under control, our sense that whatever we do in our own personal lives to alter our patterns of consumption really, will be truly a drop in the ocean.

I think we settle into a kind of unconscious disbelief. We believe in a way, but we don't believe in our hearts so that we can carry on. And I think that's a really interesting kind of cognitive dissonance that, that will allow us to commit collective suicide. I think what we really need to do with that sense of disempowerment is to come together and empower ourselves through collective action.

LC: I mean, I have, I even have tears in my eyes now, and I'm somebody who's been looking at the data for 15 years and watching what's going on very closely and trying my best to help in small ways with, with how I can, and in terms of dealing with this situation. And yet still, I recognise that most days of my life I'm living in a state of disbelief. I think that the shift that's required is maybe it's so big that it's hard to truly believe.

JO: Also our institutions, our industry, our transport, our supply chains are set up in such a way that just by existing, we are complicit.

LC: Everything wants you to be normal. It's so easy to be in a state of disbelief because all the media, all the advertising, all the messaging, everything, like the collective psychology averaging, the normal is itself in a state of disbelief. You know, that everything is fine. Just keep, keep carrying on everything's going to be fine.

JO: It reminds me of Pascal's idea of performativity of faith. That I believe. And that is what’s his wager. And it's like by participating, we believe this is not really happening by going through daily life, by feeding ourselves clothing, ourselves, surviving through a system that rests not only on the suffering of others in sweatshops and the destruction of natural habitat, but which also through fossil fuel emissions, methane gas emission, that could render our planet uninhabitable. But simply by living, we are actually performing our disbelief in the climate change around us because we are complicit in our daily quotidian activities. I fear that sometimes the idea that we can make lifestyle changes as a means of contributing, becomes close to a kind of spiritual self salvation.

And my fear is that sometimes we do things like we cut out meat as I have done. What I'm afraid of is that the comfort that that gives me actually fuels that disbelief the sense that, well, I am doing my part and that helps me get through the day. When so much more is needed.

LC: I think a lot of people do that with carbon offsetting. They justify flying because they carbon offset. Most environmentalists I know, would say you need to carbon offset and reduce flying. Like we've we can't cancel one out with the other. George Monbiot compares it to indulgences in the middle ages, you know, where you, you literally pay for your sins and that'd be a way of, I guess, washing them away.

JO: It’s certainly my fear.

LC: How are you exploring cognitive dissonance in your film, at the end?

JO: It’s just as in The Act of Killing, I explore cognitive dissonance through Anwar’s confrontation with his own regrets, physical and bodily there. I think here it's the same. All the stories they've told themselves that brought them to where they are, and that led them to participate in the destruction of the world really, as they face their regrets, the message is that by that point, when we've rendered the world all but uninhabitable and we’re huddled away and hiding, what really keeps them in that bunker also is fear and guilt.

LC: And have you done research on real life versions of that scenario, i.e. people who are building bunkers?

JO: I was developing a film about a very politically powerful and wealthy family that was shopping for a bunker. And it was while shopping for that bunker, traveling with them to look at this bunker made me think it could have been out buying a fancy car or a vacation home. There was so much, they couldn't say, I mean, they just were not looking at what they were really doing. And actually there was a connection to fossil fuel also within the family as well.

LC: Is that a big industry, you know, are there lots of bunkers being bought and sold?

JO: It is. And I think with the coronavirus pandemic it has surged. There's many billionaires and people with hundreds of millions of dollars will have built very luxurious bunkers that we'll never see. And we'll never quite know how they're constructed, but there's a bunker in Kansas called the survival condo, which is built in a former nuclear missile silo, that is sort of an inverted underground skyscraper, that I visited and it was pretty luxurious, 15,000 square foot luxury apartments, the pool.

We live in a society that values individual self-interests or has elevated individual self-interest, not just as a virtue, but as the engine upon which everything rests. Individual self-interest and I should say optimism. I mean, that's the other thing, capitalism is built on optimism because the system of credit is built on optimism. You wouldn't loan someone money to start a business, in hope that they could pay it back with interest, if you didn't think tomorrow would in general be better than today. So just by participating in the market economy, as the scholar says, we’re kind of performing our disbelief in the catastrophe that we’re approaching, and that we’re bringing upon ourselves.

LC: Do you think optimism then is a problem in the sense that it's also performative?

JO: It depends what it motivates. If optimism motivates collective action, if it motivates civil disobedience, if it motivates, I mean, it's optimism that motivates Greta Thunberg. It's the belief that change is possible. It's optimism, plus a rediscovery of the importance of collective activism, true activism and political activism. I remember when I was at, I guess in high school, when George W. Bush his father, the first George Herbert Walker Bush was president. I mean, he came to president promising to cut back collective solutions to our problems in favour of what he called a thousand points of light. It was, that's of course what Thatcher was saying when she said there's no such thing as society.

We are all completely interdependent. In fact, the distinctions between us are artificial. Our individuality is actually perhaps a myth. There's this wonderful book, The Lives of a Cell. It has this wonderful analogy. It talks about termites and how termites build these incredibly designed nests with geometrically and brilliantly engineered gothic, soaring, arches, and pointed arches. And they do it without having any idea what they're doing.

And the writer Lewis, he says that the human analog to that is language. That's the project that we're continually creating unconsciously and innovating and renovating and reinventing unconsciously. All of us together. And it is what allows us to know ourselves and each other. And to tell us the stories about the world that allow us to come together for collective projects, whether it’s the market economy and the status quo or the alternatives that we need to act, that actually you've dedicated your adult life into trying to realise and to demonstrate and to pilot.

LC: Interestingly communication has in it, the word ‘muni’, which is also in community and comes from the Latin for gift. And that's something I've always been interested in, is the idea that you build community through gifts. Anthropologists mostly agree that the earliest human way of relating was through the gift economy i.e. like tribal societies would all give basically to one another and therefore receive from one another. And it was through the gifts that at you would established community.

It's interesting when you apply that analogy to communication that it's the gift of language for the most part, we share it. We share our words, right? Y

JO: Munificence has it as well I suppose.

LC: Yeah. Well done. Yeah.

JO: That’s interesting too, that the collective is a gift.

LC: I think community is one of my reasons for optimism. It's something I spend a lot of time in the book, looking at both in terms of what we can learn from indigenous communities and also how community operates in our own contemporary world. And it's one of the places I hold the most hope. I think that, you know, it's, it's obvious, right? We're like we're human, we're human creatures i.e animals on a planet that are co-dependent with not just other members of our species, but also other species.

And so, remembering that, remembering our needs for belonging, our need for community, with other human beings, and I would argue also with other species and the ecosystem, I think is such an essential part of reestablishing, not just balance and sustainability, but also I think happiness and meaning and the, you know, the positive reasons for being alive.

LC: That’s beautiful. That’s faith right? I think faith is an important word. Your faith in our better angels and our possibility to do good and to bring change and your activation of that as much as you can, through how you live and your humility, when we cannot confront the limitations of how we can realise change, is really inspiring.

And I think that humility is probably what protects one against cognitive dissonance. It's actually the ability to accept isn't it. We're talking about like saying, okay, there is a way in which I am complicit every day. And I think just like Anwar’s celebration in The Act of Killing, of his crimes is born of defensiveness, I think that kind of disbelief creeps in upon us in part, when we don't accept, when we can’t reconcile ourselves with the fact that there's aspects of our lives, that will be complicit. And if we can accept that or acknowledge it, then maybe we can actually imagine the scarier and more difficult things we need to do to make a real difference.

LC: This is my friend, Joshua. This is Wylde!

JO: Wylde, you’re all grown up since I last saw you. Wylde I last saw you when you were a toddler. I was chasing you around the British museum. You’re five?

Wylde: Today, my friend called Jonny jumped from a wall and knocked his tooth. So he had to see a dentist today.

JO: Oh, that’s terrible.

LC: Not good.

JO: Wylde, I'm so happy to see you. I'll let you guys go, but I want to see you more and more and more.

Lily Cole: What happens to individuals when they embrace the science? When they think of future generations, when they think of others, when they really, really care? How does the mental health of activists often fair?

I spoke again with Farhana Yamin, the environmental lawyer turned activist you may remember from episode four. Farhana co-authored multiple UN IPCC reports, worked at multiple UN COP meetings on climate change, and then she fell into a deep depression, forcing her to withdraw from her work.

Farhana Yamin: After we got the Paris agreement to reference 1.5 as a safer level, an effort which had taken the best part of 10 years because the small islands I'd represented had been putting forward the 1.5 degree threshold since 2009, I felt really, really depressed because so many progressive countries, the bigger environmental NGOs, especially the one in the States, said there's no way we're going to do that. That's too difficult. Let’s at least just aim for two.

And it was completely rejecting the science because it was saying all of those millions and millions of people who would be affected, all those vulnerable ecosystems that would be affected below two degrees, which the science had then proved, were sort of irrelevant. We should just carry on sort of saying that was just too tricky and difficult for us to achieve. The fact that people were on our side, our allies were saying, let's just give ourselves an easier target. And it really shocked me and upset me. And it was like, no, this is what we agreed. This was part of the sacred bargain that the small islands and multiple countries also came to.

I really couldn't deal with so many reports that were coming out saying we're at one degree already, we’re going to miss the 1.5 target and let's just move on and deal with this consequence. And I felt, I really couldn't look at all the small Island leaders in the eye and say the COPs gonna fix it. And most of the developing countries were yet again, blamed for setting impossible ambitious goals or not being realistic enough. So yeah, it's the usual tale.

LC: How long did that depression last?

FY:  It was, I sort of had to take most nearly all of 2018 off. I stepped back from most of my professional work. I didn't take any more funding. I stopped being part of that whole sort of climate policy community. I stopped working for the small island states directly. So I felt like my body shut down and it wasn't able to function in many of those UN tight spaces, and with my old friends and colleagues who were still doing great work, but also not able to stand back and say, yes, we failed and we haven't really achieved what we set out to. And yes, Paris has some really fundamental problems right now. Because they were so sort of committed to, to saying for the sake of funding, for themselves, ‘Oh, Paris is great. Let's all be optimistic. Let's just keep going.’

And I felt like, no, you have, you have to sort of acknowledge where you are and that's why, that thing, ‘tell the truth’ was so compelling to me. Well, another one of XRs things, let's tell the truth about where we really are. And it hurts to say we haven't really achieved what we set out to achieve. And Paris isn't working. The business community is absolutely not on board.

Even two years ago I went and did an eight month Nature connection course. I did lots and lots of wildlife nature, connection work. So I felt, yeah, I needed to just get away and nature was my medicine. I spent lots of time walking, I developed practices like gratitude, appreciation and just tuning into a different timeframe and a different way of being, and settling myself and dealing with the cutthroat politics globally, as well as individually, as you try and sort of thrive in this world.

And it was a very bleak time as a Muslim being in this country as well. And as a migrant. From 2016, we had the Brexit election. So for me feeling the hostility, you know, towards foreigners, towards immigrants, towards migrants, towards refugees, we were sort of demonised. And I, I felt like, goodness, I felt like I loved England more than England loved me.

So for a number of different reasons, it was, it was kind of a difficult period, and it was only the time that helped heal that sense of grieving and loss and frustration and channeling some of that frustration in non-violent direct action. I really only came back when the IPCC report was published in October 2018 in on The 1.5 Report and then Extinction Rebellion staged this Die In and arrests in parliament square, and I thought, wow, that is the right response to this report.

There is something sort of unstoppable that's happened. And that, that outpouring of anger hurt, truth-telling, the use of our bodies and nonviolent direct action, the young people rising up has compelled politicians to act in a way that wasn't happening before before then.

So I feel a bit more encouraged by that kind of action work. The UK is a great example because changing our national law, The Climate Change Act, to go from 80% reductions by 2050 to net zero by 2050, that proposal to change our law had been sitting there after Paris for like three and a half years and the government had done nothing and it was just not a priority. So it was only through the protests of the young people and through XRs protests that that legislative change actually came about in May of 2019, just two months after the rebellion.

LC: Have you experienced a sense of like grieving the loss of nature and of wildlife and the kind of different species that we may have already lost?

FY: For me, there was a whole mixture of different griefs. And again, one of the most compelling things I found about XR was this truth telling about the scale of the sixth mass extinction. And we had funerals, that was one of the key theatrical things. We had funerals for nature and having a coffin that I marched behind in Downing street, a whole march was a funeral march for me, was really important.

It was the first time as a sort of straight-laced policy nerd, I could cry and grieve and say this is happening. And so I think that sense, not just for me of climate anxiety, but actual grief for the life that was lost, the ecosystems that were destroyed, that we're never going to adapt our way out. And we didn't have to all just kind of be cheery and go into this whole optimism, you know, using this optimism framing, we're not talking about the grief and the loss and they were not, and are still not talking about the immense loss of life and disruption and the things that cannot be solved by battery storage and Elon Musk and renewables.

That is a fantastic story, but we're not bringing back huge parts of the dead ocean, the coral reefs, the wildfires that decimate millions and millions of animals. Those are never coming back. We're never refreezing. We're not pulling back the ocean circulation or the ocean acidification, that's not going to happen. So all for me, those things were as important to acknowledge and scream about and cry about and truth tell about as the story of the march of renewables and the success of electrification.

For me, that was a really important reason also for stepping back from that community and my friends in that community. Cause I felt like, I want you to also say this. I know that renewables are cheaper and now, you’re going to do that, but as I said, battery storage, micro grids, renewable electrification isn't going to bring back large parts of the dead planet and it isn't going to solve the existential crisis or survival for small island. So please be honest about it. Please be honest about it. Say in the same breath.

You know, I still, you know Lily, I’m sick of it. I really am sick of that optimistic strand, and never acknowledging the limits to human ingenuity. So yeah, I would like that acknowledged. I would like as much, if not more, start off with humongous loss and damage that was utterly predictable. That is not a shock. It is not a surprise. It is what the scientists were predicting those 30 years ago, those 10 years ago, those 15 years ago, every single report has been confirmed, affirmed, and actually like things are happening faster.

LC: There’s more to come right?

FY: Yeah. There's more to come and there's no way that human ingenuity is going to deal with that.

LC: When you consider how the reality of our environmental situation negatively impacts many of the people directly engaged with dealing with it, it’s almost no wonder that cognitive dissonance and even climate denial abound, but is it possible to care without falling into depression or anxiety?

What are the tools we can use to better navigate this time? I spoke with a psychologist, Julia Samuels about her clinical experience of eco grief and eco anxiety and how she recommends dealing with it.

Have you seen a direct increase in the number of clients you have expressing versions of eco anxiety?

Julia Samuels: Yes. And so have all the helplines; MIND, all the support helplines,  Samaritans. Only in the last I think three to five years probably, as awareness has grown. What people say is that it’s not a diagnosis of a disorder, it’s a realistic human response to ongoing events. I also work with living losses, which are experienced like grief, someone doesn't die, but it's a loss of something that you believed in or hope for or a relationship that you had.

And often the pain is the agent of change. Pain is the thing that wakes you up to recognise this new reality that you didn't want and you didn't choose, but when you feel comfortable and you feel happy and at ease, you don't have any requirement to shift your perspective or change your view or change your behaviour because you're in your comfort zone.

So anxiety is the first bodily signal that wakes us up to know that something isn't right. That we have to look and see what it is. I mean, we're wired to have a negative bias to look for danger. The great thing about young people is they're much more emotionally intelligent and much more emotionally vocal, and that's incredibly powerful. And once you're aware of something and you've voiced it, that is the first step to change and you can't have change without that.

LC: That’s interesting. You say we're wired towards the negative. Would you elaborate on that a little bit?

JS: So from the sort of early man we know from evolutionary biology, that two things are really interesting. One is that we don't survive alone so that we need, we need people, people need people to survive and people need people to be safe and to connect to others. So that's a fundamental need. But also we are wired to look for danger to see if there's a tiger coming to see that we're safe, because that is how we evolutionarily survived in the Savannah or early times. And that's still in our DNA.

LC: And do you think that has the potential then to distort our sense of fear around issues like climate change, for example, like apocalyptic senses?

JS: Often people who feel anxious, it is a perceived anxiety from what they're telling themselves. So they've conflated a feeling with a fact. The complexity, I think with your question, is I don't think many people argue the truth of climate change and of fears for our future, of its impact certainly for my grandchildren, even if not my children. So it's a realistic one if that makes sense, which is very different from a self perpetuating one. It's not the way someone is thinking about it or perceiving it. It's recognising there is something difficult out there and we need to respond to it. The anxiety is information that we need to take seriously.

LC: Do you think that this people on the other end of the spectrum who are living in denial because it's too difficult to accept the reality?

JS: Definitely. It's a very uncomfortable reality. It's an inconvenient truth as Al Gore said. I don't know if you can ever square the circle of what we need to do and what we can do. Like the man in your book who saw the oil pouring into the Bay in San Francisco. He never got in a car again for 22 years. I mean that for me, that would be too big a leap, but people on that spectrum have to make lots of choices, don’t they.

LC: Yeah. And interestingly, I mean, he's a good example. Mark Boyle’s another good example. He's a friend who’s lived without any modern technology for the last three years, because he believes it’s antithetical to a sustainable vision, even green tech. What's interesting is that I think in both those examples, they would argue,  John Francis and Mark Boyle that it made them happier, because they felt more at peace with themselves. And it's certainly something that I know I've struggled with is that by not being fully authentic to what I feel is going on environmentally and the kind of level of commitment that it demands, I then end up often feeling very guilty or conflicted or…

JS: Shamed

LC: And shamed, yeah. And then when I do make choices that are more in line with what feels right to do, I do find a sense of peace.

JS: I mean, I think that's completely right. We know psychologically that how we behave, how we speak, how we show ourselves, the choices we make when they're congruent internally with ourselves and what we show externally and what we do, then we're much more aligned and much more at peace and much calmer.

I think each of us needs to be at peace with our own ethical responsibility and moral imagination of what we individually can do to be at peace with ourselves.

LC: There’s something I explore the very end of the book. I feel like there’s a potential like circle whereby the disrespect we've been showing collectively to nature or the environment is causing the kind of existential threat of the climate crisis. But arguably it's also causing a lot of unhappiness through feeling disconnected and that the symptom and the cure may be connected.

JS: I mean, there's a lot of research about ecotherapy. I think walking and talking as a family, as a couple, with friends is one of the most cathartic things that you can do. I think again, evolutionary biology shows that we belong in nature. We find our resting place in nature. So even people who are born and brought up in urban cities who made to begin with feel uncomfortable in nature, their cortisol levels drop in nature. So their levels of stress drops. So nature is our kind of natural home.

I think the big thing is, is this, apart from evolutionary biology, is that we need each other so that as one person you make your own decisions that you can live with and you can be proud of yourself, but we need to do it as a community. And the research is robust throughout the world. The single biggest indicator of wellbeing, health, and happiness outcomes is love and connection to others.

And of course having enough financial security is a big lens on that. If you have a lot of financial problems and difficulties, it's much more difficult to have good sustainable relationships because you're so frightened all the time. And there's so much using up your energy. But when we look back at our lives, it is always our relationships that matter to us most.

LC: Have you heard of the collective psychology project?

JS: No.

LC: I came across it in my research. It's quite an interesting concept, arguing that a problem with psychology generally for recent decades is that it's very, self-focused, individual focused and that whilst we need to do a lot of psychological work, we need to do it in community because the shifts that are required are collective.

JS: I completely agree. I mean, I think it's come full circle in a way, but now I think family systems therapy like taking one unhappy member of a family out of a family, them having therapy and then putting them back in the family doesn't necessarily fix the problem because maybe the person that's unhappy is acting out a systemic problem in the whole family system. And you could argue that with us in society, in communities. And loneliness is the equivalent to smoking 30 cigarettes a day on your health.

And I think COVID was a terrible thing, but one of the surprising consequences was neighbourhoods, where people met neighbours, where they dropped food off for people who had to shield, where they had a call list of people they telephoned, where they stood on doorsteps and spoke to people they'd never spoken to before, and connected in a way they never had before. And I think some people worked extra hard, but a lot of people slowed down and felt a connection with themselves and their families and their communities and nature, the spring, in a way that they never had before, because they were always kind of on a rush.

And there's been this kind of 21st century badge of honour, the busier that I am, the more important I am. And actually that's fed a kind of hole of hunger that can never be sated. And I think the slowness has enabled people to be in touch with themselves, to enable them to be in touch with those that they care most about. When we’re kind of wired, our autonomic system is on fourth gear. You don't adapt, you can't change when you're only in defence mode. So to slow down is how we learn to shift and change. And it's like losing the sort of scales of a skin like a snake. And then you adapt into this new person, this new version of yourself, which then feels more vibrant and more alive. The kind of thesis of my book is that those of us that don't change and don't adapt, have less joy and a success in that.

LC: Rebecca Solnit, I think writes beautifully about this, how from disasters, you often see the best in people, not the worst in people. You see that people respond with kind of care and kindness to one another.

JS: Yeah, loss does create growth. You know, there is this research about post-traumatic growth, that the level of the loss is never denied and has to be acknowledged whatever that is, but it changes people when you have a sort of very intense experience and it changes their perception about what matters. It changes their engagement with the world. And mainly the outcome is that people are more connected with other people. That love matters to them more than anything else. And that extends to their communities.

LC: Aldo Leopold writes about the sense of community that goes beyond the human community, a community with other animals, other species, with wildlife, with nature itself. Do you think that’s an appropriate exploration, if you're interested in community, that we also understand ourselves in the community beyond just the human sphere.

JS: I mean, I don't know if it's the natural world needs us, but we certainly need it. And when we value it and enrich it and engage with it, we reap enormous rewards. I think there's so much connection that we don’t see. And you know when you talked about hope, hope is the alchemy that turns a life around. Hope isn't just a feeling. It is a plan and a belief so that you have a light at the end of the tunnel, the flame that you aim for it. Isn't just a kind of, oops, I wish for this. It’s really something to aim for. And that does change the whole way you see the world.

LC: Do you think that there is an opportunity in the climate crisis for a spiritual, psychological awakening that needed to happen? Do you see any silver lining or hope to the situation?

JS: Psychologically we talk about a breakdown, being a breakthrough. That when we break old habits and ways of being and beliefs that have constricted us and sort of tied us down, we can feel liberated into a new version of ourselves that may feel much more joy, much more capacity to feel joy, more spontaneity, more freedom. And I think getting off of rat run. All the measures for success when they change and match more what we've been talking about to do with connection, to do with working with meaning to, to work with your community, to live in an authentic way with nature and yourself, I think there is very likely to be a much more spiritual light pouring.

Lily Cole: Finally to conclude this episode, I thought I'd go full circle back to Patti Smith's insights and bring in the words of someone who's also traveled in the Dalai Lama's Homeland, the anthropologist Wade Davis, who you met in the last episode, who spoke to me about how we might each try to act upon the crisis with wisdom without despair.

Wade Davis: As a storyteller, you have an obligation to bear witness to the world. And one of the things I've learned both from my travels in Tibet, but also from my own father, my father, wasn't a religious man at all, but he did believe fundamentally in righteousness and evil. And he would just say to you is, you know, like son there's good and evil in the world, take your side and get on with it.

And what he was really saying is don't ever expect to win. You know, the Christian tradition is people are constantly frustrated because at some fundamental level, there's an expectation that if we only do X, Y, and Z well enough, that somehow evil will be vanquished from the world. For better or for worse, Eastern religions don't have that illusion. You know, if you asked, for example, in the middle ages in Europe, the obvious question, if God's all powerful, why does he allow evil to exist in the universe? Well that became a great heresy and you were burned at the stake because it was a question that challenged a very fundamental ideology of the church.

But when Lord Christian was asked that same question by a disciple, why does evil exist in the universe if God's all powerful, he just responded, “to thicken the plot”. In other words, there is good and evil in the world and yeah, one's choice is simply to try your best to walk on the path of righteousness.

I don't mean to sound sanctimonious with that, but it's kind of basically true. And one thing I've learned from the Buddhist Dharma is that the goal of the path of life is not a destination. It's a state of mind, a kind of an animity that allows you like a mountain, not to be shaken by the disappointment or the excitement of events.

That doesn't mean disengagement. It just means that if, for example, as I have fought very hard for, to protect the mountain or for the rights of indigenous people, and I've watched both the mountain torn apart, and the people crushed along with the forest that gave them birth, you know, had I been expecting a victory, maybe I would become embittered and disappointed. But having no expectations and recognising that the fight for the mountain or the fight for the rights of the people that was the path of life. It just means that I can continue to walk that path, turning my attention to the next place where I might be able to adjust in some small way bend the hinge of history.

Lily Cole: So perhaps the journey is as much about caring as it is about winning. I hope this episode has offered you some inspiration for how you might navigate these times with open hearts and minds. How to feel empowered and truthful without feeling overwhelmed. How to stay engaged and proactive without falling prey to depression, anxiety, or despair. I don't claim to have figured out any of these fundamental questions yet myself, but it is a journey I embrace because I want to avoid both denial and depression.

And also because I do not believe we can bring peace and balance to our outer world without also seeking peace and balance within. I always love the ancient adage attributed to Hermes, as above, so below, as within, so without. We may discover that happiness and sustainability are fundamentally connected.

This is the last episode of the series, and I plan to take a break for now, but there are still some key topics and questions I'd like to address. And so I plan to release more next year. If you'd like to tune into those, please subscribe to the series or you can follow me on Instagram @LilyCole, where I'll share future episodes.

Finally, I announced a competition earlier in the series to give away an audio book copy of my book, Who Cares Wins. If you've reviewed the podcast, please send your contact information to penguin through the weblink in the show notes. We will notify the winner directly by December the 17th. I would really genuinely love to hear what you thought of this series so please do rate, review or share it. We don't have any advertising on this podcast. So its distribution depends largely on word of mouth.

Wishing you love, luck and courage and the journey ahead of us all. Thanks for listening. Thanks for caring.

Friday 03.19.21
Posted by claudia delgado
 

WCW - Episode 7

Hello for the eager eyed amongst you, you might've noticed this episode is a week late. We decided against posting this last week because of the turmoil around the US election. And we also felt it was appropriate to share it this week in the aftermath of that election, because this episode tries to grapple with some of the fundamental issues underneath our increasingly divided and tribal political landscape, in the US and arguably around the world.

So I hope you take something from this episode, as we reflect on what our global consciousness is going through and where we might want to take it in the future.

Wade Davis - We are all descendants of the same handful of people who walked out of Africa 70,000 years ago. Therefore every culture shares the same genes. And there is no hierarchy in the affairs of culture. The other peoples of the world aren't failed attempts at being you. We all know we must change the fundamental way in which we inhabit this planet. Every culture has something to say. Each deserves to be heard. There are other options.

Chief Nixiewake - Our culture brings out the traditional, but also the modernity. The modern is represented by the new musical instruments, the new dances, the way we make our rituals. And also represented by the women empowerment.

Vanessa Nakate - In my country and in my culture, they name people after animals, they name people after plants, they name people after trees, they name people after fish. So this was a system that was put in place in order to protect everything that connects to nature.

Sam Lee - The work is for me is, is about deep listening. And this is something that as a people, we have lost the art of. Spending hours in the company of somebody sharing their life and their songs and listening to them slowly tell this world.

Lily Cole: At the heart of every issue that intersects with the environment you find contradictions tensions and divergent perspectives, and these issues are complex and changing. Most of us want a happy life and a healthy planet. But many people have different ideas about the right way to travel towards it. In this new podcast series, I'll be sharing parts of my research from my book Who Cares Wins, interviewing some of the leading and conflicting voices in contemporary debates, such as technology, food, gender, politics and looking at how they intersect with our environment.

I see myself a bit like sellotape, ribbon or string holding together divergent voices and sort of asking, ‘who cares who wins?’

In this episode I will speak to an anthropologist, indigenous communities and a folk song collector, to try and better understand the cultural, political and social forces that have shaped our present system. And I'll also explore alternative visions that we might take inspiration from.

System change is often chanted like a mantra, but what exactly does the system mean? The roots of our system run much deeper than the laws and the institutions we've built. These structures emerge as symptoms in the collective stories we tell and retell ourselves. Instead it is the values, metaphors and beliefs that fundamentally underpin our society's relationship with the world. And these beliefs are constantly shifting.

Whether, for example, we believe that most human beings are good and to be trusted or are barbaric people to be civilised. Whether we believe in a natural hierarchy between species or even between people or whether we believe hierarchy is something culturally imposed on difference. Whether we believe we owe our fidelity to the Earth or that the Earth is ours to own. Whether we believe in the American dream, or whether we listen to the dreams of the people who've lived for tens of thousands of years on the land that we now call America.

The anthropologist Wade Davis sees the confluence of the Trump presidency and COVID as a historical turning point for the world in terms of the shift of empire. Wade has dedicated his life to documenting and trying to understand the breadth of cultures around the world, sharing his insights through books such as One River, The Wayfinders, Into the Silence, and most recently, Magdalena.

In response to the COVID crisis, Wade wrote an article that was quickly shared hundreds of millions of times titled, The unraveling of America, which explored this moment we find ourselves in and what it might mean for our future.

Wade Davis: You know I had been asked to speak about COVID by many people. And I didn't really feel I had anything novel to say until I kind of just realised that COVID was not a story of medicine at all, but it wasn't really a story of healthcare, even morbidity and mortality. It was really a story of culture.

Lily Cole: In what sense?

WD: Well, in the sense that the long-term impacts of it were to be cultural and historic. The adaptations that the COVID reality we're going to call for and provoke, all these were just petty inconveniences that we would readily adapt to. But what will not change was,  I sensed, was the absolute devastating impact this would have, the kind of catalytic impact, it would have historically on the balance of power in the world. And it struck me that this was the unraveling of America.

Americans woke up to the fact that 2000 of them were dying a day. They were living in a failed state, ruled by a dysfunctional government at the helm of which was  a kind of buffoon of a president, who was advocating the use of disinfectants to treat a life-threatening pandemic disease that he intellectually could not begin to understand. And as frontline workers at healthcare centres across the country awaited emergency air lifts of fundamental supplies from China, the hinge of history kind of opened to the Asian century.

LC: And so you feel very confident that this will be the kind of, the linchpin in essentially the Empire moving back towards China.

WD: All empires are born to die. Every kingdom fails to anticipate its own demise. I mean, you know, the 15th century belongs to the Portuguese, the 16th to the Spanish, the 17th to the Dutch, the 18th to the French, the 19th to the British and clearly the 20th to the Americans. I mean, the British empire, for example, reached its greatest geographical extent as late as 1935. You know, Brits were swirling their gin and tonics in clubs all over the world in that year, quite unaware that the empire probably had faded by the Diamond Jubilee, in a serious way.

By 1935, unbeknownst to the British, the torch of history had clearly passed to the hands of America. In 1940, for example, the United States was in fact a demilitarised society. Portugal and Bulgaria both had bigger armies. The country reversed itself, and overnight became the true arsenal of democracy as president Roosevelt promised. And it really did save civilisation as we know it. Russian blood and industrial might of America.

The scale of that might Lily is simply hard for people to believe today. The Detroit arsenal, one factory owned by Chrysler, produced more tanks than the entire German Third Reich. And in the wake of the war, with Europe in ashes and Japan prostrate, the Americans with but 4% of the global population generated 2% of the world's economy making 9% or more of the world's automobiles and that incredible affluence and dominance allowed for a treaty between capital and labour that gave us a weekend. That gave us a working middle-class.

The idea that a man with limited education could support a family, buy a house, buy a car, look forward to his kids going to good schools, schools, incidentally, that were brilliant in part because of the subservience of women. You know, young women of even your generation, Lily, that they forget that it really was true. That in the 1950s, the only opportunities for women were teaching, secretarial, nursing.  And so our schools were led by women who today would be running corporations or serving on the bar or on the bench.

And then vibrant middle-class was also based on an economic system, even though it's often said to have been a golden age of American capitalism, it resembled Denmark more than the America of today. You know, there's a 91% marginal tax rate for the wealthy. The average CEO, including my father-in-law, who at that time led Bell and Howell company, a big camera maker, his salary would have been maybe 20 times that of one of his white collared staff employees.

Well, today that chasm would be more like 500 times. And today the top 1% control, $30 trillion of assets and the lower half of the American people have more debt than assets. The top three celebrity billionaires have more wealth than the lower 160 million Americans altogether. And so one of the things that broke down was that social contract, that promise of America and the roots of all of America's dilemmas today are less political than issues of fairness.

There's a deep sense in those, for example, who support President Trump, that life has been unfair. Something's been taken from them, which is one of the reasons that the economic frustration is conflated with resentment, for the very social movements that grew out of the 1950s, that most of us would think of as being very progressive. Whether it was the fact that women went from the kitchen to the boardroom, people of colour went from the woodshed to the white house, gay people from the closet to the altar.

So even as America came out of WW2, celebrating the individual with this incredible excitement, that kind of image of Jack Kerouac on the open road, which gave us all this sort of sense of freedom and mobility. It also meant the progressive breakdown of community. We on the Left don't necessarily like to acknowledge it, but the family went to hell, divorce rates soared over 50%, obsession with the workplace and career, slogans like 24/7 meant that children are left at home.

America in decline consumed two thirds of the world's anti psychotic antidepressant drugs. The highest cause of death for those Americans under 50 today is not automobile accidents as it always was, but abuse of drugs, meth, crystal meth, and opiates in particular. A country that has come to define freedom as the individual's right to possess a personal arsenal of weaponry, trumping even the safety of children and the litany goes on.

And, you know, out of that came a gradual breakdown of the sense of community. The building of the wall along the Mexican border, which is sort of seen as a sort of act of patriotism by certain Americans, if you really think about it, is an act of treason because what is treason? It’s not simply the sharing of state secrets with a mortal enemy. It's acts that betray the very heart, soul and strength of a nation. Those words carved onto the base of the statue of Liberty really do mean something, to bring us your huddled masses. Well, when the huddled masses arrive at the American border today, their children are taken away from their mothers, placed in cages.

Even the Trump administration admitted that 546 young children have not been able to be found, who were separated from their parents. I mean, what does that say about the America of today? Nothing that I write in this article is anti-American, you know, I was born Canadian. I'm Irish, I'm Colombian, but I also chose to be an American and I married an American. My father-in-law was almost US president. He turned it down when Nixon offered him the vice presidency. My own son-in-law is on active duty as I speak for the US military overseas. I mean he's a soldier among many soldiers in 170 countries in the world. And again, this is one of the challenges for America. After World War two, it did continue to fight an essential cold war.

 Since 1975 China's never gone to war, America’s never been at peace. Trying to build its nation, pouring more cement every three years than America did in the 20th century. And the reason COVID becomes so important is that it revealed all of this and it revealed the fundamental feelings of the American obsession with the individual.

In Canada, we still recognise that wealth is not the currency accumulated by the lucky few, but the strength of social relations and the bonds of reciprocity that connect all of us in common purpose. I think the Irish Times put it best when they said, you know, since World War Two, there have been many emotions expressed about the United States, but the one that has not been expressed is pity. And now when most of us from vantage point of Canada or Europe, look to America, that becomes kind of a sad, pitiful lament of nostalgia for an America that once was. An America that literally did save the world.

LC: Would it be fair to say that you think a large part of the demise of the American empire, as you understand it, is down to the emphasis on the individual, over the community?

WD: Well, one of the things Lily, that was so fascinating when this Rolling Stone piece came out, you know, unexpectedly, it hit a viral nerve and 362 million social media impressions around the internet. And the response was sort of twofold predictably, right down the middle. From one side, a kind of a deep lament, a kind of a sadness. And at the same time, a kind of determination to see how America could be set right. And from the other side, even from individuals, so you can sort of tell by the grammar of their writing, were educated, but their messages were just base and vitriolic and ad hominem, a litany of curse words, some of which I had never even heard before. But one of the consistent and surprising themes in the hate mail was how deeply misogynist it was.

I mean, the article, as you know Lily, says almost nothing about women, perhaps to a fault, but the number of hate emails I got that called me things like menstrual discharge, or you must be a pussy woman. You know what? I won't even repeat some of the things that were said, but I thought that was interesting. Why this misogynist streak of criticism for an article that was fundamentally historic and political and not even polemical.

And what I came to think is that when you look back on the movements that we've just cited, whether it was for the rights of women, the aspirations of the people of colour, the aspirations of gay people, I think it's very difficult for anyone. I mean, I'm 66 and I'm almost too young to remember just how crazy it was. To remember a time when a simple hint of homosexuality could ruin a career. It's difficult for people, even my age to remember what real segregation was like in Jim Crow, South, right? When lynchings were as common as autumn leaves.

And so the extraordinary thing and the promise of America is the fact that the movements that we now identify as having been progressive movements around women's rights, gay rights, people of colour, they really represent the sociological equivalent of splitting the atom. I mean they represented an absolute transformative view of the world. And the divide really comes down between those who are comfortable with those transitions, and those for whom those movements are either deeply troubling or because of resentment, and I think that one thing we forget is that as those movements grew from the 1950s, certainly through the 1960s into the 70s, these were the very years when factory jobs were going abroad.

If you chart the statistics on the loss of manufacturing employment in America, it almost goes year for year with the rise of those movements.

LC: Is that a coincidence? Do you think they were coupled?

WD: I think it's a complete coincidence.

LC: I’m wondering if they could be coupled and I'm just speculating the other way round, i.e that as America became wealthier as a consequence of globalisation, that wealth enabled the rise of movements. There’s a term you may have come across called post-materialism that argues when communities are more affluent, it actually gives them the space and the time to develop the movements like environmentalism and feminism.

WD: I think that another way that would be fascinating Lily, to reflect upon is where did these three movements come from? I mean, I'm an anthropologist and I take great delight in teaching first year students. And one of the things I always say to them is, if you look back on the values of your great-grandfather or maybe my grandfather, the kind of Edwardian certitudes about the nature of race, the nature of our relationship to landscape, the role of men and women in society, not only would you disagree with many of the certitudes of that era, but you would find many of them morally reprehensible. And yet what we forget about is that before there could be social movements, there had to be some kind of shattering of those certitudes, some kind of intellectual grounding.

These contrarians were mostly women. Margaret Mead, Ruth Benedict who famously said the purpose of anthropologist is to make the world safe for human differences. Zora Neale  Hurston, Ella Doloria, Gregory Bateson. And these were people who inspired by Boaz were saying, wait a minute, race is an absolute social construct, nothing to do with biology. These were people who were saying, wait a minute, a family can be one man and two women or two women and one man or any combination at all, as long as for a family to be a good family, all you need is love in the household.

They're the ones who anticipated the revelations of genetics by several generations to say that we are all descendants of the same handful of people who walked out of Africa 70,000 years ago. Therefore, every culture shares the same genius and how that genius is expressed is simply a matter of choice and cultural orientation. There is no hierarchy in the affairs of culture. The other peoples of the world aren't failed attempts at being you, failed attempts at being modern. Every culture has a unique answer to that fundamental question, what does it mean to be human and alive?

LC: Whilst feminism was raging in the West, the West was still raging in the Amazon. With missionaries pouring into indigenous lands to convert and civilise the communities that had been nearly decimated through centuries of colonialism. The Yawanawa tribe in Acre, Brazil is one such example. Their population had dropped to fewer than 70 people, and the language had been outlawed by the missionaries before their community rebelled against the evangelising and sought to reclaim the language, songs and culture.

The Yawanawa are now in their thousands. But something interesting happened during that process. When I met them in Brazil, they told me that the women who had arrived from the outside, the rubber baron wives, the missionaries, had originally arrived wearing skirts, but at some point they started to arrive wearing trousers. And then a local woman from Rio arrived and drank the sacred medicine ayahuasca, that only the men hitherto that moment had been allowed to drink. In part inspiring two sisters Putanny and Hushahu, to become the community's first ever female shamans. I met with Putanny and her husband, the Chief Nixiwaka (Bira) when they were traveling in England. And they told me a little bit more about that journey.

Putanny: In the year 2005, my sister and I, we received a spiritual call. Women didn't have access to this area as men do. And we were the very first women to step on the sacred space, to go through the spiritual process, to follow the diet from a very sacred plant. No water, no sweets, no sex. It is a full isolation outside of the community. And we need to follow this plant diet for one year. It would be done only by men because it has a very strict and hard process. And then my dad, were the Shamans who've opened this door for us. After we went through this process, we brought strength and enhancement to our culture, to our traditions,

And we brought empowerment to the women, to the children, to the young ones. I'm not a feminist. I don't like this word. I guess that if a woman says she's a feminist she wants to be more than men. She wants to be superior, but I think that men and women have both their own individual value. There is no such thing as men are better or inferior than women and vice versa.

I believe that women should be side by side, balanced in terms of thinking, of working, of the duties and splitting off the duties. The women once wouldn't be even heard. When men would speak, women would have been kept away just listening. Women’s opinion wasn't taken into consideration. Since then women now are heard and are treated with respect. No more than men, but side by side with men.

Chief Nixiwaka: Female participation in our spiritual world has changed a lot. The way they drive our stories. Putanny is a pioneer. The  female participation has brought about a new energy, new melodies, new messages from the mother. We are a people who have come from a very oppressive situation from when we were first contacted. We were discriminated against, we were forbidden to speak our language and keep our customs. Our spiritual practices were forbidden. And our people had to face that oppression. And we, just like the other indigenous people in Brazil, lost our traditions, our customs.

We indigenous people have been denied access to a conversation of what it truly means to be human in all its facets; social, economical, political, and environmental. We weren't invited to that conversation. Now we're beginning to be a part of that conversation.

Lily Cole: How do you feel about the way that you're managing to hold on to the traditions and your culture, whilst also being exposed to the technology, the money, the capitalism that comes from the outside world and kind of Western culture for want of a better phrase?

Chief Nixiwaka: In this past few years I've been visited by relatives from North America and South America. And we've been dealing with that situation without losing our customs, without falling into imbalance. And so we can find the harmony between the new, the modern and the traditional. Both coming together. One respecting the other, keeping the balance.

Putanny: Our culture brings the traditional, but also the modernity. The modern is represented by the new musical instruments, the new dances, the way we make our rituals and also represented by the women empowerment.

Chief Nixiwaka: There is a need for reflection and reconnection because we've lost that connection with our creator being. With technology and science, we've advanced so much that we've disconnected. It's time we reconnect with our essence, and that's why I talk about this new age, this new cycle of humanity. This time of peace. This time of reciprocity, of solidarity, of sharing. The way I see it is we're living a moment of human recycling, a transformation. Either we go down this path or we will stop human existence.

Lily Cole: What’s your feeling on the environmental situation. And do you see any changes in your community?

Chief Nixiwaka: There's a big change happening. Our rivers, our water, our forests, they’re all hugely impacted by the climate change. For ourselves, the ones who live in the forest, we can see that very clearly. The only thing that can change it is awareness and consciousness.  It is not the animals or the plants fault. It is our fault. If we change it, it will stop. In the same way we had enough knowledge to create the situation, we will have the necessary knowledge to get it back,  to recover.

The forest is my home, my school, my hospital, my masters, my doctors, and all the spiritual guard. We learn how to sing with the birds. We learn how to heal a sick person with the animals. The plants are the healers. What can I harm? What can I destroy? Nothing.

Lily Cole: I take great inspiration from the Yawanawa and their willingness to reconcile our disparate cultures. Whilst fighting to reclaim their traditions they have extraordinary forgiveness and acknowledged to me that in spite of the incredibly painful history their community has gone through, there is also a lot they've gained from the cultures that colonised the land. For example, the impact of feminism or the musical instruments that children now play, or the boat that reduces their travel time out of the village by days. Putanny jests that they are only able to come to Europe now because of “the giant metal bird with people, food, and a bathroom inside”.

There is of course a lot that our different cultures can learn from one another. And we have a unique opportunity now to engage in that process of deep listening. I asked Wade Davis a little more about his thoughts on the cultures he's met.

Wade Davis: Culture is not trivial. Culture is not decorative. It's not the clothes we wear. The prayers we utter. It's ultimately, culture is a body of ethical and moral values that every society places around its members to keep at bay, the barbaric heart that history teaches us lies within all human beings. It's culture that allows us to have civilisation, to make sense of sensation, to find order and meaning in the universe.

You know all cultures are myopic, faithful to their own interpretation of reality. And this kind of cultural myopia has been sort of the curse of humanities since the dawn of awareness. We in the West are also famously cultural myopic and we forget that we too are a simple product of our history. And because of the dominance we've enjoyed, ubiquity of our presence on the planet, we tend to think of ourselves as a norm. But we actually are very much the exception in terms of how we think about our place on the planet. And we can understand the nature and the origin of that exceptionalism by going back to Descartes and the enlightenment, you know, in the European tradition, as we tried to liberate ourselves from the tyranny of absolute faith, we throw out all notions of myth, magic, mysticism, but critically metaphor.

And when Descartes said that all that exists is mind and material he kind of in a single gesture, deanimated the world, and the idea that the flight of a bird could have meaning was dismissed as ridiculous. Now, the triumph of the kind of secular materialism has become the concede of modernity, but ubiquity shouldn't imply that it's the norm. Quite to the contrary, most societies around the world have a very different relationship with the natural world based on reciprocity, not on extraction.

You know, we tend to see the world as a sort of a stage set upon which only the human drama unfolds. Plants and animals at best or props on that stage set. Whereas an amazon tribe in the Northwest Amazon, their most profound intuition is that plants and animals are only people in another dimension of reality. Now, before we say, Oh, that's ridiculous, we have to understand the power and the meaning of metaphor. Most societies have a fundamental idea that the earth owes its bounty to humans just as humans in turn owe their fidelity to the earth. Now that essential dynamic of reciprocity becomes very elaborated in incredibly complex ways, both in terms of mythology, myth, ritual, ceremonial activities, et cetera.

I was raised in the forest of British Columbia to believe that the forest existed to be cut. That made me different than my friends amongst first nation raised to believe that those forests are the abode of the crooked beak of heaven. Now, the point isn't whether the forest is cellulose onboard feet or is it domain of spirits. It's how the belief system mediates the relationship between the human population and the natural world with profoundly different consequences for the ecological footprint.

So when I was asked, for example, some years ago to do the CBC's Massey lectures in Canada and an editor put on a snappy title of my book that came out of those lectures, The Wayfinders, and the subtitle was ‘why ancient wisdom matters in the modern world’. I didn't really like the subtitle, but on the other hand, it did force me to answer that question. And I did so with two words, climate change.

We all know we must change the fundamental way in which we inhabit this planet. Every culture has something to say. Each deserves to be heard. There are other options. And what I mean is that the very existence of these other visions of life itself, which are the norm, not the rarity, that's something we're already moving toward.

LC: I loved that book. And I take great inspiration from the fact that there are other systems and ways of seeing the world that we can take inspiration from. Do you worry about the decline of the ethnosphere and are there ways you think we could better equip ourselves to listen and learn from indigenous communities?

WD: Ethnosphere is just a term that I coined in an early book to kind of create an organising principle, parallel to the biosphere, to draw people's attention to the fact that much as we lament the demise of biodiversity on the planet, I don't think even Ed Wilson would suggest that 50% of all plants and animals are more abundant. Yet that, the most apocalyptic scenario in the realm of biological diversity, scarcely approaches, what we know to be the most optimistic scenario in the realm of cultural diversity and the great indicator of that is language loss. And one of the extraordinary statistics is that today, half the languages spoken in the year that I was born are being taught to children.

So we're living through a time when half of humanities intellectual, social, ecological even spiritual knowledge is at risk and this does not have to happen. All peoples everywhere are always dancing with new possibilities for life. These societies are not delicate. They're dynamic and living peoples who are being driven out of existence by identifiable forces. I mean, the remarkable thing is if you look around at the surviving terrestrial biodiversity on the earth, a huge percentage of it is on lands that at least traditionally or titularly belong to indigenous peoples.

LC: So I wanted to ask about what you might have learned from the different ways that these communities perceive reality.

WD: I think the fundamental lesson learn from indigenous people is a different way of thinking about the Earth. The idea that the Kogi and the elder brothers have that the prayers maintain the cosmic balance of the world. That, that sense of, and again, I'm not, you know, I'm not taking these beliefs literally, although they're true beliefs. But what always interests me is the consequences of a belief. And if you really do believe that your rituals maintain the balance of the world, you're going to have a different attitude towards the world than if you believe the world is just there to be exploited. The tragedy of climate change is that indigenous people, who played no role whatsoever in the creation of dilemma, I mean, climate change has become humanity's problem, but it wasn't caused by humanity. It was caused by a narrow subset of humanity with a particular worldview.

And in many ways, in terms of reference of their societies, they're doing more to combat it than we are. And we forget that for us climate change may be a scientific challenge or a scientific debate in some quarters, or an economic opportunity or whatever, but for people who believe that they're responsible for the wellbeing of the world, as many indigenous people do, climate change is a deep existential and psychological crisis. And you see this all around the world, indigenous societies, amping their ritual activities, desperately trying to do something. I've been with Inuit on Headlands in the Arctic. And they look out at the rain and they just say, what is this? This is not our weather.

LC: My friend James Suzman says nomadic communities are the most sustainable communities that have ever walked on the planet because you know, they co-existed with the natural world for hundreds of thousands of years. Is there anything that you felt inspired by when you spend time with nomadic cultures?

WD: Well, certainly in nomadic societies, you know, they're in an acephalous sort of be egalitarian societies. It's a very different way of life. You know, how do you measure wealth given that there's a disincentive to accumulate any material possessions? Well, certainly in the nomadic societies I've been with, wealth has explicitly defined as a strength of social relations between people. Because if those relations fray, everybody suffers. I mean, if you think about it, if you're a hunting and gathering society and you've got a small nuclear family group of say a three men, three women, a bunch of kids, well, if I don't get along with the two other men such that I have to split, that means that night by definition, my children have a two thirds less chance of eating.

So one of the things you see in hunting and gathering societies is a very strong pressure for social solidarity and consilience. So for example, in the Inuit, you would never have swear words. You never in the language, Inuktitut, there’s, you would never speak badly of someone it's inconceivable. You express your displeasure by silence, right? Because nothing must be allowed to threaten the solidarity and thus the survival of the group. And in Penang society and Sarawak, where I spent some time, there’s was no word in their language for thank you because everything is reflexively shared. I once gave a cigarette to an old woman and watched as she tore it apart to distribute the individual strands of tobacco equitably rendering the product useless, but honouring her obligation to share.

LC: Hmm, that's amazing. Do you think that the strength of community and the need for community can in some examples stifle individualism?

WD: By definition it does. I mean this is a big trade-off in history. Do you accept the comfort of conformity that the community gives you? The certainty of faith? You know, I mean, this is the existential dilemma, isn't it? I mean, all of life comes down to two fundamental questions. How and why? And how a society answers those questions determines its, both,  its social, political and to great extent its spiritual worldview. And one of the dilemmas of the modern age is, is that when we liberated the individual from the community, again, that was the sociological equivalent of splitting the atom. And we achieved great personal freedom, a freedom that none of us want to give up. But it also cast us adrift by definition in a world of uncertainty and isolation.

Again, it's not about saying who's right and who's wrong, or what was better. The point of anthropology is never to try to reconstruct the past or freeze people in time. It's really to ask what kind of world we want to live in. And this is our fundamental question. How in this interconnected multicultural world, can we truly generate a pluralistic vision, such that every voice can be heard and each culture can exercise its inherent right to contribute to the table of human wisdom and knowledge.

LC: So can our interconnected world hold together many world views without homogenising them? Is identity politics tearing us up? How do we fight for individual rights without becoming more divided as a society? And what can we learn if we open our minds to other ways of seeing the world?

Here again is Vanessa Nakate, the youth climate activist you met in episode five, speaking to me from Uganda.

Vanessa Nakate: We cannot eat coal and we cannot drink oil. We'll look back and realise that money is nothing, if our life support systems have been destroyed. I believe that the climate crisis is as a result of colonialism, imperialism. I believe that the reason the intersection between racial justice and climate justice, activists from the global south, they have struggled so much to amplify their voices, to get their stories heard because of the kind of system that we found ourselves in.

LC: And when you talk about changing the system, do you have a sense of what that means and you know, what we can learn from other communities or what type of system change we could look to to make?

VN: When I say changing the system, I believe that we are in a system that doesn't treat everyone in a just way. We are in a system that chooses who is more important and who is less important. We are in that kind of system that is filled with discrimination, with racism in different parts of the world. So I believe that the kind of system that we need is one that ensures that people are happy. What makes people happy? Being able to access the necessities, being able to live in an environment that is just, being able to tell their stories,  being able to speak up without worrying about anything happening to them, being able to go to school without fear or facing discrimination, being able to get a job without fear or facing discrimination. So we want a kind of system that embraces everyone. I think a system that is diverse enough, that is just, that is equitable and that is sustainable.

In my country and in my culture, they named people after animals. They named people after plants. They named people after trees and they named people after fish. And when I did a research about these, I got to understand that this was something that was brought by our forefathers, our foremothers, those who came before us. So this was something that was put in place in order to preserve wildlife.

Personally, I come from the Elephant clan, so that means I can't do anything to the elephant. I can't eat it. I can't kill it because it's a belief that if I do anything to it, then I'm bringing myself bad luck. So you find that someone is coming from the Elephant clan, someone is coming maybe from the Cow clan. Someone is maybe coming from the Monkey clan. So this was a system that was put in place in order to protect the animals, in order to protect the fish in order to protect everything that connects to nature.

LC: Well, I come from the clan of a Lily for flower.

The ability of indigenous communities to better protect land is made clear in the data. 80% of the world's biodiversity can be found in indigenous territories, even though they only cover a quarter of the world's land. After centuries of cultural oppression, genocide and campaigns to ‘civilise the natives’ through colonialism, the developed world is now looking to indigenous communities to provide pathways to better land management, with none other than the World Bank calling for indigenous communities to be leading participants in conservation, writing ‘The loss of indigenous cultural and spiritual identity and ancestral knowledge is as serious a threat as the massive extinction of species on earth’.

And more and more indigenous men and women are taking positions of leadership around the world. For example, in 2019, the first indigenous woman was elected to Brazil's Congress. New Zealand now has five Maori ministers. And just last week, the highest number of indigenous representatives in history were elected to the US house of representatives.

When people think of indigenous communities, we often think of communities far away in distant lands. But in reality, every land has its own indigenous past. Even… nationalism and patriotism are often viewed as dangerous, perhaps rising forces that can breed xenophobia. But at what point does cultural pride become a problem? Can a sense of cultural identity and pride be extremely positive when it's honoured within a pluralistic worldview? And what is Europe's indigenous past?

To conclude this episode, I thought I would explore the deep time stories of my birthplace. So I spoke to Sam Lee, the folk singer, and song collector, who has spent years trying to trace the song lines on the British Isles.

Same Lee: I mean you and I know very well how wonderful it and what a privilege it is to be able to learn from indigenous tribal peoples from all around the world and the access we have now to a community who are willing to share their knowledge.

But the word indigenous itself is about nascence, it’s about birth and there's a writer who I'm very fond of called Robin Wall Kimmerer  and her book, Braiding Sweetgrass, talks specifically about this idea of, for Americans, of newly arrived Americans of what, that quest is to find a sense of indigeneity to their land. But also for us in the UK. What does that mean for a community so separate from our tribal past.

But I think the important thing within all of this is the idea of localism and identity is so much about understanding firstly, your landscape and your natural world, the species of trees, not just the names of the plants and the animals, but understanding who they are as beings and what their role has been in that community of the environment.

It's not that long ago that we had a very thriving oral folk culture. And I'm a folk singer and I've spent years recording and documenting the songs and stories of some of those elders. Some are alive, but many are in living memory and within their memories are this incredible relationship to land and the ancient identities that have emerged out of that relationship with landscape.

In the folk traditions of great Britain and the oral culture that we have, there are hundreds of thousands of different folk songs. In many ways every one of them tells a little bit, is a part of that mosaic of what our ancient newness is and who we are as an ancient people. Some of them go back to the 1800s, some of them go back to the 12th century. There are songs that I've learned that are pre-Christian that have really ancient roots to them. I mean, I'm particularly fond of the songs that sing of the birds or the environment. And there's a wonderful repertoire of songs that speak of the love of the natural world and, you know, Sussex songs, songs from Scotland, some of them speak specifically about a particular bird and there are so many songs that speak of that bird in such a reverential way, that it's not just a nice song. It's a devotional song in the same way that the Yawanawa or the Kaxinawá, or, you know, the Kogi are singing their song in praise of their land. Our songs are exactly the same. They're just a bit more familiar and obvious in our language.

LC: Can you speak a bit to how you find songs, because as I understand it, you encounter different gypsy cultures who have oral traditions. Is that correct?

SL: In the British Isles, there are still ancient people, elders who've grown up as the gypsy travellers who mostly can't read or write. They grew up in caravans. They were born in caravans. They've lived their life around the fire, singing these songs, passing these songs down. There are elders who still remember that way of life and finding them is not easy, but I managed to track down one of these, the tradition bearers.

The work is for me is, is about deep listening. And this is something that as a people, we have lost the art of,  spending hours in the company of somebody, sharing their life and their songs and listening to them slowly tell this world. And for me the song collecting, yes, I'm recording and I'm documenting it and I'm putting it online and I'm working with it on a contemporary way. But actually for me, it's about receiving our sovereign birthright inheritance of our local culture and of the stories of the people who came before us. And that for me, is a great privilege to be witness to that and be part of that transmission and also a link in the chain for the sharing it on and keeping that knowledge, these songs, these ideas, and that vibration with it, that comes with them to pass that on in that unbroken way. That's what my role is.

LC: And do you feel like a lot of these communities are thriving or do you feel that we are losing them?

SL: No. I mean, it's the situation with the gypsy travellers is horrific. It's exactly the same issues that are befalling the First Nations and Aboriginals in Australia and all indigenous peoples, is that separation of people from land, the denial of their birthright, practicing of their culture. The illegality of travel for a nomadic people is like telling us that we can't live in houses. We have chastised them from society. We have treated them with such low sense of dignity and respect that they are suffering from all the issues that any community that feels so bottom of the pile will feel. And in Great Britain, the passing through of the criminalisation of trespass that's going through right now will be the final nail in the coffin for that community.

LC: Such a strong memory came back, as you were saying that, of being a child in London, and once I was asking somebody for help, I think I was lost and I was going up to a stranger asking for help, and they just really rudely dismissed me. And it emerged that they thought I was a gypsy begging.

SL: Yeah. Well, I mean the amazing thing, knowing you a little bit, Lily, is you grew up in Ladbroke Grove in West London and there's a massive Irish traveler community that are still there living in caravans underneath the A40 flyover, which goes right through central London is right at the heart of that bit of London that you grew up in. So people in the area are well aware of that community and would put boundaries up between them. You know, that's why they’re fenced in under this motorway flyover. So I'm not surprised that people would, you know, with your Irish face, your red hair, might've seemed like one of them and not been helped out.

LC: I don't want to put you on the spot and feel free to say no, but are there any of those older songs, are there any that you know off by heart that you could share?

SL: Many! I mean, what can I sing for you now? In terms of the really ancient ones, there's one that some say goes back to the Cane and Able story of the two brothers. And it's a very ancient ballad called ‘The two brothers’ or ‘What put the blood’. And it's about the conversation between a son and his mother with her asking where this blood is on him, on his shirt. And he admits that he's killed his own brother and they fought over this cutting of a tree.

And there's lots of interpretation. I'm really believing that this, the allegory of this song is about a boy who is accepting the consequences of his actions and his conversation with the mother is actually about mother earth. And I think the song is not as literal as a boy and his mum, but actually about the conversation that we are having about what destroying our planet means and what we're going to do.

It's a song that has existed across the British Isles and Ireland, but it's unknown where it's from, whether it's Scandinavian in origin, whether it's pre Celtic, going back to Pictish tribes, to the ancient tribes of this land. So we'll never really know, but there are versions of it that exist in other parts of Europe, which suggests that it migrated.

I first heard that from my teacher who was the last of the Scottish travellers. Sadly it's a culture and a language that's almost extinct now, Stanley Robertson. And hearing him sing it, having heard recordings of it, and you know, it being sung so many times on records throughout the folk revival in the sixties and seventies and eighties, and many people have sung it, but to hear it some from one of those people - the tradition bearers, the sourcing as we call them, like dipping my cup into the deepest purest well, and drinking that water, was like hearing no other song I'd ever heard. And that really did, it made it a powerful mark, but he was singing it for a very different reason than I'd ever heard the song being sung. And it was out of a sort of sense of purpose that this was what he and his culture do. This is why they're there, is to sing these songs, is to tell that story.

Here goes…

Where have you been all the long summer’s day?

Son, come tell it unto me.

I’ve been hunting and fowling the whole day long.

And it's mama pardon me, oh, and it’s mama pardon me.

Son, come tell it unto me.

Oh that is the blood of my brother John,

for he would not rule by me, by me

And he would not rule by me.

And what did you kill your own brother for?

Son, come tell it unto me.

I killed him because he cut the little tree

And the the bird that flew from tree to tree to tree,

that flew from tree to tree.

Lily Cole: This episode has teased at some fundamental questions. Are we able to honour and respect our differences whilst remembering our essential similarities? Could cultural pride be aligned with an international outlook? Can we change the fundamental understanding of our relationship to the natural world. Would answering these questions, help bring together our increasingly polarised politics?

You can learn more about indigenous communities in my book, Who Cares Wins, which is out now in hardback, e-book and audio book. And finally here to end is a sound recording I made of the Yawanawa women singing, including Hushahu Yawanawa, recorded deep within the Amazon.

Friday 03.19.21
Posted by claudia delgado
 

WCW - Episode 6

Lily Cole: Welcome to Who Cares Wins, with me Lily Cole.

Aja Barber: The piles of bags, from this one charity shop. It was like Prometheus getting his guts pecked out every night on the rock because there's no ending to it. It's just like bag after bag after bag every day. You're opening bags of clothing. And you're not going to be able to resell them all.

Andrew McAfee: We have learned the playbook for decoupling greater human prosperity from our planetary footprint. And we've talked about two of the forces, that’s intense competition and amazing technologies.

Merlin Sheldrake: Unmitigated competition and conflict are the driving forces in evolution. It’s an idea that's been around since the late 19th century that merit human views of social progress within an industrial capitalist system. The history of life is full of examples of intimate cooperation.

George Monbiot: We need political rewilding. We don't accept the principle of presumed consent in sex. Why should we accept it in politics?

Lily Cole: At the heart of every issue that intersects with the environment you find contradictions tensions and divergent perspectives, and these issues are complex and changing. Most of us want a happy life and a healthy planet. But many people have different ideas about the right way to travel towards it. In this new podcast series, I'll be sharing parts of my research from my book Who Cares Wins, interviewing some of the leading and conflicting voices in contemporary debates, such as technology, food, gender, politics and looking at how they intersect with our environment.

I see myself a bit like sellotape, ribbon or string holding together divergent voices and sort of asking, ‘who cares who wins?’

That music was made by Cosmo Sheldrake whose brother, the biologist Merlin, I speak to on this episode, as I explore the concept of growth. Anyone who believes that infinite growth on a finite planet is possible is either an economist or a madman. So said Kenneth Boulding, the economist and environmental advisor to president John F. Kennedy. Yet growth has been a dominant feature of our political, cultural and economic reality for longer than most of us can remember with no end in sight. Are we being led by mad men or is infinite growth actually possible? The answer to these questions seems to present a chasm in the environmental political landscape between those who've long argued that we need slow growth or even de-growth to stay within safe planetary limits. Or the more recent trend of thinkers who argue that economic growth itself is driving sustainability.

In this episode, I'll take you on a journey as I speak to people on both sides of the camp. I first came to the narrative of consumption and thinking about its potential positive and negative impacts when working in fashion. I started to try and unpick the way things are made. To understand the impacts of supply chains and the cultural, economic, and political forces that are driving mass consumption. For me fashion is just an example of every other industry of consumption, that given that garment workers are 80% female and predominantly nonwhite, issues and supply chains become ones, not just about economics, but also of race and gender.

I spoke with Aja Barber fashion consultant for Eco Age, who’s been on a similar journey trying to improve awareness of fashion's impact.

Aja Barber: I had a fashion blog. I began to actually think about my own damage that I was doing because of blogging. And I don't think that I was doing the whole practice of like buying an item just to wear on the blog and then never wearing it again. But I could tell that my consumerism was speeding up rapidly and I began to realise, well, wait a minute. This isn't just me. This is actually something that's happening within the world, not just within blogging, but within just average people. We were buying way more clothing than we had bought in the past.

And I began to realise that if this were the case, that we were creating an ecological disaster. And so that sort of fascinated me and then there was also the element of who makes the clothing, you know, I began to really consider how it could be possible that a brand could sell a dress that’s a rather challenging pattern for 20 pounds.

How is that possible and how is it that the person who's making the dress is, how are they surviving? How are they getting a living wage? It turns out in most cases, they aren't. And so once I began to sort of ask myself these questions, I began to really dive into sustainability. And I was pretty shocked by the things that I found.

My mother's favourite place to shop is our local charity shop. And I worked there one summer. And what I found was that the piles of bags that I was opening from this one charity shop, it was like Prometheus getting his guts pecked out every night on the rock because there's no ending to it. It's just like bag after bag, after bag, every day, you're opening bags of clothing and you're not going to be able to resell them all.

And I was thinking, okay, so this is one problem of one charity shop. Is this a problem with loads of charity shops? And what I found was that charities were only able to sell about 10% of the clothing donations they were receiving. The other 90% would get shipped off to different places. Some would become landfill, but the stuff that got shipped to different places would normally go to countries in the global South, where what we've inherently done is ruined a lot of local economies.

So someone who's a maker in a country where they're receiving secondhand clothing donations from the global North, can’t sell and do what they do because of the waste that we create in the dump on other countries. It's a real problem. On top of that, I began to realise that these fast fashion companies had billionaires at the tops of their company, but somehow they just couldn't get it together to pay the garment workers who were making their clothing. And I just think that is wholly unacceptable.

LC: And do you have much hope for sustainable fashion in the sense of new products being made in a more mindful, sustainable way? Or do you feel like sustainability needs to be about pre-owned and vintage first and foremost?

AB: My wardrobe is 50% secondhand, 50% sustainable ethical brands. For me personally, I understand that not every person can shop from ethical and sustainable brands. Now, I think price wise, people always complain about it being expensive. I think that's a bit of a myth. People have been tricked into thinking that the prices that exist on the high street are fair. They're not. A lot of the prices that we've been paying are exploitative prices. You might say that you can only afford the 10 pound dress, but also you're buying ten 10 pound dresses, which is a hundred pounds. So maybe instead of buying 10 pound dresses, maybe just get two 50 pound dresses from a sustainable maker then all of a sudden you can afford sustainable fashion.

LC: That’s something I run up against a lot is the question around isn't sustainable fashion prohibitively expensive. I feel that there's a kind of cognitive dissonance between actually what things should cost and what their real impact is when things are that cheap. And it also, for me, it speaks of kind of neocolonialism and the fact that a lot of the low prices in Western countries are able to be low because they're benefiting from wage gaps between richer and poorer countries.

AB: Absolutely. The amount of times I've heard, like a person in Northern Virginia be like, well, you know, those people make less money because they live in that country. And you know, that's a very good wage in that country. Well why do you think that that's a decent wage in that country? And also if these countries are resource rich, labour rich, and they have the factories to make the things that we actually need, why are they not economically wealthier?

Why is that? Let's look at that system and look at the fact that we feel like a poor brown or black person should be excited for a really crappy job so that they can make clothing for us. And so, yeah, it's a real nuanced conversation that a lot of people aren't super comfortable exploring, but I think we all need to explore it.

The current system we have is a castle made of crap. Unfortunately, I don't think that altruism and humanitarianism is going to be the thing that's going to change the big fashion brands. I think losing customers is what ultimately changes their minds about the way they're doing things.

LC: How much do you think we need to change and how much do you think this is happening in business models in fashion? And I use fashion as a metaphor for all other industries, but like consumption based businesses.

AJ: If you aren't exploring the idea of de-growth or prosperity without growth within your business, I think it's really time to explore that. And I think a lot of businesses would rather cut off their own arm than explore these ideas. I definitely just champion the resell market more than anything. I think that there's still stigma around secondhand clothing and we really have to work towards dealing with that stigma, because until that happens, there’ll be certain people that will never want to participate in buying things second hand, and that's a bit sad.

LC: Capitalism is going through an extraordinary transformation, as many companies work to make the supply chains more sustainable and circular. Some of this change is being driven by NGOs working on the front line, trying to pressure companies into positive change Greenpeace amongst them. I spoke with John Sauven, the UK director of Greenpeace about their work with corporations.

John Sauven: If you look at fast fashion, the quantity of fast fashion has been going up vertically. So people are buying more and using less. And that's the logic of the current system of capitalism that we have is just more and more consumption. It’s linear in its model.

How do we get better quality? How do we use things more? How do we get more enjoyment out of things? How do we look at life more in terms of quality rather than quantity? So ultimately, you know, why do people live? You know, they live because they, you know, they want love, they want happiness and so on. They don’t live cause they want consumption, but somehow we've been forced into that all consuming system backed up by an unbelievable advertising and marketing system. You know how much money is spent globally on advertising? Either $700 or $800 billion. It was nearly a trillion dollars.

There's always the one thing that companies cannot get their head around, you know, when you talk to these companies and they come out with all these sustainability plans and you say to them, yes, but what about growth? What about the fact that you're just producing more and more stuff and they say, Oh yeah, we can do everything but that. But that’s what the problem is.

LC: In my book, I interviewed many different entrepreneurs, scientists and designers who are trying to evolve capitalism into a greener version of itself.  Amongst them I spoke with Lisa Jackson who has an interesting perspective on this transition and the role of the public and private sector within it. She was formerly the head of the EPA under president Obama. And now is the vice president of environmental policy at one of the largest companies in the world, Apple. Lisa told me why she feels the private sector is at the cutting edge of climate ambition. And a few weeks ago made announcements about the company's achievements and ambitions in this space, as they try to fundamentally reconcile economic growth in their business model with sustainability.

Lisa Jackson: By 2030, we plan to have net zero climate impact across our entire business, including our manufacturing supply chain and all product life cycles. This means that every Apple device sold from material collection, component manufacturing, assembly, transport, customer use, charging ,all the way through recycling and material recovery will be 100% carbon neutral.  Taken altogether, the change we've made for iPhone 12, cut over 2 million metric tons of carbon emissions annually. It's like removing 450,000 cars from the road per year. This is huge. And we're really proud that Apple is taking the lead. We hope others will follow, making this impact even bigger for our planet.

LC: So does this mean we can shop our way out of crisis with electric cars, renewable recycled phones, lab grown meat, clothes made from recycled fishing nets or organic cotton, allowing us to reconcile many of our contemporary lifestyles with sustainability?

I spoke with Andrew McAfee, the author of More from Less who aligns with a group of thinkers called eco modernists, who argue that growth, capitalism and technology are tools that will help drive sustainability and that we can, and are beginning to, decouple human development from environmental impacts.

So I asked him, what does decoupling look like?

Andrew McAfee: When we talk about decoupling, there are a couple ways to talk about it. In general we want to lighten our environmental footprint over time. And there are two kinds of decoupling. There's kind of a weaker version and a stronger version. The weaker version is what you call relative decoupling. So you know, how many tons of steel do you need per million dollars of economic output? We want that tons of steel number to go down, even as the economic output goes up. That’s kind of relative decoupling.

Here's the tougher one, it's called absolute decoupling, which would say, look, no matter how our economy grows, we are using year after year, fewer tons of steel. We're emitting less carbon. We're taking less water from the environment. We are reducing the amount of acres that we need to do all of our farming. In other words, the footprint absolutely goes down even as growth continues, as output goes up.

Now that seems like a magic act. It seems like it could never happen. And if you look at the first 170 years of the industrial era, you would become convinced that decoupling is kind of impossible because if you look from about 1800 up to about 1970, and you look at our planetary footprint and you compare that to our, the growth of our economies, you see kind of a perfect one-to-one relationship. The amount of energy that you need, the amount of resources that you need, the amount of pollution that you generate, they were all going up just as our economies grew. Just as our output went up.

So Lily, I think you're too young to remember this, I’m just barely old enough to remember the first earth day in 1970, when people took to the streets in America and around the world, and they said, stop you can't, we can't do this anymore. We cannot keep exploiting our planet more year after year. Because in 1970, there was no indication that we would ever get out of that bad habit.

And the reason I wrote More from Less, and the reason I've become kind of passionate about growth is that in the years since 1970, something profoundly weird has happened, which is that we, especially in the richest countries in the world, have started to achieve this decoupling that we would all love to see happen.

So for example, in America now year after year, we are using fewer acres for agriculture even as agricultural output goes up. We are using less water. For our cities, for our power generation, for our industry, even as all of those things continue to increase. So we've kind of accomplished this wonderful, wonderful decoupling phenomenon. And I just want to understand that and celebrate it and communicate it.

LC:: Can I ask about foreign emissions? Because quite often when these calculations are made, I know that this is the case in the UK, for example, around how much we've reduced our carbon footprint in recent decades, they don't include the kind of imported emissions of goods that we buy that are manufactured abroad. Is that true of that? The way that you've kind of analysed statistics?

AM: Even after you take that embodied carbon in imports into account, US carbon emissions are down from their peak. I believe their peak was in 2007 and I'm pretty sure we are down more than 10% since then. Now it's really important to say the following right away. That is not a fast enough decline. We should not be satisfied. We should not be complacent. Global atmospheric CO2 concentrations continue to go up. And that continues to cook our planet. So this is, I'm not saying the US has nailed this, or we're not part of the problem anymore, but this is another example of decoupling. So the idea that a rich country can't decouple its environmental footprint from growth is just dead, flat, wrong.

LC: And why do you think that decoupling has been achieved? How?

AM: There are two forces at work here. And I very often talk with people who are not fans of capitalism, and I am a fan of capitalism and we disagree about a lot of things. But the one thing that everybody agrees with about capitalism, and that list is not very long, the one thing everybody agrees with is that capitalism is super profit hungry. That sounds like it's bad news for the environment and in some ways it is. And we have to be careful about it.

The reason it's good news is that if you are profit hungry, that almost automatically means that you are passionate about cost reduction. That goes hand in hand with making more money. And the other thing to keep in mind is that resources, materials, things from nature, generally cost money. You don't get a ton of steel for free. Nobody gives you a ton of phosphate for free. You don't generally get to take water for free from the environment. Although there are some exceptions to that.

So resources and materials costs money. And that makes companies focus on them as an opportunity to cut costs and increase profits. So that's kind of the motive. The opportunity out there is this amazing technological toolkit that we have that lets us trim the amount of aluminium that goes into a beer can or a soda can. That lets us do precision agriculture so we need less fertiliser and less water to grow our crops. That lets us design car engines that are simultaneously smaller, more fuel efficient, and more powerful than the previous generation.

So the way I talk about it in More from Less is that we've got this wonderful combination of forces. We've got capitalism, and if capitalism is a triggering word for you just sub-swap that out and put in ‘extreme cost reduction pressure’,  combined with just astonishing technological progress. You put those two forces together and that helps me understand why in the decades since 1970, we have learned in this really powerful way, to lighten up on the planet. To take fewer resources from it.

LC: Capitalism wants profit and therefore wants to reduce material costs, but arguably, there are other factors at work, like for example, planned obsolescence and designed obsolescence. The incentives to make people consume more and over consumption, which is good for business, but ultimately means we use more and more resources. Is that not a problem in that, in that way of thinking?

AM: It absolutely is a problem if you're worried about our footprint on the environment, because like you say, I've been talking about costs. Companies also are passionate about revenue growth, and if they can make you buy a new smartphone every year, that's good for their bottom line.

If the dishwasher breaks in five years, as opposed to 20 years, and it's got a planned life of a five years, that looks like it's good for the bottom line and bad for the environment. We should keep in mind though, a dishwasher that you buy today is so much more energy efficient and water efficient than the one that existed 20 years ago.

So with every load that you do in that new dishwasher, man, you're lightening up on the planet compared to using the 20 year old dishwasher. So the efficiency overall of our devices, our appliances, everything else is actually getting much better over time because of that cost reduction pressure, and in some cases, some really smart regulation. And so that helps me understand how the cost reduction side of the balance sheet is swamping the revenue growth side of the balance sheet.

LC: There was an argument I always liked about how the modern smartphone combines 20, 40, a hundred potentially different devices in one. And therefore is by its own nature, kind of de-materialising our relationship to stuff.

AM: Yeah. Lily, do you want a fax machine?

LC: No, I don’t!  

AM: You want a camcorder?

LC: I have a super eight camera.

AM: Wow. Do you still have a film camera?

LC: I do. I do. I love film.

AM: Oh, you do? Wow. Um, do you still have a telephone answering machine?

LC: I don’t, no.

AM: So even in your kind of weird case, there are a lot of devices made out of resources and materials and energy that you don't consume anymore because you carry around this very small, very lightweight smartphone.

So my thought experiment is always to compare my smartphone or my pile of smartphones over the past 10 years with the pile of devices that I would have bought over the last 10 years, if not for the smartphone. And then I take that and I multiply that by the billions of people, it’s now billions, around the world who have some variety of smartphone. And I really start to think that that phone is one of the world champions of decoupling, dematerialisation, taking better care of the planet.

LC: But do you think there should be some kind of regulation that doesn't completely stop innovation, but paces it?

AM: I get very wary about trying to get too clever with regulation. It's incredibly hard to write regulation that doesn't have unintended consequences, that the incumbents can't find interesting work around so that they still do what they want to do. Now, there are a couple of cool exceptions to that. I like this right to repair movement, which says, look, you can't have overly restrictive warranties that will keep me from trying to fix this thing myself. And if I can't fix it, I've got to buy a new one. I'm kind of, you know, temperamentally on board with the right to repair movement in some ways. So maybe that'll be an interesting thing to watch.

LC: If capitalism is so good at pushing towards dematerialisation, why do you think it's pushed so far in the opposite direction for so long, i.e. that in the last few decades is where we've, I think emitted half of the carbon emissions, you know, that humans have emitted historically have happened since I think 1970s, I read the other day.

AM: Oh, yeah, because we've added a ton of new people to the world and we've added a huge amount of economic growth to the world over the past 50 years. And we have not yet applied that pollution reduction playbook to greenhouse gas pollution. Carbon prices are either low,  too low or nonexistent in most of the world. I love markets. Markets don't solve pollution generally on their own. They're an externality if you want to use the economist jargon. You need something else to solve that externality. So you need smart regulation.

LC: Okay. So it's not unrestrained capitalism you'd advocate.

AM: Exactly! And please, please, don't cut this out the final cut here. Unrestrained capitalism is a bad idea for the planet. Businesses will pollute if it's costless for them to pollute. It doesn't matter what the wonderful letter to shareholders in the annual report says. We cannot trust businesses not to pollute if it's costless for them to pollute. Great make it costly. We know how to do that. We have done it effectively in many parts of the world, for many kinds of pollution. Let's apply that playbook to the biggie out there now, which is greenhouse gas emissions.

LC: So when you say the playbook, can you just maybe list one of the kind of policy ideas you have in mind that you think are needed?

AM: We have learned the playbook for decoupling greater human prosperity from our planetary footprint. And we've talked about two of the forces that's intense competition and amazing technologies. The other two forces are public awareness and public demands for improvement and governments that listen to their people.

So when I look at any politician’s plan, my first best for if we're going to talk about greenhouse gases, my first best approach is a carbon dividend. My second best approach is increased research on and fondness for nuclear power. And then after that, my third best, I guess, is more research and more emphasis on other kinds of renewable energy.

I wish I saw more emphasis across the board and across countries on my first best and my second best. William Nordhaus shared the Nobel prize in 2018 in part for his work on a really cool variant of a carbon price or a carbon tax, which he called a carbon dividend. And what he meant by that was okay, put a price on carbon, make it high enough so that emitters will actually change what they do. But instead of the government keeping that money, which is a tax, rebate it immediately to people in the form of a dividend that will still cause the behaviour changes because relative prices change. Things that have a lot of carbon will become more expensive, so we will buy less of them. We'll still get the overall goal, but the economic burden will not be as heavily felt by low income people because they're getting a dividend. It's an incredibly clever idea. The greatest unanimity I've ever seen in the economics profession was around the wisdom of a carbon dividend.

LC: Yeah, I wrote about it in my book. I was fascinated by it because I tried to look at bipartisan, you know, largely bipartisan ideas that have wide consensus and that I found was one of them.

AM: And the sad thing is that that consensus, that bipartisan consensus, at least in my country, is just vanishing so quickly. In the 80s it was the Republican Reagan administration with a bunch of lefty democratic environmental groups that came together around a good idea and got important things done. We started to close the hole in the ozone layer I believe in, I think it was 1980 that the Montreal protocol was signed.

LC: I think it was 87 actually, because I think it was the year I was born.

AM: Oh, okay. Thank you. But again, we had consensus, we listened to the scientists. We listened to the evidence. We put in place measures that worked, man, I'm nostalgic for that time…

LC: How do you feel about inequality? And if you're a big fan of capitalism, do you see any issues with what seems to be accelerating inequality that it causes?

AM: It depends on what kind of inequality we're talking about. I am less bothered for example, about wealth inequality than a lot of people are. One of the reasons I'm not as bothered about it is when you look at the list of countries that have the highest number of billionaires per capita, it's kind of a list of great places to live if you're an average person.

So I'm not as worried about wealth inequality as a lot of people are. I am super worried, like a lot of other people, about equality of opportunity, equality of access, equality of rights, equality of dignity. Yes, yes. Yes. Let's go work on all those things and understand the root causes of those problems.

LC: Why do you think de-growth is a bad idea?

AM: Well, first of all, it's incredibly unpopular among human beings. Can you point to me the society that has voluntarily embraced de-growth? I can find individuals. I can find some pretty small communities. But when you look around, when you look at the data going back, pretty long periods of time, the universal human thirst seems to be for growth. I think people have almost universal desire for a higher standard of living, definitely for themselves, for their children. We've been trying that for about 50 years. The de-growth movement is about as old as the environmental movement, man, you have trouble seeing any success story there.

So one of I think Einstein's definition of insanity was doing the same thing over and over and expecting a different result. Why are we expecting people to voluntarily embrace de-growth now? And if we're not expecting them to voluntarily do it, are we going to start mandating it for them?

LC: And is your utopia, for want of a better word, that everyone on this planet will be able to live the equivalent of an affluent middle-class life, to have consumer goods, gadgets, dishwashers, phones, every year? Do you see that as possible? Do you see the earth having the ability to sustain that lifestyle for 8 billion plus people?

AM: Yeah, I think it's a wonderful question. That is my utopia. And I believe absolutely that it's possible. In fact, it's actually fairly conceptually easy and if we get these next decades wrong, we have no one to blame but ourselves. I'm trying to imagine a reasonable, alternative, an alternative where somehow we say to the currently low income people in the world, to the populations of Nigeria, Bangladesh, India, where we say to them, Hey guys, everyone for the sake of the planet, you need to stop where you are!

The one that does work for me is where we continue the trajectory that we are on, of very widespread, greater human prosperity. And it's not universal, but it's very widespread. Let's continue that trajectory. We know the playbook for improving human prosperity while taking better care of the planet.

It's not an accident that Brits and Americans have learned how to decouple their economies. It's not magic. It's not because we are more moral than Nigerians or Bangladeshis. As Nigeria becomes more affluent, as its people can afford to care more about the environment, they will. I always fall back on a quote that Indira Gandhi gave in a speech in Sweden, I think in 1972, where she essentially said poverty and need are the greatest polluters in the world.

LC: There are many environmentalists who do not believe in Andrew’s utopia. Indeed the mainstream environmental movement has focused on slow growth and de-growth as a way to drive prosperity and sustainability.

I spoke with the writer and environmentalist, George Mumbiot who presents a very different version of what true wealth might look like.

George Montbiot: Oh gosh. I'm so sorry. Someones’s come to the door.

Lily Cole: Don’t worry. Nice doorbell you’ve got.

GM: Um, I think that'll just cause a little disruption, so we might just let that determine… Okay, good.

LC: Do you think that conscious consumerism and the movement towards circular economies, more sustainable product design, is going to have a significant impact in terms of the climate crisis?

GM: I’m very wary of conscious consumerism. It's still consumerism. You know, the great effort that companies have made is to get us to buy green stuff. But actually the transition we need to make is to buy much less stuff. The economy is currently constructed based on growth. And it's deemed to fail if growth does not continue. And yet we live on a finite planet with finite resources and beyond a certain point, that growth, as has already happened in many cases, bursts through planetary boundaries and drives us towards disaster.

Unless you really tackle the root of this, which is this really quite carefully constructed drive towards growth, where central banks and governments and alongside industry and the private banking sector are constantly trying to ramp up economic growth. Unless you can stop that and switch to a different system, it doesn't really matter what sort of a consumer you are, whether you're buying more supposedly green products, like, you know, your solar powered waving queen or, um, renewable smartphone for your dog or whether you are buying products which don’t claim to be green. You're still buying products which require precious resources, use energy and are basically pushing us past the limits within which our life support systems can be sustained.

So it's about less, rather than different. The key task if you are an environmentalist or if you care in any way about the future of the living world and of humanity, is not so much to start doing good things, but to stop doing bad things.

LC: What would that look like from an economic perspective in your mind? You know, if consumerism ground to a halt, is there a version of that that you think would be kind of socially just i.e  without causing a lot of the social fallout I guess, that a lot of people would be afraid of, if the economy was to essentially slow down.

GM: The current economy does not distribute wealth. It concentrates it. There's more wealth moving through the system than there was before. That's what economic growth does, but the great majority of it goes to the top 1% and those at the bottom see very little of it, very little indeed. In fact, there's some extremely stark figures showing just by how many times we would have to multiply the global economy for everyone to start living on no less than $5 a day.  I think it's 11 times the current size of the global economy and far from creating universal prosperity, that creates universal ruin. It just destroys everything in the Earth’s systems that keep us alive. We're not going to make everyone rich by growth. We're going to make people prosperous by redistribution.

And at the moment, a very small number of people have grabbed almost everything for themselves. So that might be tracks of land. It might be rights to use the atmosphere. It might be the purchase of minerals or indeed meat or fish, anything which is basically depleting the world's natural treasury. We should be taxing very heavily when some very rich people have super homes all over the planet and super yachts and private planes to travel between them, a few million people living like that would completely destroy the Earth’s systems.

And so we should tax that sort of behaviour out of existence and use that money in progressive and redistributive ways. And Thomas Picketty talks about this patrimonial spiral of wealth accumulation, where, because you have wealth, you can use that to make more and make more and make more. And there's no internal break on that system.

It's only when governments step in and say, no, you can't take everything, and that's what happened for instance, during the 1940s, when the maximum income tax in the United States Rose to 94% in the United Kingdom Rose to 98%. And it was quite overtly to try to break that spiral of wealth accumulation and redistribute money more broadly. Just 80 years ago, we saw how that could be done.

LC: Do you think that we shouldn't have billionaires in the world?

GM: Yes, I strongly think that. The whole promise of capitalism is that everybody can aspire to private luxury. And that's why we acquiesced in this system because we're all, as someone said in the 20th century, we're all temporarily embarrassed millionaires.

We all think that we're going to be the person who comes out on top one day, if only we can win the lottery or something miraculous like that happens. But of course it's not actually possible for all of us to reach that level of private wealth because there's simply not enough ecological space. In fact, there's not even enough physical space.

If everybody in London had a vast house and a big garden with a swimming pool and a tennis court and their own art collection and their own playground for their kids, London would occupy half of England. England would occupy most of Europe. Europe would occupy the world. I mean, already, even though only a very small proportion of our population are billionaires, the UK has got an ecological footprint five times the size of our ecological capacity. So our wealth, our consumption in this country depends entirely on taking other people's resources. Its promise at the heart of capitalism is a lie. It's just impossible. And the only reason why some people can is that other people don't have it.

And so what do we do to create a world in which everybody has a good life? Everybody has prosperity. Well, instead of pursuing private luxury. We should pursue public luxury. Fantastic public parks, fantastic public tennis courts and swimming pools and art collections and playgrounds and public transport systems. And using our space, both our physical space and our ecological space to develop public luxury, we create space for everybody.

LC: Is there a way you can imagine society being organised? Whether it's more service-based economies or something that universal basic income, or how would you see us doing a slow growth agenda in a way that doesn't hurt some of the most vulnerable people in society?

GM: That does mean much better distribution, but it also means just much better design across the board. It means urban design. So we all have lovely places to live by investing in public luxury. And we employ large numbers of people to maintain that public luxury. And some of those people hopefully can be employed through communities, not by the state.

We start to rebuild the commons. And this is really the missing element of so much economic discourse. People say, Oh, I'm on the left or I'm on the right. They, you know, if they're on the left, they say, I want more state and less market. And if I'm on the right, I want more market and less state. But those are only two pillars of the economy. There's two others, which are just as important. One of them is a household, perennially neglected by economists, which means that women's work, which is still the majority of household work is perennially neglected. And the other one is the commons, which is basically resources and processes, which are owned by communities.

LC: Yeah, it reminds me more of kind of, I guess, indigenous management, right, of land and resources.

GM: Well, there was a time when the commons was the major element of the economy. That most of our resources were held in common and managed in common, and they were managed on the whole, much more sustainably as a result.

LC: I came into working on this book, and then now as a consequences this podcast because of the platform I set up many years ago that was trying to run a gift economy online. And I was really, really inspired for many years, reading about the sociology and psychology around gift economies as an alternative way of organising. And one of the things that comes to mind also when you're saying that is that these structures of the aspiration, what my friend James Suzman would call ‘the melancholy of aspiration’, of aspiring to better also create an incredibly competitive sociological and psychological landscape where we may not realise, but we're all sort of competing with one another in a very atomised way. And I think that that actually creates a much more impoverished experience of being alive than if we were to fundamentally shift to a more co-operative reality, that would be maybe more similar to what I understand indigenous communities to practice.

GM: I’m sure that intense and perpetual competition fuels the mental health crisis. There was a very interesting Belgium psychoanalyst called Paul Verhaeghe who wrote a book called What about Me, where he looks at how neo liberalism, which is really about extreme competition, it’s about measuring everybody by their competitive success and dividing society into winners and losers. He’s shown how it creates this world of extreme atomisation and alienation that feeds directly into the mental health crisis. And that really the only solution to it is creating community spirit, public spirit instead. And instead of fighting each other, like stray dogs fighting over a dustbin in order to grab resources for ourselves, which is basically a neo liberal world, we need to form strong communities, strong neighbourhoods, which work together to solve our common problems.

And what I find so interesting about this is that something which could start as an ecological quest, it's like we don't have enough for everyone to pursue private luxury so we must instead put our efforts into private sufficiency and public luxury, soon can turn into political transformation because I think it's actually only by coming together as communities using participatory democracy, deliberative democracy, that we can refresh politics and genuinely take back control.

LC: What I understand from a lot of my more conservative friends is that they are kind of reticent about the idea of big government and the kind of idea of a kind of big bureaucratic government. And I wonder when you talk about increasing taxes, if that implies big government?

GM: Well, I'm quite reticent about the idea of big government as well. I think, you know, we, we should be wary of an over-intrusive state. And what I want to see is government devolving powers to communities. Not all of its powers, of course. I mean, there's certain functions of government, which are absolutely essential. But there's a huge trench of government powers, which I don't think should belong to government. They should belong to us.

So for instance, setting the budget. We have seen certainly for the first 15 years of its existence in Porto Alegre in Brazil, how the entire city was transformed when citizens were allowed to set the infrastructure budget, rather than just allowing the city government to do it without reference to them. And 50,000 people a year took part in those deliberations and turned it from being really a place with pretty desperate conditions into the state capitol which was highest on the human development index in Brazil, with a massive transformation in sanitation and clean water, in primary health care, reduced maternal mortality reduced infant mortality, improved public transport. I mean, right across the board, they basically rested the budget out of the hands of a pretty corrupt government and the mafia like friends of the government, who a lot of the money went to and used it for general public benefits instead.

And I don't see why we can't do that everywhere and not just for the infrastructure budget. But with major portions of both the local and the national budgets, which are spent in our name. Do it with deliberative participatory politics, instead of this very top down system.

Now what's very interesting is that politicians on the right are constantly saying, you know, we must shrink the state. We must reduce the size of government.  Government is your enemy, the market is your friend. But all it wants to do is to transfer powers to people who have money, what it calls the market. The market is a euphemism for the power of money. But, you know, there is a way in which the state should be shrunk and there's totally legitimate way, which has to be shifting powers to the smallest possible political unit which can adopt those powers.

And we've seen with the use of all sorts of new political technologies, different forms of participatory politics, that actually you can devolve an awful lot of power to communities and communities will probably discharge it much better than any government does. I mean, you look at the way that government works at the moment. It's a total train wreck. It’s such an illegitimate system.

In the case of the UK, at the last election got 29% of the votes then forms the government and presumes consent for everything it does for the next five years, even if not a single person in the country actually wants it to do a particular thing, it says, well, you voted for us, whether you did or not. But you know, 29% of people voted for us four years ago, so therefore we're empowered to do this today.

Now we don't accept the principle of presumed consent in sex. Why should we accept it in politics?

LC: That’s a good, that's a good line. Have you ever spoken to Zac Goldsmith about this? Because I interviewed him on the podcast and it was interesting to hear that he's quite keen on direct democracy, has apparently tried to push through direct democracy initiatives through government.

GM: Well, that's interesting. Now I've spoken to Zac about a few things, but not about that. I mean, it is interesting actually, how, once you start showing an interest in ecology almost inevitably you're led down this path because you start to understand systems. Now, ecology is particularly rich in complex systems. I mean, an ecosystem is a phenomenally complex system within which many other complex systems are embedded. And as soon as you begin to understand that you can only really engage intelligently with the ecology by grasping its fantastic complexity, then you begin to see something very similar about politics.

That human society is a phenomenally complex system and yet governments try to treat nations as if they were simple systems, where they can be controlled from the centre with one person, a figurehead or not at the centre of that, pulling the levers; as if that person can understand all the needs of all those people and all those complex systems and can control them.

And that's why we've seen in ecology, a shift from conservation towards rewilding. And in rewilding, you basically try to sort of front load a few interventions, and then to the greatest extent possible stand back and let the ecosystems evolve under their own steam. And what I feel we need to see politically is the equivalent of that. We need political rewilding. We need to set up systems where we, the citizens, have a meaningful voice where we can participate week by week, rather than just once every five years. And then to the greatest possible extent, government should stand back and allow that ecosystem, that political ecosystem to evolve.

And it's through ecological interest  that I feel I've seen that the way of turning our totally dysfunctional political systems into systems that actually reflect our choices.

LC: What do you think of the arguments made by thinkers like Steven Pinker? Andrew McAfee recently also put out a book, More from Less, who argued the dematerialisation of capitalism, for want of a better phrase, that it's possible to continue growing the economy whilst reducing carbon emissions towards zero.

GM: Yes, well, there is an energy decoupling. There's not a resource decoupling. So if you look for instance, at Jason Hickel’s work, he points out that the amount of resources that the systems can tolerate is about 50 billion tons being used by us every year. We're already consuming 70 billion tons. Business as usual would mean that we were consuming 180 billion by 2050, which is almost four times the sustainable limit.

But if we were to use maximum resource efficiency, the massive carbon tax is when some fairly optimistic assumptions, we could maybe reduce that to about 95 billion tons, which is still almost twice the sustainable limit.

So in other words, we could see some relative decoupling from what it would otherwise have been. It would still be a lot more material resource consumption than we have today, but basically economic growth just drives us forward into more consumption, even if it's not as much consumption as it would otherwise have been. And nowhere on earth, do we see the absolute decoupling that Steven Pinker is talking about, and I'm afraid, basically he's talking out of his rear end on this.

LC: I wanted to ask about greed and I think greed, particularly in the sense of self analysis, needing to protest against yourself. And I was interested to hear on a more personal level, if you feel like that's a narrative you’ve had to struggle against in order to be part of a broader change and bigger picture change.

GM: Well, the aspirations which we're all brought up, the fairy tale is that one day we'll be the rich man or the rich woman living in the castle, surrounded by high walls, detached from society, living in private luxury. And unlearning that is is a huge task because it's reinforced in so many ways. It's reinforced in all the stories and fairytales we’re brought up with. It’s reinforced by advertising all the time. Not only do you have to unlearn what you learned as a child, but you have to resist all the time, the dominant narratives that surround you. And that is pretty exhausting. I mean, even for me, I've got a sort of natural resistance to this stuff. I'm quite acetic by inclination. But even so there's this kink in my brain which says to me, Oh, that thing looks nice. Wouldn't your life be a bit better if you had that.

That is social conditioning. It's so powerful. Now what makes it less powerful is when you have large numbers of people who are fighting it together, And this is why I've been so supportive of Extinction Rebellion and Fridays for Future, where we see these, this mass mobilisation, particularly of young people who say, fuck this shit. We're not going to be sucked into this world, which is defined by consumerism. We're not going to be defined as consumers. We're going to be citizens and we're going to explore what being a citizen means in its fullest sense. We're going to carve it out against everything that governments and advertising and corporations and billionaires are trying to make us do and trying to make us be. And in carving out this new role, we're going to have far richer lives in the true sense than the lives that they've tried to lay out for us.

It does give me hope that these new movements. They are so exciting. Their determination,  I mean, the clarity that that young people have got today and that sort of utter unfailing determination, we're just going to fight this all the way. It’s a beautiful thing to see.

LC: The de-growth in the eco-modernist  positions seem to be underpinned by a different understanding of human nature and whether competition or cooperation are more powerful and useful tools in driving human prosperity. So, given that we are nature, I wondered what we can learn from our study of nature about the role of cooperation and competition in terms of species growth and success. So I asked the biologist and micologist Merlin Sheldrake, whose new book, Entangled Life, examines how fungi make our worlds, change our minds and shape our futures.

Merlin Sheldrake: If you put a block of wood with a wood rotting fungus, you put the block of wood on a dish, you can watch the fungus explore the dish, looking for new sources of food. And the fungus will grow out from this block of wood in all directions at once, forming a kind of fuzzy white circle. If you put lots of different types of organism in an environment where they had the foods and the conditions they needed, then they'll grow until they can’t. It's very rare that you find organisms that would voluntarily as it were stop growing when there was more growing to be done.

In natural ecosystems there's always, almost always, something to stop an organism growing out of control. There's usually these checks and balances, and this is biodiverse systems and organisations going to run up against something else doing its thing before too long.

LC: Which is usually another species, I guess right? And that's the balance between the species?

MS:  Yeah, another type of organism entirely, you know, say a fungus, a tree, a bacterium, viruses, and there'll be interactions between these great larger divisions in the tree of life.

LC: When I was doing some research, my understanding of Darwin has often been coloured with the kind of survival of the fittest mantra that I've seen that gets thrown around a lot. And I was quite interested to discover that actually, you know, a large part of his work looks at cooperation in nature and the role of cooperation in evolution. And that struck me reading your book as well. That it seems to me, cooperation and symbiosis are instrumental parts of how you understand the natural world to work. Would that be fair to say?

MS: Unmitigated competition and conflict are the driving forces in evolution, is an idea that's been around since the late 19th century. It’s an emphasis that was placed largely by English proponents of evolutionary theory. And it mirrored human views of social progress within an industrial capitalist system.

Of course, competition is only one aspect. And we know it's only one aspect because the history of life is full of examples of intimate cooperation. And we ourselves are the outcome of intimate cooperation between many different organisms. We have more bacterial cells in and on our bodies than our own cells. And each of our cells has mitochondria inside, which were once free of living bacteria. So even on a cellular level, we’re the outcome of intimate associations between otherwise unrelated organisms.

Thankfully the picture has deepened and expanded in more recent decades. And now it's generally considered that yes, competition plays a part in evolution, but so does cooperation and to think about one and not the other is to skew the picture in an artificial way. So the way I like to think about it is that life is a process of collaboration and collaboration itself is an alloy of competition and cooperation.

And it's an idea that we’re familiar with, you know, you can have a functioning family unit and you can have competition and cooperation playing out in that family at once. You can have a touring jazz band that they can cooperate enough to give you an astonishing performance. And at the same time they can fight furiously and ceaselessly backstage. So these dynamics can coexist. And then, so I think it's best to step into a larger room where cooperation and competition can both take place and both be key forces.

LC: So if all species will grow until something stops them, what might the limits to human growth be? And have we already touched upon some of them? Is economic growth a blessing or is it the beating heart of the problem?  Are the eco-modernists right? Can we really be going in the right direction? Don't the facts paint a very different picture, that a million species are threatened with extinction, that we have lost over half of our wildlife in the last few decades, and that there are now tens of millions of climate refugees with that number increasing every year. Aren't these facts, evidence that the system needs to change much more radically than it's been able to do so far? Can more regulation be enough to make it change?

I do hope that capitalism can be evolved into a fair and more sustainable version of itself. And there are many signs that that project is underway. Carbon taxes, dematerialisation, laws against planned obsolescence, but also shifts in the legal structure of capitalism itself, away from shareholder primacy. Might we want to consider how we measure economic growth and GDP? Indeed, when GDP was originally devised by Simon Kuznets in the 1930s, he warned that “the welfare of a nation can scarcely be inferred from a measurement of national income.”

As many economies slow in 2020 because of COVID, perhaps we need to consider what exactly are we trying to grow? We could, for example, exclude activities that cause violence or degradation such as logging or armaments and include metrics that track mental and physical health, sustainability, community, and perhaps that most evanescent of things, happiness.

Fundamentally, I agree that we need much more cooperation amongst our species for our prosperity and perhaps survival, which might mean more sharing, more listening, more participatory democracy, and the empowering of communities. But with this logic in mind, we also need to cooperate with each other intellectually to look for solutions, which means that both the eco-modernists and the de-growthers have points to make, which we might learn from, to find our way through.

And finally, what might we learn from the oldest and most enduring indigenous human societies whose economies were not organised according to the logic of growth and who make up the majority of our human history? We’ll explore that question in our next episode.

So who wins or maybe there's no winner and that's the point? That there's something to learn from all these different perspectives as we try to figure out how to get to sustainability and happiness. You can hear more from Lisa Jackson, George Monbiot and other champions of de-growth, conscious capitalism and direct democracy in my book, Who Cares Wins, which is out now in hardback, e-book and audio book.

Join me on the next episode of this podcast, where I'm going to explore how our different social and environmental issues intersect.

Friday 03.19.21
Posted by claudia delgado
 

WCW - Episode 5

Lily Cole: Welcome to Who Cares Wins, with me Lily Cole.

David Attenborough: We do have a universal language and those  of us that are working in it have a responsibility thus.

Alan Rusbridger: There’s a very dangerous situation in media ownership at the moment. So in a sense in the days when you owned a newspaper to make lots of money, that was a kind of, sort of clean motive if you like, but now you've got a situation where nobody really owns a newspaper to make money. So then you have to ask, well, if it's not money that they want, what is it?

Vanessa Nakate:I know that society normalises certain things and yet they are not OK. So I have learned to be that kind of person who will speak if I notice that something is wrong.

Carole Cadwalladr: And this was the sort of most extraordinary thing to me when I started trying to research it, is that there was absolutely nothing to research because everything from 2016 disappeared into a black hole, because it is, you know, it's this sort of, it's like being in your own reality show essentially, your social media feed, in that it's only directed at you.

Rutger Bregman: So how do you change the world? Well, maybe it starts with telling different stories.

Lily Cole: At the heart of every issue that intersects with the environment you find contradictions tensions and divergent perspectives, and these issues are complex and changing. Most of us want a happy life and a healthy planet. But many people have different ideas about the right way to travel towards it. In this new podcast series, I'll be sharing parts of my research from my book Who Cares Wins, interviewing some of the leading and conflicting voices in contemporary debates, such as technology, food, gender, politics and looking at how they intersect with our environment.

I see myself a bit like sellotape, ribbon or string holding together divergent voices and sort of asking, ‘who cares who wins?’

In the last episode of this podcast, I found myself reflecting on the fact that all of our guests, from politicians working in the heart of government to activists rebelling against the government, all champion the essential need for public will in order to see serious action on climate change. Which brings us onto the question of how do we shape public will, and the media's role in doing that.

Does the media give us an accurate representation of our world? How is the media landscape shifting under the influence of digital? Is social media a powerful tool for bringing the truth to light? Or is it undermining our democracy itself? Would it be better if we simply read less news? These are some of the questions I'll be exploring in this week's episode.

Arguably no one represents the power of the media to bring attention to the environment better than broadcaster David Attenborough, who has been bringing the natural world to the eyes and ears of millions through his work in television and radio for nearly 70 years. I spoke with him about the role of television at this time.

David Attenborough: I mean the problems that we are facing, the really important things can only be helped by people who weald great power, which in most democracies is politicians and politicians have to be convinced that this is a serious problem.

I mean, it's easy enough for those of us who are concerned with it, we can certainly grind our axe, but they've got to worry about their votes. This is a democracy they have and so you have to convince not only politicians, but also the electorate.

Lily Cole: Do you feel that people are finally waking up or do you feel disappointed it's taking so long?

DA: I have to say that when I started talking about this sort of thing quite a long time ago, I mean, 20 years ago I made programs which were saying, look, the planet’s in danger, we’ve got to look at it.  At that time I'd dare say people thought, is he right? I mean, but now I think it's much more serious than that. I mean, I think that it is more recognised that the world really is facing a crisis. I think it's quite true. It's a truism and a cliche, but you know, people say, well, people won't care for something they don't love or don't know anything about. And we have a paradox at the moment and that is that never before in history have so many people been divorced from nature.

So that means over half the human population of the world is cut off to a greater or lesser degree from the planet. But the paradox is that actually they can be better informed than they ever were. Television has bought the world, the natural world into the living room with everybody. And it's not just, it's not just penguins or birds of paradise. I mean, in responsible hands, television networks can bring everybody everywhere, aware of every corner of this planet.

There is one form of communication with people at all levels everywhere can appreciate. It’s quite remarkable because it's a strange abstraction. It's a two dimensional version of reality. And so we do have a universal language and those of us who are working in it, have a responsibility thus.

LC: Attenborough’s work has played a critical role in expanding the environmental consciousness in recent years, reminding us of the beauty and wonder of the natural world, but also the threats its faces. But what about less visual media? What about old fashioned black and white print?

I spoke to Alan Rusbridger, former editor in chief of the Guardian, and now a principal at Oxford university where he chairs the Reuters Institute for the study of journalism.

LC: You’ve been the editor of the Guardian for, how many years were you there?

Alan Rusbridger: I was 20 years there.

LC: 20 years, wow. Well, how do you feel that mainstream media has changed in recent decades? Do you feel like it has changed? Do you see any issues with the way the media is reporting for example, on issues like climate change?

AR: Well I think it is changing. You could argue that it's been too slow to realise the sort of enormity of what's going on. One of the things that's changed is that, of course anybody can be a media critic. If anybody gets anything wrong or anybody doesn't like anything, they can say so immediately and powerfully and so the sort of stranglehold on opinion and news has been taken away from mainstream media.

And I think the most responsive bits of mainstream media are realising that the world has changed, that they have to change with it. So for instance, on climate change, I think there was a particularly bleak period where mainstream media was missing the story or actively subverting or twisting or distorting that story. But it’s harder and harder to do now, when you got millions of eyes watching you and challenging.

LC: Did you see recently Extinction Rebellion’s action of disrupting the printing presses in the UK? I mean, hard to miss. I’m interested in what you made of their action, but also I'm interested in what you think about their arguments behind the action i.e. that the UK media is too much of a monopoly and it's owned by people with business interests that then conflict with the responsibility to tell the truth.

AR: Well, I thought in the end, their actions were self-defeating because they managed to turn this into a story that looked as though they were about suppressing free speech. It felt to me like a bit of an own goal, but at the heart of it, it's a perfectly reasonable critique to make of a lot of mainstream media; that they haven't covered climate change with the seriousness that it deserves or that they have actively sought to distort or mislead people about it.

Now that leads on to perfectly reasonable questions about, well, who’s ‘they’? Is this proprietors, is this editors, is this fear of upsetting advertisers? I mean, it seems to me that there's a natural questions to ask because some of the coverage of climate change has been really bad. So, you know, I understand their anger. Whether it was actually sensible to prevent media from appearing, I rather doubt.

LC: And do you think that there are any issues in terms of like monopolies of media ownership globally and in the UK?

AR: There’s a very dangerous situation in media ownership at the moment. So in a sense in the days when you owned a newspaper to make lots of money, that was a kind of, sort of clean motive if you like. But now you've got a situation where nobody really owns a newspaper to make money. So then you have to ask, well, if it's not money that they want, what is it?

You then get into a very sort of complicated area. I think in this country, Rupert Murdoch owns too much media, same is definitely true in Australia. And when we did the phone hacking scandal on the Guardian, exposing the behaviour of the Murdoch press, that was extremely alarming because it was clear how many people, not just in the media, but in the police and in politics and regulators, were frightened of that man. And he had built up too big a chunk of power in this country. Where I'm with Extinction Rebellion is to say, these are absolutely legitimate questions to be asking and on some of these questions, I think I would trust them more than some of the people who own, edit and write about climate change.

LC: The mainstream media has been massively disrupted in recent years by the emergence of social media. Even David Attenborough just joined Instagram. I met Ugandan youth activist, Vanessa Nakate at Arctic base camp in Davos earlier this year, where climate scientists gathered to bring their research to the World Economic Forum. After doing a press conference with four other white youth activists, a photograph of the event was published by a major news agency, cropping Vanessa out. Vanessa and other youth activists, such as Greta Thunburg used their social media platforms to give their own account of the event.

Vanessa Nakate: I remember going to Davos, it was a completely different experience. This was an opportunity for me to talk about the challenges that people are facing in regards to climate change. And there were around a hundred journalists or more in the room. So it was a great opportunity to tell my story. Unfortunately, I ended up being cropped out by a news company when they shared and posted an article. And I wasn't included as one of the activists at the press conference.

That situation changed a lot of things because I remember asking them why I had been cropped out. It caused a massive outrage on social media, from different parts of the world. From that experience, I feel like a lot has changed in my life. It has made me a really strong activist and I'm really not afraid to speak. I know that society normalises certain things and yet they are not okay. So I have learned to be that kind of person who will speak if I notice that something is wrong.

LC: Yeah, I remember when that happened with a photograph, it was the associated press, I think. And I read a really beautiful caption I think you put, or a quote you put, which you said you didn't just erase a person, you erased a continent. And how did you draw attention to what they had done?

VN: Well, it was through my social media platform, because I got to see the article on Twitter and I retweeted it with a comment asking why I had been cropped. And honestly, I didn't know how viral it would get. So it also showed a certain form of social media being helpful, in putting out there the challenges that people face. So I use my social media, specifically twitter to question them and this attracted many people, many youth activists who came in support of what had happened and who spoke against it.

LC: I noticed you have two different accounts as well on twitter, an activist organisations, One Million Activist Stories, and the Rise Up movement. Could you maybe tell me a little bit about those?

VN: Well, about the Rise Up movement, it’s an organisation that I created to basically to help amplify the stories of what is happening in Africa and different stories about us activists, and also provide solutions that we know that can work to the climate crisis. And then with the One Million Activist Stories, we've been sharing different stories of different people, regardless of the activism that they are doing, so that we get to amplify their voices and for the world to get to know their work that they're doing and how they can support them.

I believe social media has been a great tool. Of course, it comes with its negative issues because the trolls are always out there to attack. But then the bigger picture is that it has been helpful in pushing my activism, in telling my story and also in interacting and working together with other activists to demand for action.

LC: So social media clearly has the potential for positive disruption and communication. Yet with it has come a series of new and more complex challenges for our media landscape, from smart advertising and data manipulation, fake news, mass surveillance, bots, media monopolies on an unprecedented scale and filter bubbles that drive polarisation.

Social media offers a funfair mirror to our collective consciousness, which in turn distorts our ability to have a healthy democracy. I first came across the work of Cambridge Analytica many years ago when I was setting up my own social network. As a tool that allowed you to target people based on their psychology, I found it pretty scary, and I wasn't surprised a few years later when the investigative journalist Carol Cadwalladr spoke out about how Cambridge Analytica had been used by platforms like Facebook to distort international elections.

Carole Cadwalladr: So what happened is that Cambridge Analytica employed this psychologist at Cambridge university, this a guy called Aleksandr Kogan, who changed his name, his name at that point, he changed it to Dr. Spectre, which is this kind of bizarre extra detail in the story. Anyway, Aleksandr Kogan, he developed this app, which was a personality quiz and Cambridge Analytica paid a couple of hundred thousand people to take this personality quiz. And at the end of the quiz, they had to tick the box and that gave Kogan access to all, not just their data, so it gave access for them to have all of their data, everything they’d ever sort of seen and shared and liked, and even their private messages on Facebook. And it enabled them to take all of their friend's data as well.

So from just a couple of hundred thousand people taking that quiz, they actually harvested 87 million people's Facebook accounts from around the world. So it's this massive, massive invasion of privacy. And then that data was used to create the psychological profiles of people. So you could sort of match up people's personality types, according to what they had sort of seen and liked and shared on Facebook and then those personality profiles, they, from that they built these algorithms and they used that to target people, for Trump, in the US election on Facebook. A Facebook employee was embedded at Project Alamo inside the Trump campaign where Cambridge Analytica was also embedded.

And the other thing we've seen as well as this creepy and disturbing alignment between Trump and Zuckerberg in that there's been these sort of secret meetings. There are these private dinners that Trump and Zuckerberg have had at the white house that were only revealed months down the line. That's Cambridge Analytica and Alexander Nix, and a whole host of other people have always denied that these psychological profiles were used in the Trump campaign.

What was really amazing was that Channel Four news got hold of the entire database that the Republican party had in 2016. So they've got every single American’s voter file. It's sort of this amazing trove of information that every single voter and that included the Cambridge Analytica psychological profiles of all of these voters. And what they showed was that they showed how Facebook was used by the Trump campaign to target individual ads at black and minority voters to try to persuade them not to vote. It's there. The evidence is there. The psychographic profiles are in there. Whether it worked or not, or how it worked is, you can still argue that if you want, but you can't argue that it wasn't used by the Trump campaign because we know that it was.

LC: And also other elections internationally, right?

CC: We don’t even know. I mean the number of elections that Cambridge Analytica worked in is still, has never been sort of like totally nailed down, but it was hundreds.

LC: Yeah, I remember in your Ted talk, reflecting on the impact of social networks on the 2016 elections, this line that was, and I might get this slight wrong, but it was something like - it’s not about right or left, Brexit or no Brexit. It's about whether we will be able to have a free and fair election ever again - .

CC: I am just one of many people who have been trying to sound this alarm bell. In 2016, that wasn't just a warning, that actually happened. The US election was actually subverted and it was actually Facebook that enabled that. There is just reams of evidence that was provided by the FBI about how that happened, how Russia did that.

And the fact is, is that Facebook has, all that happened is it said sorry. That is all that happened. It was never held to account. It's never had to deal with the consequences of that. There's never been a proper shake up at that company, which was required to address the problem and to ensure that it had the national security systems in place. The FTC in America, the Federal Trade Commission, it announced this absolutely record-breaking fine. It find Facebook $5 billion because of the Cambridge Analytica data breach, which we'd exposed and Facebook's share price actually went up that day. It was this extraordinary thing. And that's because you know what, what’s $5 billion to a company like Facebook. It’s nothing, it’s is pocket change.

So, you know, the share price went up because it was like, this means nothing. And we are here four years on. We're four weeks away to this, a new election, when already it is happening again. Already, the vote is being undermined. We can, this misinformation and disinformation about voting is flooding the platform and the most egregious thing is that Facebook does have policies. It has policies about incitement to violence, for example, but it just doesn't enforce them.

LC: It is correct that Donald Trump Jr. had put up a post on the platform calling for kind of armed militias to guard the polling stations? Is that correct?

CC: That’s right. It's this terrifying thing. It's sort of like this idea of Poll Watchers who essentially are militias who have been encouraged to show up at the polling stations to intimidate voters. This is all happening inside these closed groups on Facebook that these militias are being organised. And then what we know is that people are being radicalised, still being radicalised by the Facebook algorithm.

LC: When I was researching it for my book, you know, I fact checked it last year before it went to print, I don't know if it's changed, but Facebook specifically excluded the third party kind of fact checking of political ads. Like it allows third party fact checking, if I remember right, of other types of ads, I mean, heaven forbid you post half a nipple and it will be censored, but political ads don't have to be fact checked. Is that still the case?

CC: Yeah, exactly, that’s nail on head Lily. And there's this extraordinary clip of Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez asking Mark Zuckerberg about that in a congressional hearing. And, you know, he doesn't blink, he just says Facebook has another policy.

LC: With Cambridge Analytica, you also, the government really struggled to see the political ads i.e. to get out of Facebook evidence of what the ads were, the political ads that were being shown to people. So it wasn't even an awareness of what people were seeing.

CC: During the Brexit referendum, that the whole point is, I mean, this is the sort of most extraordinary thing to me when I started trying to research it, is there was absolutely nothing to research because everything from 2016 disappeared into a black hole. Because it is, you know, it's this sort of, it's like being in your own reality show essentially, your social media feed in that it's only directed at you.

It was totally totally un-transparent. And this is the thing which still completely infuriates me, is that we still have no idea of what happened on Facebook’s platform during the EU referendum. And Mark Zuckerberg refused to come to Britain to be questioned by MPs about that. There has been no access whatsoever for academics to be able to understand what happened. All of that evidence just disappeared down a black hole.

The only thing we saw is that parliament eventually forced Facebook to handover the ads of one of the campaigns that, just one of the campaigns, so the official Vote Leave campaign. And even that was totally extraordinary because we just saw it was lie, after lie, after lie, after lie. That Turkey is joining the EU, that staying in the European Union will endanger polar bears. The social media output they put, were putting out, in the last two days before the referendum, we now know was illegal and the money spent in those last 48 hours was this illegal overpayment.

They admitted that and all that happened with some poxy fine. This is massive, massive, massive electoral fraud. It’s the biggest electoral fraud in this country for more than a century and nothing happened. Nobody was held to account. And more than that, most people in this country fundamentally do not understand that. They don't even know about it because a lot to do with the fact actually that the BBC failed to understand it themselves, failed to report it correctly. And the whole thing was swept under the carpet.

LC: Do you feel that Twitter have responded in a more responsible way, or what are your thoughts on Twitter's role in this?

CC: I think Twitter is responding in a more responsible way and it also is just less impactful.

LC: Do you think that misinformation on this platform is impacting the understanding of climate change?

CC: There was this sort of amazing moment for me, right at the beginning of my reporting on Cambridge Analytica. So it was like about three days after my first article on Cambridge Analytica came out and I had got this prearranged story that I was doing in States. I was going to Denver to go to Al Gore’s Climate crisis organisation. And that, what they do is they train people. They do these sort of climate training camps, where they train people from all around the world to go out to their communities and to tell people about climate change.

And what was amazing, so I had this sort of like, I had this brief interview, pre-interview with him at that. I told him about the story I had just done and how it was all about Robert Mercer, who was funding Cambridge Analytica and this crazy stuff I’d uncovered. And what was so fascinating is that he sort of said, “well, of course I know all about Robert Mercer. He's been funding climate denial for the last 10 years.” And he said it was, there was no way of combating it online. And so this was why they decided that the only way that they can have an impact was to talk to people. So they were focusing all of their efforts on this idea if you talk to one individual and you convince one individual in person, and then they go out and they talk to other individuals, this was the only thing way that you could really combat what was going on online, was to take it into the real world like this, because the information space had become so toxic.

And what we've seen is this linear progression because the climate denial people learned the trick from the smoking lobby. So it’s this idea that you don't have to prove the science wrong, you just have to create this uncertainty. And that's gone from smoking to climate to politics.

LC:  Many people feel that Facebook's response to the controversy surrounding the 2016 elections has been weak. Whereas Twitter decided to ban all political advertising and remove posts from prominent politicians if they break their code of conduct, Facebook have continued to defend their position, not banning political advertising, not fact checking political advertising and not hiding politician’s posts, even if they break their terms of use, and for example, incite violence.

The big concession Facebook has made has been to set up an oversight board of 40 very distinguished members, including the former prime minister of Denmark, a Nobel Peace Prize laureate, and several constitutional law experts. The board they say is supposed to act as a kind of Supreme Court with the power to override decisions made by the networks, moderators and influence policy.

Alan Rusbridger is a member of the new board and spoke to me about it.

LC: First and foremost, on a kind of pragmatic level, would you maybe explain your role at the Facebook oversight board? What is the actual remit? Does Facebook propose cases or do you guys propose cases?

Alan Rusbridger: Facebook propose cases. We can propose cases and users can propose cases. So it's like a kind of Supreme Court. We can give instructions, which Facebook has said they will always implement. And then there are broader policy questions, which Facebook can come to us and say, we're having difficulty with these kind of cases on this kind of issue. Could you help us think through that.

And then they're not bound to accept our judgment on that though I think it would look odd if they paid no attention to what we were saying. They have said they will make the changes that we suggest, those sorts of straightforward take down issues that are obliged to do what we say. But on more sort of broad policy stuff, they will listen to us, but they haven't said that they will automatically implement what we say.

LC: In your mind what are the biggest challenges you see in the opportunities to solve them in terms of the way that Facebook and other companies like them are operating right now?

AR: I think it's an incredibly fascinating moment in the development of social media. So you have 2 billion people using Facebook and some of it is wonderful. Some of it is awful. Some of it needs to be protected. Some of it needs to be taken down and suppressed. Now, how you do that at the scale that things are now happening is a really difficult thing to solve. So part of it is being done by machines. Part of it's being done by human beings. And I think anybody who has ever given any thought to free speech issues knows how difficult it is to sort out these questions and who gets to decide.

And then some people would like to jump straight to regulation. But I think you have to sort of pause and think, well, what does that mean? Does that mean  President Erdoğan gets to regulate the Turkish Facebook, Putin regulates Russian Facebook? Is that a good idea? And I think there's some skepticism about the idea of self-regulation.

So this idea of saying, well, look, a halfway house is to have a group of independent people who have had some experience in free speech and human rights issues, to take some of the most crucial decisions is quite an imaginative thing to be doing, I think.

LC: And is there any appetite to challenge the fundamental business model of the company, if you feel that that is causing some of the other issues?

AR: It’s been interesting seeing my colleagues, you know, some of them who've got judicial backgrounds, some of them who've got human rights backgrounds, legal backgrounds, journalistic backgrounds, but none of them I think has come into this because they love Facebook. And in fact, a few of them have been quite marked critics of Facebook in the past.

So in hearing the cases we've thought of so far, the last thing on our mind is, is this going to damage Facebook commercially or not? I mean, I think we think, well, that's not our role. If what we're proposing damages Facebook commercially that's Facebook's lookout. We will just say what we think is right.

LC: I asked that because it seems to me that the very business model of social media platforms, of being free to users, but therefore, almost wholly dependent on advertisers, is one of the root causes of a lot of the other issues that we've had, whether it's the platform’s designed to get as much of users time as possible or filter bubbles because you're, the algorithms are designed to make you see content you'd like, or the fact that arguably a lot of the political advertising that's been done through social networks hasn't been fact-checked or moderated in a way that one might hope. So, I just wondered if you agree with any of those more fundamental issues.

AR: Yeah. That is one of the things that people criticise Facebook for. And I think that's fair criticism. I mean Facebook are not the only people, obviously there are, there's a lot of traditional media that have gone on to largely free model, which is subsidised by advertising. Whether that's going to work or not, we don't know. I think we have to sort of get going, win trust all round, and then if at some point we need to start saying, look, we need to understand better your algorithm, I think it would be quite difficult for Facebook to say that's none of your business.

LC: Carol Cadwalladr is not convinced. A few days before we spoke she launched an alternative shadow board named the Real Facebook Oversight Board. I asked her first and foremost, what she thought about Facebook's official board.

Carol Cadwalladr: There’s obviously, there's some really amazing people on it, very authoritative in their field. And I mean, essentially, I just wish them the best of luck because I think any attempt to bring any kind of like scrutiny on Facebook has to be welcomed.

LC: Why did you feel compelled to set up the shadow board, the Real Facebook Oversight Board as you named it?

CC: What possible way is there to hold Facebook to account? You know, that is the fundamental question and there isn't one. And when Stop Hate for Profit launched, we had a lot of conversations with people involved in that, and were thinking about, well, how can we do this? So this was when the boycott of advertisers who were using Facebook launched. And, you know, it's just such a critical thing because without advertising, there is no Facebook, you know, this is the money supply. So it was a really, really interesting and important moment this summer.

But they made these demands and nothing happened. And nothing happened because there's nothing to fall. You know, it's not enough that just even that, you know, these huge, huge companies saying, no, we're not going to advertise on Facebook wasn't enough.

So anyway, it was at that point that we started, I started, we started thinking about this idea of a sort of Brains Trust who would support them in their aims. And at that moment, we remembered about the oversight board, which, you know, had been announced with this great fanfare and then had done absolutely nothing. So had this idea for a Real Facebook Oversight Board. Essentially, it was this idea, it was this sort of punk act of subversion, I suppose, to appropriate their terminology and their structure, but to make it properly independent, to make it properly transparent and to make it not on Facebook's terms.

And it’s very much an emergency response because a lot of the people who understand this technology best are really, really seriously alarmed at the way that Facebook is already being used to subvert and undermine the US election. It’s going to be a really different election from other US elections because of mail in voting, there’s not going to be a result on the night in this way, because the result in certain States is going to be delayed. And during that period of uncertainty, these really key experts who came to the Real Facebook Oversight Board, really worry about what will happen during that period and the way that Facebook could be used to incite violence.

And the consequences of that are kind of terrifying, not just for America, but for the world. And I hope that the Real Facebook Oversight Board just gives some additional leverage. It's going to increase the pressure on Facebook, it’s going to make their job easier, I hope. And I think also when we've already seen it have an impact, various things that happened behind the scenes. But the fact is that Facebook came out on the day that we were launching The Real Facebook Oversight Board, they did this massive press push to go, ‘Oh, actually we are launching ahead of the election. It's okay.’

And then during the press conference we had two days ago, whilst it was going on, they conceded one of the first key demands of the Real Facebook Oversight Board. They've said that they will not allow political ads that seek to de-legitimise the election results before it has been announced. So that's a step forward, but it doesn't address everything else, which isn't a political ad.

LC: Can you tell us about some of the people on the Real Facebook Oversight Board and what came out of the first meeting?

CC: There’s some really incredible people who have agreed to be on it. So Shoshana Zuboff, for example, who's the author of Surveillance Capitalism, people like Rashad Robinson who's the president of Color of Change, Derek Johnson who's another one, he’s an NAACP, which is, I think it's the oldest and largest civil rights group in America.

Then there's people like Yaël Eisenstat, she’s the former Head of Election integrity for political ads at Facebook. She’s really sounding the warning bell about the danger that Facebook poses to the US election. Plus these sort of other incredible voices like Timothy Snyder,  who's this historian who's been cataloging the ways, how authoritarian governments arise. And he sees us in this dangerous historical moment.

And then one of the most compelling voices who sort of slightly freaked me out in a way, Larry Tribe is this, he's one of the most important constitutional scholars in America, and he spoke right at the very start of opening of the board, and he said, this is the most important project I've been involved in, in my 50 year career at the law. And he said, what we're seeing is already, it’s a coup d’état in progress and it is being aided and facilitated by Facebook.

I get all this crap for, like, she's not a journalist, she's an activist. And it worried me for quite a long time. And then I just thought sod it, I responded by going, yeah, I'm an activist for the truth, so kill me. But now actually I respond by thinking, yeah, you know, I am a journalist, but I am also a person. I am a citizen and I am not going to sit here whilst you can see democracy being blown up essentially.

LC: So it's, you know, scary stuff in a world of misinformation. How do we get more informed? Who do we believe? Is the world really falling apart? Is progress actually being under reported? Is climate change being underreported? Are there any signs of hope for journalism and how we might collectively understand our situation?

Alan told me about a few movements that he thinks we can look to to find our way through.

Alan Rusbridger: So if society cannot work without truthful and accurate and reliable information, evidence-based information, and if the business model for providing that is collapsing, then what do you do? And what I think we're describing is a public service. That's classically something that society needs, but that can't be financed through a traditional business model. And I see all kinds of interesting initiatives around the world, including philanthropy, including tax breaks, including people registering themselves as charities or as social enterprises, which say, look, our mission is the provision of truthful and reliable information on things that matter. And we're not there to make a profit, but you know, that society needs us. I think we will see a move to that kind of model and that gives me some hope, because I think actually that's why most people go into journalism, to do that kind of thing.

LC: I’ve been quite interested in Steven Pinker's arguments, I don’t know if you've followed his work much, where he argues that whilst in many ways, we've socially progressed in the last few decades, the picture of the world painted by the media has largely gotten more and more dystopian. I would say climate change and environmental coverage is probably an exception to that rule, but by and large, social things have gotten better and we under report them because we over report on all the things going wrong in the world.

And that has potentially negative consequences on people's mental health. And there is a small, but promising counter movement towards solutions journalism looking at solutions and the good things going on in life. Do you have any thoughts on that? Do you feel like the news is sometimes a bit too negative?

AR: I think it's a really interesting, important subject. Journalists are almost genetically programmed to look for things that are exceptional and in a way bad. So when things are going well, that is sort of classically not something that journalists tune into. I remember we once did our little column at the bottom of the leader column in the Guardian, in which, just called ‘In Praise Of’ because I thought we should be positive about things. And we would always have our leader meetings and we would discuss the terrible things going on in Africa and the middle East. And then I'd say, okay, so what are we going to praise today? Well, it's huge, terrible silence. And it was very hard to get journalists to think that, that was just not how they were programmed.

LC: The Dutch historian, Rutger Bregman is more optimistic about the state of the world and offers a radical proposal. In his new book, Humankind, Rutger concludes with 10 pieces of advice, including a key one, avoid the news.

Rutger Bregman : If you look at the past 10 years, I think there's a lot of reason for hope, because so many ideas that used to be dismissed just five or six years ago, have now become quite mainstream, you know, whether we're talking about taxing the rich or whether we talk about universal basic income, or also about, I think, a bit more hopeful to mystic view of human nature. The tide is really turning.  My short summary would be that cynicism is out and hope is in.

LC: Why do you think that the negative news and salacious stories have tended to sell better?

RB:  I'd focus on two things. In the first place human beings have this negativity bias. So we tend to focus more on the negative than on the positive. Evil is stronger than good. The good can win though with an overwhelming force of majority, but evil is stronger, you know, it just makes a bigger impression on us.

I mean, we've all experienced that in our own lives. If you get, I mean, I experienced this like, you get a hundred compliments on Twitter, like, Oh great book, or a nice review, blah, blah, blah. And that's nice. And then this one nasty piece of criticism, and that's the thing that keeps bugging you and that keeps you up at night.

So I guess it's sort of, the news really feeds into that. That it sort of triggers this negativity bias over and over again. So if you watch a lot of the news, at the end of the day, you'll have a very cynical and depressed world view. There's even a term for this in psychology. They call it Mean Wolf syndrome.

It's a strange thing. You know, if the news would be invented today and sort of the health authorities would have to decide whether they can sort of allow this product that we call the news on the market. And they would look at the side effects. It will probably say, no, no, no, this is way too dangerous. You know, it causes anxiety and feelings of depression and cynicism, etc. Now this is not good for our society. You know, we're not going to allow this.  But here we are, 90% of the population consumes it. And that's the one important reason.

There's one other thing I was thinking about, it's sort of this negative worldview is also in the interest of those in power. So, if you have an hierarchical society is in the interest of those at the top, for the rest of the population to believe that most people can't be trusted because that legitimises their power. Now, if most people are pretty decent then maybe we don't need them anymore.

LC: What are the ways that we can try and change the narrative around what a human is? So we might see some impacts in politics.

RB: I think that in the end, we are the stories that we tell ourselves. And for centuries, for millennia, even we've been telling each other really cynical stories. It's I think at the heart of our capitalist system today, we have to design our companies in the marketplace, etc,  around that idea that people are selfish.

And so, yeah, we, we sort of become the stories that we tell ourselves these, these can become self fulfilling prophecies that's so deeply embedded in our culture. That goes back all the way to the ancient Greeks. That you find with the Christian Church fathers, you know, the concept of original sin, for example, basically the same idea.

You find it with Enlightenment philosophers. So how do you change the world? Well, maybe it starts with telling different stories.

LC Well, that was a head fuck of an episode wasn't it? Sorry. And I didn't even get into how the digital landscape has empowered the rise of modern surveillance states with whistleblowers like Edward Snowden revealing that intelligence agencies have been tapping into the vast amounts of personal data that tech companies trade in.

Hmm, I must admit, I definitely feel better when I read less news, but we need some news, right? And unless we also moderate our social media and digital intake, it is hard to control the news we receive. As Carol says, understanding the influence of the digital information sphere isn't about being left or right, or choosing political sides. It's about respecting the truth required for democracy to function. It's about resisting manipulation.

As we discussed in the first few episodes of this podcast, through conscious consumerism, we have the ability every day to express our political voice through our buying choices. With the media, this relationship is more complex because most of these platforms are free, but conscious consumption is just as important.

We're not paying for these services with our money. We're paying with our time, our attention, our eyeballs, our data, our privacy. Campaigns like Stop Hate for Profit show the role that businesses and advertisers can play in pushing back against these trends. Employees reacting inside companies have a lot of leverage power. Brave activists, whistleblowers, lawyers and journalists are trying to improve standards. And it may be that we see political actions in years to come to regulate tech giants.

Personally I decided a few years ago to go on social media diet, not abstaining completely, but being more mindful about how much I use these platforms and the impact on my thinking. Traditional media, social media, the Facebook Oversight Board, the Real Facebook Oversight Board, reading the news, not reading the news; who wins? Or maybe there is no winner, and that's the point. There's something to learn from all sides.

Indeed it's kind of meta, right? Because I'm arguing that the news needs to be representative of more voices and not get lost in filter bubbles. And indeed, that's what this podcast is trying to do.

You can hear more from David Attenborough,Carol Cadwalladr, Rutger Bregmanand many others in my book, Who Cares Wins, which is out now in hardback, e-book and audio book. Join me next time on this podcast where I'm going to be exploring the concept of growth.

Friday 03.19.21
Posted by claudia delgado
 

WCW - Episode 4

Lily Cole: Welcome to Who Cares Wins, with me Lily Cole.

Farhana Yamin: We can't just rely on the established machinery of law and the established machinery of lawmaking, of norm making. We have to do something different.

Caroline Lucas: I think one of the most toxic ideas ever out there was the idea that individuals can't make a difference. They can, and we do, and working together, we can do anything if we really put our minds to it.

Dr Gail Bradbrook: We must have a grownup conversation about the political economy. This is not about coming out pro this system or anti that system. My own personal view is, I think the system needs upcycling. Take the best of it and move it forward, so it's not destroying life on Earth.

Zac Goldsmith: So I think something has shifted. I feel there's a stirring in global politics, it’s a recognition that this is a moment for a change. I'm maybe I'm being too optimistic, but it feels that way from the discussions that I'm having.

Lily Cole: At the heart of every issue that intersects with the environment you find contradictions tensions and divergent perspectives, and these issues are complex and changing. Most of us want a happy life and a healthy planet. But many people have different ideas about the right way to travel towards it. In this new podcast series, I'll be sharing parts of my research from my book Who Cares Wins, interviewing some of the leading and conflicting voices in contemporary debates, such as technology, food, gender, politics and looking at how they intersect with our environment.

I see myself a bit like sellotape, ribbon or string holding together divergent voices and sort of asking ,’ who cares who wins?’

In 2018, the UN called on policymakers to make ‘transformative systemic change’ by 2030 in order to stay within safer boundaries of climate change. But how do we transform our systems? Let's not forget our systems are malleable and always evolving. Indeed, they have transformed many times over into the shape of representative democracy that most countries have today.

Yet when it comes to the environment, they seem to have been stubbornly reticent to change. Scientists have been pointing out the risks of global warming with increasing urgency since the mid 19th century, when American scientist and women's rights, campaigner, Eunice Newton Foot first discovered the carbon dioxide traps heat.

In the 1960s the US government was warning of the risks of climate change. And in 1988, whilst I was still wearing diapers, NASA scientist, James Hansen testified before the US Senate saying, “the greenhouse effect has been detected and it is changing our climate now.” So 32 years later, my own daughter out of diapers, why have we reached this point of crisis? What does stop the system from transforming itself to protect our only life support system thus far? Is our legal and political machinery up to the job? Why are children and adults taking to the streets around the world and in some cases, inciting arrest in order to try and change our laws?

In this week's episode, I speak with both law makers and law breakers to try and understand how change happens. In the spirit of this podcast, I’ve spoken to two politicians, both fiercely committed to the environment, but existing within very different political camps in the UK: the Greens and the Conservatives.

Zac Goldsmith was editor of the Ecologist for nearly 10 years. After losing his seat as a Conservative MP in the 2019 elections, he was recently given a life peerage in the House of Lords, which enabled him to continue his work as Minister for the Environment, a critical role at this moment in time, as the UK prepares to host the next United Nations Climate Change Conference called COP26 in 2021.

So, given the fact that you’re a very committed environmentalist and you're also working in the heart of our political system, I was really interested to learn your thoughts on how much the British government is doing and has done environmentally. And whether you feel it's enough, frankly.

Zac Goldsmith: I spent all my life as far back as I remember one way or another campaigning on environmental issues. So, I mean, it's not a job, it's what I do. And if I wasn't in politics, I'd be doing it in another way. And most of that time I've been on the outside and then I got one foot on the inside of the system by becoming an MP, but that still effectively means campaigning relentlessly to get government to do things.

And now for the last 14/15 months or so I've been a minister, which means I'm able to actually make stuff happen. And the answer to your question is that I will probably never think that government is doing enough. I don't think any government in the world is doing enough. I mean even Costa Rica, which has really been a marvel in terms of what they're doing, still has more to do.

But at the same time, there's no doubt in my mind that we have made huge, huge progress in recent months and probably in recent years as well. I mean, I don't think there's much interest in this stuff from a sort of newspaper and broadcast point of view. So I doubt many people know much of the stuff that's being done by government, but there is a lot. Boris Johnson at the last UNGA committed to doubling our climate funding to 11.6 billion (GBP).

And it was quite big news around the world, but I don't think it was reported at all in the UK. He also committed that a big chunk of that uplift will be spent on nature based solutions to climate change, which for me, it's like almost more important than the first part of the announcement. There is no pathway to net zero at all, that doesn't involve massive escalation in our efforts in relation to forests, mangroves and so on. And yet it only gets about 3% of climate finance, which is madness.

We've been creating more and more programs, which are really pioneering. We've got a blue planet farm for ocean conservation, half a billion pounds launching early next year, we got a landscape's fund to try and help create wildlife corridors, transboundary, linking countries together, creating safe passage for animals, but also creating jobs for people who live in and around those corridors.

We’re leading the campaign to get the world to commit to protecting 30% of the world's ocean by 2030. There's a lot of really good stuff happening internationally. It's not enough clearly it's not enough, but then I don't think there's enough public money generally to solve this problem. All the countries in the world could double their climate finance and commit to putting more money into nature based solutions. It's not going to be a patch on the amount of money that's currently flowing into destroying nature. Now, if you look at the top 50 food producing countries, they spend about $700 billion a year subsidising land use, and usually destructive land use. That’s four or five times bigger than all of the world's Aid agencies combined.

So if we could get countries to spend that money in a way that supports nature and sustainability, that would be gigantic. It would be huge. And by coincidence that $700 billion figure corresponds with the sort of general consensus as to how much money is needed every year to invest in nature, to reverse the extinction crisis that's happening at the moment.

We are legislating in the UK to replace our land use subsidy system, the common agricultural policy, with the new system that pays landowners only if they deliver public goods like environmental stewardship. So we haven't done it yet, but we're in the process of doing it. But that is a very, very powerful lever. And if having done that in the UK, we can persuade other countries to join a big coalition of other countries, willing to do the same that's huge, We have trade. Even if we clean up our own house here in the UK, we're still importing stuff that has huge environmental impact. 80% of deforestation is caused by commodities. And when we import commodities, whether it's palm oil or soy or cocoa or whatever, we're effectively importing large scale deforestation.

So we're going to need to clean up our supply chains and we've taken the first step towards doing that, which is to make it a requirement on big business to ensure that when they import commodities, they're not importing deforestation, but the only way that's going to work is if we get other countries to do the same.

So we're trying to build a coalition of countries now willing to take the same step. And if we get a critical mass of countries willing to clean up their supply chains, that alone could be big enough to flip the market in favour of protecting forest. If you think that today, the incentives to destroy forest are 40 times bigger than the incentives to protect forests. So for as long as that remains true, everything else we're doing is tinkering around the edges. We are going to lose all our forest. And when we lose our forest, we lose our biodiversity. We lose the greatest regulatory system in terms of our fresh air and our water. Ultimately, we render this planet non-viable.

So really it couldn't matter more. I can't think of anything in fact, that's more important. It's a crude thing to say, but it's quite extraordinary that we could bring the natural world to its knees and ultimately ourselves, without breaking a single law. That was just madness. So clearly the law has to reflect this total dependence we have on the natural world.

We are just slashing away at life on earth and it's indisputable. So it always puzzles me that there's so much resistance to the kind of change that we need, given that the science and the evidence really couldn't be clearer. I wonder what more it would take to get people over the line and get them committed to doing what's necessary.

LC: And on that point, why do you feel that there's been such a slow political response to the scientific reality?

ZG: The two things. While I think while there is a consensus, climate change is a problem that needs tackling, it’s not necessarily seen as a top priority. And that means that sometimes you have a choice, you have to make a decision and you've got to balance things up. And the default until now has always been to make a choice in favour of a growth at any cost. And I think that's the bit that's beginning to change. And weirdly I think coronavirus is part of the reason for that. So, I mean, I've been talking to counterparts all around the world and I don't think I've spoken to a single politician who hasn't noted that we have a duty now to make sure that as we rebuild our economies, following this appalling pandemic that we actually do so in an intelligent way, that we take nature into account where we are living within natures means.

This is a new kind of discussion. I don't remember ever having these kinds of discussions before coronavirus. So I think something has shifted. I feel there's a stirring in global politics, a recognition that this is a moment for a change and maybe I'm being too optimistic, but it feels that way from the discussions that I'm having.

LC: So then in a nutshell, would you say you're of the position that government's role should be in more kind of rules and regulations that will then push business in the better direction. Kind of like Thomas Friedman's vision of the Green New Deal?

ZG: I think it's a cop-out to say that - clearly, obviously everyone does have a role. I mean, everyone makes decisions every day and those decisions have implications and consequences. But I think it's a cop out to point at consumers and people and say, you know, you've got to change the way you live otherwise the world is stuffed because it kind of completely overlooks the fact that most people aren't deliberately engaging in environmental destruction. When you go to a supermarket and you buy parsley and it's kind of wrapped up in a brick of plastic, that’s not consumer waste. No consumer wants that kind of waste. It’s producer waste.

So I think the onus should be on the producer to minimise and eliminate that waste. And how does that happen? Well, yes, a little bit of consumer pressure has an impact. It makes a difference, but ultimately it's about government setting the rules. I don't think governments are good at micromanaging, but I think they are good at creating the framework and the rules. And then business is a better place than to respond. So, you know, the more carbon becomes a financial liability, the more companies will do to eliminate carbon from their supply chains and their operations. So, yeah, government has huge power and money, laws, taxes, and international cooperation.

Governments can't do it all, but they can create a framework which would drive us rapidly in the right direction. The only thing I would say is there's a difference between being outside of government and being in government, clearly because when it comes to being in government, you've got to find the solution that is going to work for the biggest number of people and be as effective as possible.

So there's always a little bit on the one hand, on the other hand in government, and I don't think that's avoidable. But just in defense of this government, while I really do acknowledge and believe that the government's got a very, very long way to go as all governments do, I partly wish that the people could see and witness some of those kinds of cabinet committee meetings on the environment on climate change to recognise that there is so much bigger appetite for meaningful and radical action than I think anyone outside of government would imagine. There was a recognition of how difficult it is in getting to net zero by 2050. I think we’re the first country, we were the first to legislate for that, which is a big step, but actually making it happen is a really big deal. It's going to require some really tough decisions by all the departments of government and the whole of government is engaged right now in kind of really trying to figure out what that means, how are we going to do it?

And that will involve bringing people along with us, because the worst thing that can happen is the governments reach out for clumsy and deeply unpopular policies to tackle climate change or, or sort of harmonise our relationship with the natural world. Because if that happens, you're going to get a backlash. And the last thing we can afford I think is a backlash right now. I think people do want action. Everything I've seen, every school I've spoken to, every event I've been at, confirms my very strong view that people want governments around the world to get their heads together and really deal with this stuff.

But that, I don't think is something we should take for granted because if we extinguish that and I think we're in real trouble.

LC: Do you think then some activists are too radical with their demands? Like I know Extinction Rebellion wanted net zero by 2025.

ZG: Yeah. I mean, my only interest is that we get to the point where we're genuinely turning the trends and I don't care how we do that. We just have to do it. And I recognise the fear and the sense of urgency that is exuded by the Extinction Rebellion, protesters, Greta Thunburg and all the people who've been campaigning with her on Fridays. I completely recognise where and share that from a sense of urgency. I think it is an emergency. I don't think there's anything wrong in what they're saying about that.

The only thing I would caution is there are times when things that have been done by, for example, Extinction Rebellion have really pissed off a lot of people. And when you get in the way of people just living their lives, you don't win friends. You don't make allies. And right now this cannot be a niche movement of people who are living in a fairly small bubble. This, this has to be mainstream. There's a long way between what we need to do and where we are now. There's no doubt there's a big mismatch between action and what's needed, but the only way we're going to close that gap is by bringing as many people as possible on board.

So whenever actions are taken by protest groups, I would always have that in the back of my mind, what is going to win us friends, what's going to expand our coalition, our alliance, and what's going to minimise that and I'd avoid the latter like the plague, because we just can't afford that.

LC: I spoke with the Farhana Yamin, an environmental lawyer who has authored multiple UN reports, but in 2019, took to breaking the law to call attention to its limits.

Farhana Yamin: Thanks for having me on the podcast. Yeah. I became a lawyer back in 1991 when I qualified and I feel it was an age of huge amounts of optimism and trying to integrate environmental protection in the heart of economic decision-making. And we invented this concept called Sustainable Development. And we're armed with this concept, which we would enshrine into law. We were going to fix, you know, the planetary crisis, even as it was unfolding then.

So scientists have been warning us about the limits to growth, about the intensity of extraction of natural resources, polluting water, soils, chopping down forests for a very long time. So I felt like that time, the scientists were really being heard and that we were able to use their knowledge, their wisdom that they were giving us based on evidence to inform policy making. I really felt that that's what we were doing.

And in 1992 was the second major Earth Summit in Brazil, which I was fortunate enough to attend. And there was a huge number of international treaties that were being written, EU policy, EC as it was called then was progressing a pace and lots and lots of countries were writing their environmental legislation or beefing it up. So it was a very optimistic time. We have lawyers, economists, politicians listening.

We thought we were able to use expert knowledge and devise political solutions that would take care of things, you know, make stuff right. And prevent problems. 30 years later, we have not been able to use the law in the way that we thought. We have got huge numbers of treaties, many of which I've helped negotiate and participated in. We've got thousands of laws in training, environmental protection and conservation, but those have mainly been too weak and have been breached and damage has occurred in a way, which is on a scale that we didn't imagine and much faster than we imagined. And the earth is literally disintegrating in terms of the ecosystems before our eyes.

So it's a great source of sadness to me that my own personal journey, as a young lawyer aged sort of 24 to now age 55, is marked by huge success in terms of legal instruments, many of which I was part of, but they haven't done the job and that's the truth. They haven't done the job. We are in the middle of a sixth mass extinction. We are decimating wilderness at an alarming rate. Nature is sending us signals. The oceans are acidifying, you know, you and I are speaking, both of us are looking tearful, but that's the reality. And that's not a reality I thought I would be facing at this time.

So I feel very much the answer to your question is no, we can't just rely on the established machinery of law and the established machinery of lawmaking of norm making. We have to do something different, which has led me to become much more of an activist and not fear, you know, breaking the law because the system needs to be reset very fundamentally.

LC: And why do you feel like there is a sense of failure with those international agreements? Is it because there was too much compromise? Is it because of lobbying? Is it because the forces of capitalism and economics and the kind of power handles we have right now through politics are just too strong for the law to go up against? I don't know. I'm speculating. Why do you think that it hasn't been enough?

FY: I think all of those reasons, but I feel for me the most, I guess, haunting in terms of me feeling I didn't pay enough attention to it. And so sort of sadness and regret and anger in myself is the power of the corporations and the power of money and the power of lobbying. And I kind of feel, I naively thought politicians armed with scientific knowledge with experts, that we would get the right solutions then that we would act in the long-term interests of everyone.

We would act in the interests of the Earth. We would protect our children's interests and the fact that short-termism and the lobbying power and the inertia of the ‘business as usual’, especially the fossil fuel industry, especially the agribusiness industry, I think was bigger, far bigger than me armed with pen in hand and expert knowledge and with legal concepts.

So I feel, we sort of saw climate change and biodiversity as a sort of set of legal, technical arguments and scientific arguments to be won. And actually we didn't see them as a political and a power problem that some corporations, some countries have far more power. And they're not going to just hand it over or say, yeah, the game's up.

And I've seen so many Mark Carnies, who whilst they were in power, when he was actually at the head of the Bank of England, didn't do enough. So when they leave, they suddenly become far more radical and suddenly kind of proselytise about how urgent climate action is. But when once they actually had their jobs, they didn't do enough. And I've seen this repeated over 30 years. Leaders are so much more eloquent and talk about far more radical things when they're ex-leaders than when they're leaders.

LC: And then tell me a little bit about your journey into activism and why you made that decision to break the law?

FY: Yeah, I guess partly I've returned to activism. I feel I put it aside when I became a professional young lawyer and breaking the law was then sort of obviously inconsistent with being a lawyer. You know, I've put a lot of faith in my profession and being able to enact change through law and through, you know, devising new laws. So when I was 15 and 16, I was going to marches and I think I put all of that on hold.

And my return to it has come from, you know, seeing the failure, I guess, or the limits of that more professional, expert approach. And my return to it has come because I am a mother and I sense danger. And I feel it's time for me to put my body, my reputation, my financial assets, which I have, like I've, you know, accumulated all this stuff on the line and to support all of the people who have been fighting in a more dangerous way than I have.

I feel privileged to have all of this capital, you know, social, reputational, financial capital. I feel like all of that needs to be thrown at the problem now. And I feel like we need to make people sit up and listen.

LC: What was the moment in your mind that that shift happened, that you decided to risk getting arrested, which you know, and then you got arrested. Can you talk me through that moment?

FY: Yeah. So the moment it was really, I feel the publication by the IPCC, which is the UN body for climate science. And they published a report in October 2018 on the implications of the earth warming to a 1.5 degree limit. You know, versus I guess the two degree limit. And that report had taken essentially a decade to come out because I was part of the negotiations in 2009, where its small islands and vulnerable countries had been fighting, including with the president of the Maldives who I was working with for 1.5 degree limit to be enshrined as the safety threshold. This is in 2009. So it took almost 10 years for that report to officially come out and inform the climate process.

The report basically paints an absolutely devastating picture of existing vulnerabilities and says, you know, there's a massive difference between aiming for a two degree rise in temperature, which is the limit enshrined in Paris and a 1.5, which is much, much safer for the vast majority of the world's ecosystem, for the vast majority of the world's most vulnerable countries and communities, farmers, everywhere else.

So this was correct, like it was right that the small islands and many of the vulnerable countries were arguing for this much safer limit for 10 years. The trigger for my committing to getting arrested and through nonviolent direct action was I saw that Extinction Rebellion had staged a rebellion in parliament and people had got arrested. I wasn't there, but I knew about it and I felt that's the right response to this report. The response to this report is not to have another press briefing, it’s not to have another petition. This is the alarm bells. If they're not ringing now, what else are we waiting for?

As I said, I knew the history of that report and had negotiated for small islands to have the 1.5 limit recognised. And it is recognised in Paris. So again, it took three years from the Paris agreement, which says we should strive towards a 1.5 limit for the report to come out. And I felt like, okay, now's the time to throw everything, you know, all hands on deck and let's throw everything at the problem. We don't have another 10 years to wait. The IPCC reports says we've got roughly 10 years, this is in 2018, to bend the emissions curves and to change our societies profoundly. Every decision, every day counts.

LC: And you got arrested. Were you worried about going to jail? Were you worried about the implications of that?

FY: So I got arrested on the 16th of April and I was arrested outside Shell for trying to glue myself in fact to the doors, but I didn't quite make it as far as the doors, for criminal damage to Shell. And I wanted to honour the work of Polly Higgins and alert people to ecoside, you know, which is happening. It's happened for hundreds of years, but it's happening at an exponential rate and in full knowledge, you know, in daylight right now.

 Most of the big gains that we have in terms of human rights and in terms of political freedoms have come from movements where getting arrested, going to jail, was actually a key part, whether voluntarily chosen or involuntarily, you know, chosen. Yeah. So whether it's the suffragettes, the Charters, the Trade Union movement, the fight against racism, Apartheid, the fight for social justice has always been accompanied by a struggle with power. And power does not give itself up willingly and sadly people have to sometimes go to prison or are killed or maimed or have to risk their reputations.

And I think it was fanciful for the climate movement to think otherwise that's what I think now. It was really arrogant maybe or crazy. Like why did we think that the most powerful companies and these vested interests would just listen to a bunch of reports and scientists? You know, why did we think we didn't need ordinary people to give up and risk more? I'm totally convinced that power will not just give itself up and that we will need to be braver for many years to come.

LC: Caroline Lucas has been the UK’s only green member of parliament for 10 years, following her work as a member of the European parliament. Caroline told me about her journey, policy she's hopeful for and why she feels the current iteration of our democracy is in many ways, holding us back.

Caroline Lucas: So, I guess I've spent my life trying to work out where you need to be best placed to make change happen. That's the big question to me. And yes, the reason that I wanted to be an MP finally, was exactly because I want change to happen when it comes to environment and sustainability and our relationship with our very beleaguered planet, but it is difficult to work out where you can have the most influence. I've spent 10 years working with a development NGO. I spent 10 years in the European parliament. I've now had 10 years in Westminster and trying to answer the question where does power lie, I think is a really Interesting one. And that's why even as an MP, for example, I found myself taking peaceful direct action at Baulkham against fracking, was arrested, had a week long trial, you know, and you could argue in one way that actually the profile that I achieved through doing that, part of that profile was because I was an MP, you know, has it had more impact on, on the fracking debate than any number of debates or written questions or early day motions that I put down at Westminster.

It's important to have people on the inside of these institutions who can try to fight the battles inside, but that's not to say that you don't also need the people on the outside who are creating the political space, who are putting on the political pressure, that would mean that other politicians will move. So in a sense, I think you do need that kind of coordinated pincer action.

LC: As a Green Party MP you're sort of working outside the system as well as inside the system, at the same time. I know in the past, you've tried to do progressive alliances between different UK parties. Why did you do that? And also have you ever doubted your decision to be in the green party, as opposed to being in one of the more mainstream parties.

CL: You do have to think about, well, how do we get more Greens elected? How do we get these views more widely known and promoted in our political system? So one of the reasons for trying to explore the idea of progressive alliances was partly to try to recognise that broadly on the centre left of British politics, there are more parties and therefore the votes get split between us and therefore time and again, when we all stand against one another, the Conservatives come through the middle and win, and that doesn't represent the true views of people in that constituency.

So we wanted to see whether it be possible to find ways of working together at elections, so that as long as there were some absolutely core shared objectives on climate, on inequality on housing, let’s say, that we could then have some arrangements between those opposition parties. We need to have a really frank discussion I think, about how we make sure that our voting system doesn't lock us into a very right wing agenda, which I don't think the evidence suggests is actually what the majority of the people in this country want.

LC: If you could wave a magic wand and have a few policies in place in the next few years, what would you see happen?

CL: The Climate and Ecology Emergency Bill. It's a bill that's been worked on by a number of scientists and lawyers and academics and campaigners. Essentially this bill would update and close the gaps in our existing climate legislation. So instead of talking about net zero by 2050, which is far too late, it would talk about the imperative of staying below 1.5 degrees, that Paris threshold. It would ensure that our consumption emissions are also incorporated in the calculations because right now, one of the reasons that the government can give the impression that we're doing so well at getting our emissions down is because we've outsourced them to countries like China. Much of our manufacturing now happens in places like China.

I think we need a change in our electoral system. And I appreciate that might sound like a slight diversion, but over and over again, you have governments with a majority in terms of the number of seats, but only a minority in the number of the votes that they got. And we had over a million people voting green a couple of years ago in the election, and just one MP, you know. In order to have a political chamber that better represents what people want, we need a fair voting system.

We can start by replacing the house of Lords within the elected upper chamber. It's important to bring power away from the centre and back to the local level. And things like the flourishing of citizens assemblies right now, I think people relish the idea that they can make a difference. And I think one of the most toxic ideas ever out there was the idea that individuals can't make a difference. They can, and we do, and working together, we can do anything if we really put our minds to it.

LC: Can you tell me a little bit more about the citizens assembly that was recently held on how to reach net zero carbon emissions.

CL: Yes. So this citizen's assembly was put together by six parliamentary select committees who came together to say, we want to know what the public think about how we should make the transition to a zero carbon economy and society. And my criticism, I guess to the extent that there is one, will be that the whole assembly was based on the premise of the government policy of net zero by 2050. And many of us would say that that's the wrong target.

But nonetheless, what happened was that letters went out to a random group of people. I think it's around 110. Properly represented Britain, both in terms of geography and ethnicity and age and region. They had a huge input from independent scientists and others giving them information. And then they were facilitated to come up with proposals on a whole range of issues from transport to housing to the way that we manage our land and agriculture.

And I think what was interesting about the results was they were far bolder and more ambitious than I think government would have expected. For example, when it came to aviation, one of the fastest growing sources of greenhouse gas emissions, this nationally representative citizens assembly came up with the idea of a frequent flyer levy. They suggested things like free buses. They suggested things like a ban on carbon-intensive products.

So I think what it does in a sense is to give government some political cover. It gives them a really clear, popular mandate to be far bolder when it comes to the measures that we need to see in order to try to avoid the worst of the climate crisis.

LC: That makes me think of the impact of lobbying because probably the majority of the people in this country would support taxes on frequent flying because the majority of people in this country aren't flying frequently. Do you think the influence of power and money does distort the government's ability to listen to the people?

CL: I think that the power of lobbying is immense and it has an entirely toxic impact on our politics. And I think it's something we need to do far more, in terms of having laws around the regulation of lobbying and the transparency of lobbying and so forth. I do come back to the realisation, I think, that power does remain with people because politicians sadly won't act fast enough unless they feel real public pressure to do so.

LC: So how do we create public pressure? Alongside the rise in documentaries like those made by David Attenborough there has been a rise of environmental protest movements, engaging in civil disobedience to drive awareness. For example, the Fridays for the Future movement started by Gretta Thunberg in 2018, has seen millions of children around the world, strike school on Fridays in protest for the climate.

On the 31st of October, 2018, whilst kids were trick-or-treating, more than a thousand people took to London's parliament square to see the environmental movement Extinction Rebellion's declaration of rebellion against the UK government. Thunberg, Caroline Lucas and George Monbiot read speeches, standing amongst the statues of Millicent Fawcett, Gandhi and Nelson Mandela, who all in their time partook in civil disobedience.

I spoke to one of the co-founders of Extinction Rebellion, nicknamed XR, Dr. Gail Bradbrook, at the end of their most recent rebellion in the UK, in which they blocked access to three printing presses owned by Rupert Murdoch.

Tell me a little bit about the, kind of the theories behind Extinction Rebellion's process and why you founded it and what the theoretical underpinnings are.

Dr. Gail Bradbrook: Yeah. So there's a body of knowledge around movement and social movements that probably started being elaborated by Gene Sharp, who’s often seen as the father of civil resistance. And it's based in the ideal that obviously, you know, Gandhi before hand and Martin Luther King, who learned from Gandhi and so on. So there's a history, but in terms of academic study, there's a body of knowledge there, but some of the things are that you have to do disruptive actions and you have to do things that enable you to get into the public consciousness with the issue that you're talking about.

People don't need to like what you're doing, they need to be talking about the issue and you set things up called Dilemma Actions. So however the State chooses to respond, you set it up so that you win. So that, for example, if you go to a bank and we often use chalk, by the way, you spray on the bank a slogan on the window that you intend to wash off later. I mean, do they let you stand there for a day with your protest that was quite in your face. It’s going to get in the papers or do they come and arrest you, which is going to get in the papers. And you bring love and peaceful mischief to what you're doing. You try to bring in humour and meaning and sacrifice in the sense of people willing to be arrested if that's what it takes. In many cases, they know if they do this thing that's going to happen.

And I think the ripples of that when that person goes back home and they’re like wow, what happened to Lily? She’s done that, she lost the plot! And then they can say I did it for these reasons and it means more. The consciousness of the ecological crisis was vastly increased. It's not definitely just down to us, of course, Fridays for the Future, the films of David Attenborough, the IPCC reports. And so on, you know, your own work Lily. I mean, there's so many people add into that.

And I think that we have helped by bringing a disruptive element. Looking in any history books about the rights and freedoms that you have and there will have been somebody, some group, the Levellers, the Diggers, the Tolpuddle Martyrs, in this country, you know, those that did mass trespass, the Suffragettes, the Charters, they all did some form of civil disobedience.

LC: Yeah, your action actually, of smashing a window reminds me of the Suffragettes because I know smashing windows was a key part of their strategy. They didn't want to hurt anyone, but they wanted to cause damage to get arrested, to be disruptive.

DGB: I didn't actually smash it. I had like this little hammer..

LC: I did see the video.

DGB: It was like people were on Twitter going we need to teach her to use a hammer properly. And I sat on the window ledge high up for some time, which would give the people in the building time to respond and make that safe. You know, I mean, we're absolutely a peaceful movement. Non-violence is baked into our principles and values and none of us would wish to see anybody harmed as a result of the actions that were taken.

People are already dying in this country though, of air pollution, and caused by the Department for Transports policies. So, you know, I'm going to be tried as a criminal and the British government's been found guilty three times of breaking air pollution limits, and who's gone to jail for that?

So, you know what you're doing it's another one of those Dilemma Actions really. Are you going to jail me? It's a peaceful protester in a tradition that’s seen women get the vote in this country,  the Charters and the men, or you're going to let me off and therefore, you know, potentially look like you're encouraging this behaviour.

It's the system doesn’t know how to respond. And what it needs to do is wrestle with the law and the lack of effective law in this country to protect life on Earth. That's really, the law is a problem in itself. What's wrong with the legal system, that surely the highest purpose of the law is to protect life on Earth. But it's literally unable to do that. For several reasons there's problems in the law. But you know, one is that there is no international law of ecoside, the law that Polly Higgins was working on. Her work carries on to say that mass damage and destruction of the environment is a form of crime against peace.

LC: Do you feel that the strategies of Extinction Rebellion it working?

DGB: It’s hard to fully know. Our main purpose is active civil disobedience. We did an action for example at 55 Tufton Street, which is the home of many so-called think tanks that have been spewing out climate denial and other mechanisms to prop up and support vested interests in business as usual. We worked alongside Animal Rebellion who were pointing out the activities of, for example, Barclays bank, in funding, industrial mass scale animal agriculture that's destroying so much of life on Earth.

And obviously we took on the idea of the freedom of the press in the UK. What's happened is that I would say we've poked the beast in the eye or tickled the nose of the tiger. And it is naturally roaring. Ideally you'd have great journalism, people talking about the crisis and you wouldn’t have to have a social movement, pushing it into the faces of everybody. That’s what we want really. In the absence of that, you escalate, you raise the bar and you get a pushback. And of course, it's in two ways. One is this ridiculous concept of calling us organised criminals, talking about reclassifying us and the other is that the right wing press are attacking us massively at the minute. They’re trying to dig dirt on us and doing hit pieces and take everything you read with a massive handful of salt, by the way. People may not agree with every tactic, but when you try to reclassify, you know, a bunch of grandparents, lawyers, doctors, scientists, breastfeeding mothers, and so on as organised criminals who are talking about the biggest threat to humanity, then as you and and others did was to sign a letter to say, look, this is not okay. It's not acceptable in a democracy.

You know, in my view, in the view of many in XR, we don't have a functional democracy. Functional democracy would not allow us to be setting up the future of our children to be like the collapse of the food systems. We must have a grownup conversation about the political economy. This is not about coming out pro this system or anti that system. My own personal view is this, I think the system needs upcycling, take the best of it and move it forward so it's not destroying life on Earth. And in that way, we want a Global Citizens Assembly, you know, to ask this biggest question, why are we doing this to ourselves and what change is needed?

And of course, you've got fantastic examples of changes that can happen. You know, the de-growth agenda of Jason Hickel’s new book or Project Draw Down, or, you know, localism, doughnut economics. We don't lack ideas, we lack political will and you create political will through civil disobedience.

LC: You were arrested in the last rebellion, right? Is that correct? And when does your trial happen?

DGB: At the end of October for criminal damage. I broke one pane of glass at the Department for Transport.

LC: How are you feeling about the trial?

DGB: On a sort of, I guess, to use this language, spiritual level, I'm at peace with whatever happens. I have two children and I don’t want to be away from them, but also, it’s a deal that I made with myself that I'm willing to take risks and do what I think is necessary.

LC: Why do you make that decision? Because that is quite a huge risk, right? To potentially be away from your children.

DGB: The sentencing guidelines are six months to a year. I very much doubt it would be that long for various reasons. It's a bit foolish to lock somebody up and have them take up space in the prison system who's a peaceful protestor. And the last thing the system should do is make a martyr out of someone. Nevertheless, it is a risk. And the reason I would take such a risk is that my children have such a risky future, a future filled with horrors, you know, for their mum to spend a few months away, and they've got a great dad and so on, I feel it’s an honourable and justifiable thing to do, but not to be done lightly.

LC: Has anyone been tried by jury yet?

DGB: So Roger Hammerman and his colleague David were tried for actions that were part of the movement Rising Up that we built before the Extinction Rebellion came out. So that went to trial by jury. If you self-represent, you have sometimes more of a chance to say why you did something. There is a legal defence called necessity, or duress of circumstances that would be used in the case of, if you went past your neighbour's house and the house was on fire, you might smash a window to get into the house right. And what if it wasn't really on fire and you made a mistake and they said you've done criminal damage. You'd be like hang about, I thought your house was on fire and I was trying to keep your children safe. Our house is literally on fire at the minute in the world and I want to keep our children safe. I broke one window.

LC: Whatever you make of extinction rebellions tactics, if you swallow the science, it's hard not to sympathise with the level of desperation that many concerned citizens feel. And it is interesting that some of the people breaking the law over this issue are the law makers themselves, Caroline Lucas, and Farhana Yamin amongst them.

That said Extinction Rebellion are not without criticism. Many people find their tactics divisive and alienating and point out that taking time to protest and risking arrest are in many ways risks born of privilege. Yet if their goal is not to be liked, but to generate conversation, they seem to have been effective and their three demands: tell the truth, net zero carbon emissions and citizens' assemblies have all been partially met in the UK.

So how do we transform our system? Everyone I interviewed in this episode is fundamentally on the same team. All of them believe that the climate crisis and biodiversity crisis are real and terrifying threats to life as we know it. Everyone wants a version of system change. Yet they have chosen different pathways to create change, whether making laws, breaking laws, advocating civil disobedience or advocating community action. Is there a right way or wrong way, a better or worse way, or do we need all of these actors to push in different directions against and within the system so that we can upcycle it into a healthier version of itself that still exists in many years to come?

You can hear more from Caroline Lucas, Farhana Yamin and Gail Bradbrook and learn more about the work of protesters and politicians around the world in my book, Who Cares Wins, which is out now in audio book, ebook, and hardback.

In the next episode of this podcast, we'll dig deeper into these issues to explore how our media and social media is impacting on our democracy.

Friday 03.19.21
Posted by claudia delgado
 

WCW - Episode 3

Lily Cole: Welcome to Who Cares Wins, with me Lily Cole.

Guy Standing: The basic income would enable more of us to shift from labour to work. To work like care, like volunteering, like community work, like ecological work, which is currently unpaid and unvalued in our national accounts.

Natalie Foster: It is so clear that work in America is fundamentally broken. That what we once called low wage workers are now called essential workers and they are literally risking their lives to keep the service sector of America running and yet on minimum wage in America, you couldn't feed a family. You have to supplement with another type of work.

James Suzman: If we start digging into our deep history, to the origins of homo-sapiens 300,000 years ago, when we look at them, the general sense is that it's unlikely they had the kind of heavily hierarchical societies that we associate with inequality today. Inequality is a pretty recent thing.

Lily Cole: At the heart of every issue that intersects with the environment you find contradictions tensions and divergent perspectives, and these issues are complex and changing. Most of us want a happy life and a healthy planet. But many people have different ideas about the right way to travel towards it. In this new podcast series, I'll be sharing parts of my research from my book Who Cares Wins, interviewing some of the leading and conflicting voices in contemporary debates, such as technology, food, gender, politics and looking at how they intersect with our environment.

I see myself a bit like sellotape, ribbon or string holding together divergent voices and sort of asking ,’who cares who wins?’

In the first two episodes of this series, we explored how the personal choices we each make every day, how we travel, how we eat, have a profound impact on our environment, but it is hard to promote choices like organic food and electric cars without addressing the uncomfortable truth that sometimes these choices are prohibitively expensive, which brings us to this episode’s central question, can you afford to be green when you're not rich?

There are exceptions of course. Second hand items, eating less meat, wasting less are all cheap ways to reduce one's impact. Meanwhile, paradoxically wealthy communities have significantly higher carbon footprints than poorer communities. For example, the richest 10% of the world are responsible for half of all emissions.

And to put that in perspective, that includes the majority of people in countries like the UK. Meanwhile, the average person in the USA has a carbon footprint equivalent to 150 people from Ethiopia. The title of this episode pays homage to an article written by the American novelist, Alison Stine in 2019, when she studied the financial and time cost of trying to make green choices in rural America.

Alison Stine: I’m a writer and a novelist from rural Ohio in Appalachian in the United States. I've lived most of my adult life in Appalachian, Ohio. It's one of the poorest counties in the country. My parents did teach me love of the earth and my parents have tried their hardest, even though we didn't come from much and it hasn't always been easy in the places where we lived to be environmentally conscious and to be green. I think that affordability for all should be one of the first concerns, but it's usually often the last. More than 730 million people live in poverty, according to the United nations in 2015. So I think that helping all people really does help the environment too. Going green is often not just a matter of money, but a matter of time. It takes longer to wash things by hand, to wait for the bus rather than drive. In some ways we have to go back to realise love of the earth. And I think that something that we've seen a resurgence from recently. How important it is to have fresh food close by and to walk places rather than drive. So sometimes the way forward is to look to the past and to look to art in nature for how we can go on.

LC: Yet when it comes to consumption, why are sustainable options often more expensive and who is really paying for them. As Stine wrote in her article, ‘it's overwhelming to think that the burden of keeping the world alive rests on the shoulders of consumers and frankly it shouldn’t,' which takes us from personal choices to political policies. In reality, sustainably produced goods should be the cheaper options as they are reducing the bills to taxpayers now and in the future to deal with the impacts of climate change and pollution. Indeed in 2006, the British government commissioned the Stone Report, which found that the cost of dealing with climate change was already higher than the cost of stopping it.

Most economists argue, we are operating in a false economy in which the true cost of things is not being shown because we aren't charging companies to pollute. The International Monetary Fund calculated that by not pricing for the environmental and social costs of pollution, we are essentially globally subsidising the fossil fuel industry at a cost of $5 trillion a year.

Meanwhile, by paying people low wages to produce cheap goods, we perpetuate poverty and inequality. As the old adage goes, if it's cheap, someone else is paying. So how do we get out of this bind? Almost everyone I interviewed for my book, advocated rigorous carbon pricing as a way to quickly remedy the economy to show the real cost of goods  Here for example is Elon Musk on the topic.

Elon Musk: Energy for future generations will either be renewable or it will collapse. Essentially the price of carbon is not zero, there’s a real cost to it. But it's currently, especially in the US, effectively priced at zero.  

LC: Put simply carbon pricing would make destructive business practices more expensive and more sustainable options would have a fairer chance to compete. This would incentivise companies to reduce their pollution and allow more sustainable options to scale and potentially get cheaper by scaling. But carbon taxes have a fundamental issue as economist Guy Standing told me, presenting an interesting solution to it.

Guy Standing: Carbon taxes have one drawback, which is that they're regressive. In other words, if you have a carbon tax, that's going to be a higher percentage of a poor person's income than of a wealthier person's income. And therefore, the only way that politically carbon taxes and eco taxes will be acceptable, is if you guarantee that the revenue gained from those taxes is recycled to everybody as carbon dividends, as part of the basic income payments, as an equal payment to everybody. But the essence of a carbon tax system and this revenue redistribution goes with another beautiful advantage. One of the reasons we are seeing a depletion of nature is that we focus far too much on labour as resource depleting activity.

The main way by which the vast majority can earn an income today is through labour. And we have a crazy statistical and economic accounting system that is woefully out of date and says the only labour that is involved in the labour market is work. So if, for example, I pay someone to look after my elderly mother, that increases national income. If I look after my elderly mother, myself, that doesn't increase national income. It's not counted as work. And it doesn't count. And the basic income would enable more of us to shift part of our time from labour to work, to work like care, like volunteering, like community work, like ecological work, which is currently unpaid and unvalued in our national accounts. And we have to have a future where we overhaul our concepts of work.

LC: For me, I mean, there's lots of reasons I'm attracted to basic income, but the way that you articulate it in terms of a carbon dividend, I find interesting because it seems to me that sustainable options often appear more expensive because the unsustainable versions aren't being priced correctly i.e. we aren't pricing for pollution, we aren't pricing for damage. But also you need to create more equality so that people can afford better choices. So I love the dovetailing of essentially pollution taxes with a basic income, as you've done by talking about a carbon dividend as a way to potentially address the different complex aspects of this issue of affording basically a sustainable life and a sustainable system.

GS: Yeah. I would like to add to that Lily. In recent years, particularly after the financial crash, the governments have facilitated the loss of our commons, our institutions , our public amenities, our health services, social housing. They’re all part of our commons and a good society needs a revival of the commons. And we should be taxing the profits being made from certain commercial interests being given in effect our commons. If you have beautiful public parks, beautiful public libraries, that enables you to have a better standard of living.

And I would not accept the arguments, that having a more ecologically balanced lifestyle would be more expensive, on the contrary. If more of us had allotments, if more of us had access to the land to grow crops, vegetables, fruit and so on, we would have greater respect for nature, greater connectivity with the simple beauties of life and more control of the way we use our time.

But as I said earlier, the stupidity of our statistics is that if I go and work on my allotment, I wish I had one, I would not be counted as doing work. In fact, they would say, why aren't you doing a job. But that's actually the sort of activity that we should be encouraging. And I noticed some figures recently that the number of people applying to have an allotment has just ballooned since the pandemic began, because people are trying to connect better with nature.

LC: Universal basic income or UBI as it's often called is an idea that's been voiced since the 16th century, which in a present day world of automation, rising inequality and the ever looming threat to recession is seeing an intellectual and political renaissance in a formidable way. In California in the US, Mayor Tubbs, the youngest and first African-American mayor in Stockton's history, was originally inspired by the concept of UBI when he read Dr. Martin Luther King's last book, Where Do We Go From Here: Chaos or Community?, in which Dr. King wrote, ‘I am now convinced that the solution to poverty is to abolish it directly by a now widely discussed measure, the guaranteed income.’

Mayor Tubbs:  So Stockton is actually much more like other parts of America than when you think of California. Stockton is in the Central Valley. Incredibly diverse. It's a city of about 320,000 people. It's 35% Latino, 35% white, 20% Asian and 10%. African-American. The oldest Sikh temple in the country is in North America. At one point we had more Filipino people in Stockton than in any place in the world outside of the Philippines.

The median household income is $45,000 very strong working class roots. It’s actually a 58/ 42 Dem/Republican split.I think that's important because the conversations we have in Stockton about economic inclusion, economic security, aren't happening in the liberal bubble or silo. They’re happening across party lines. Half of my council is Democrat. Half my council's Republican. It's really forced us to lean in in some of these conversations and figure out how do we talk about a policy that's seen as liberal, that’s actually good for everyone, in a way that everyone can get behind.

So part of that, we realised that my first year in office, that poverty was probably the crux of a lot of issues we're facing not just in Stockton, but in this country. So I had a research team. I said, I need you to find the most radical interventions for poverty. Then give me a program, give me the craziest policy you can come back with. And they came back a week later with a Basic Income. I said, okay, well, so you just give people money and that's going to solve all these issues that we're facing? And I told him, I said, I remember Dr. King talked about this before he passed. I think it's an interesting conversation. I just got elected. I'm not about to lose reelection. My first eight months in the office talking about we're going to give people money and they see that just bounce back from the current bankruptcy.

But then serendipitously, I met Natalie Foster on the conference. We're talking about the work ESP was doing and how they're looking for a city. And I said, you know in Stockton we have a task force that's looking at how we create a basic income in the city. And a match made was made in heaven.

So for the past year, we've been having conversations about the dignity of work, about opportunity, about this idea of the commons, about this idea of should people work as hard as they work and not have time with their kids and be sick and they still can't pay bills in that  type of community where they live in. And we piloted the Basic Income demonstration called Seed. So starting in February, 125 families are given $500 a month and tomorrow they actually get their second disbursement.

But it's been really interesting for Stockton to be ground zero for the conversations, because for our history, we've been ground zero for bankruptcy, for crime, for foreclosures. And now we're ground zero for lifting up again, the stories that people who are working and working incredibly hard, sometimes working themselves to death, filled with stress and anxiety and worry, and not working for yachts or not working for mansions, but working to pay for lights. Working to pay for water, working to pay for medical bills. And it's really caused me to be more of an advocate and realise that I don't want to live in a society, and I don't wanna live in a community where folks don't have at least the basics taken care of because they are contributing and they are part of this common good.

LC: I spoke with Natalie Foster co-founder of the Economic Security Project who were working with Mayor Tubbs and other American leaders to create UBI pilots across the US.

Natalie Foster: So young mayor Tubbs in, you know, 2017 reads this book and says, I want to do this. I want to make this a reality. He and I actually met at a conference. I was at the time running economic security project and we had, we were looking for a city to demonstrate the idea. And so we teamed up and he launched the first city led demonstration of a guaranteed income. So 125 families in Stockton were randomly chosen. It was originally 18 months where these families would receive $500 a month with no strings attached.

It's been extended. Mayor Tubbs has extended it, raised the money and did it because of COVID so that people wouldn't be kicked off in the middle of a pandemic, to, I think 24 months now. And we know a lot, right. We know that people use the money in very basic ways. The largest expense is goods. They're purchasing things that they've needed.

Then it's, you know, energy and utilities. It's groceries. They're putting food on the table, but almost more importantly than how people are spending the money is what the money means in people's lives. So we know, one, that folks are buying time and this doesn't show up on the ledger, but when you have $500 a month, you know, there are a number of people who have been able to quit a third gig or a second job and spend time with their families.

The second thing that I think is really worth noting is there's early indicators, that something as simple as an income floor also has impact on people's sense of belonging to a community. Do I feel like I belong and I can connect in a deeper way with people around me? And their sense of hope. Do I feel like I want to wake up each morning? And just knowing that $500 a month is coming in, may make a difference in something as profound, as mattering and hope.

LC: And what about, so somebody, you know, maybe listening and thinking, it's a nice idea, but how do we afford it? And does it breed apathy and what are the different criticisms and obstacles you feel set in the way right now? And are any of them valid? Are there any issues that you think we should be mindful of?

NF: You know, I think there were a lot of criticisms before COVID that have fallen away. Like it is so clear that work in America is fundamentally broken. You know, that what we once called low wage workers are now called essential workers and they are literally risking their lives to keep the service sector of America running. And that on minimum wage in America, you couldn't feed a family, you have to supplement with another type of work.

And that has just been laid bare in this crisis. And so I think that, will people still work? The answer is yes. The answer's always been, yes. All the data shows that people continue to work, but they have more agency in how they work. And that is something that I think is important to everyone. That's certainly the biggest criticism.

And the other one that you allude to is, well, how will we pay for it? There's so many different policy choices of how you would implement a guaranteed income. There's some versions that are means tested by income. So families who make under a certain amount in the United States would get it, families that make over would not. There’s other ways you could do it, where you would give a Universal Basic Income to everyone in the country, but then you'd claw back through taxes.

So if you do it that way, you'll have one price tag, but then an actual price tag at the end. So it's actually, you know, it's really hard to put one price tag on the idea. If you do well by the economy, you should do well by society. So, you know, a wealth tax has a lot more support now than it ever has before. The financial transaction tax, which is a small tax on high-frequency trading would generate billions of dollars a year.

So there are a number of ideas for revenue and candidates like Elizabeth Warren have articulated them. You know, folks like Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez has articulated some of them. So it's not a question of, is there enough money. It's a question of political will. It always has been. And that's where I see more room for optimism, is in the political will.

LC: I don't know if you've come across this idea of carbon dividends? So the idea that you could pay for Universal Basic Income in part through carbon taxes, which are increasingly necessary in some ways .

NF: Yeah, that was an original idea that piqued our interest in my economic security project, when we launched four years ago in part, because we have a natural experiment in the US in Alaska where you almost have the inverse of it.

So 40 years ago, the oil companies wanted to come in and drill for oil in Alaska. And a very forward-thinking Republican, which is our right of centre party, said all right, you can do that,  and we'll, we'll put a tax on it and we'll put the royalties into a permanent fund in Alaska that all people of Alaska will own. And as that fund grows, it will pay out dividends to Alaskans.

So now every year, every man, woman, and child who's a resident of the state gets paid out with no strings attached a dividend that is around 2000 US dollars. So for a family of four or six, that really does start to be significant. And I always loved the poetry of a carbon tax sort of building on Peter Barnes’ work, who wrote a book called Dividends for All, that says it doesn't have to be about drilling. What if we put a tax on usage and returned those funds to Americans?  

Hillary Clinton, after her 2016 bid for president, said in her memoir, you know, we looked at this idea. We actually even built a program. We were going to call it Alaska for America. And it would have been a carbon tax with a dividend, but we never ran on it. And that was one of her regrets.

So yeah. That idea, I think has a lot of power and promise and, you know, it would have to be supplemented with future revenue sources, right. Because ultimately we all hope the carbon usage goes down, but I think it would be a great way to start the pipes,. You know because here's the thing about something like a guaranteed income or, you know, like social security in the United States is a useful example. It's hard to create something new. People are skeptical. There's the psychology of creating something new is so much harder than the psychology of taking something away. People will fight tooth and nail to make sure that something isn't taken away. So I really feel that once the pipes are laid and once a bit, you know, even a small form of a guaranteed income is created, it will be much easier to build on than it will be to take it away.

LC: The data seems clear that financial inequality is growing. For example in the US the medium household income has grown at about a 10th of the rate of GDP in the last four decades. Sometimes it might appear that inequality is somewhat inevitable and natural consequence of our system. Yet has it always been there? Are human societies naturally wired to be unequal or is another way possible, in the past, and d perhaps the future? According to Dr. James Suzsman, the anthropologist you met in our last episode, equality is not inevitable and there is a lot we can learn from the most enduring and sustainable human societies that earth has ever known.

Do you think the inequality has an origin? And if so, where would you place that? Obviously as an anthropologist, you have a probably fairly expert unique perspective on it.

James Suzman: We often have quite the idea of inequality and equality with similarity and sameness. And of course, people are born with different abilities, different skills, different capacities and so on, but the question is whether you put a value on that. And I think if we start digging into our deep history and when I say deep history, I mean, going really right back to the origins of homo-sapiens 300,000 years ago. When we look at them, the general senses that it's unlikely they had the kind of heavily hierarchical societies that we associate with inequality today.

Inequality is a pretty recent thing. And I think it's a recent thing because the reason our species were so successful as hunter-gatherers was the fact that they had societies where the real aversion to hierarchy. During the 1950s and 60s there was a period where anthropologists were able to work with these societies. And the most important of which of course was the Ju/‘hoansi, a group of what are more commonly known as Kalahari Bushmen, or San. And they live in the Northern Kalahari and they are the group that I started working with in 1991. But what we know about them is that these societies were hugely egalitarian and there were fiercely individualistic as well.

So these were acephalous societies, which had no formalised structures and institutions such as chieftainships or priesthoods. There were individuals who were shamans. There were individuals who were good hunters, but there were fiercely egalitarian. And if people didn't agree with what was happening within their particular group, which was usually between sort of 10 and 30 individuals, they'd vote with their feet and go and join another group.

Part of the reason why foragers were so egalitarian is because, as I talked about, they have this system of demand sharing. And the reason that demand sharing existed was because they took the view that their environment shared with them. So if their environment shared with them, then of course they share it amongst one another. It's sort of seen as this sort of logical process.

When you start producing your own food, the relationship with your environment, ceases to be a sharing relationship. It becomes a productive relationship. One where people invest time and energy into planting a field, nurturing it, weeding it. So on and so forth. You putting quite literally all your eggs in one basket. If that harvest fails, your risk is existential. So it produced a sort of whole new emphasis on the creation and management of surpluses. And the minute you start creating and managing surpluses, demand sharing ceases to be a functional way of redistributing things.

And people obviously are sort of starting to look after and focus more on themselves. So you invite hierarchy into the space. It’s an almost organic product of that kind of scarcity. So hunter-gatherer has never really endured that kind of scarcity, and if they did, it was a shared scarcity.

With farmers there was this sort of induced scarcity because of the nature of the productive cycle. And so it placed a premium, not only on working hard, but also on the ability to manage and secure and control surfaces. And with that came an ability to basically exercise power over others.

LC: And what do you make of universal basic income? Do you think that that's an interesting concept? Are there any others you think we should think about in terms of pushing against inequality and towards less hierarchal communities?

JS: I think universal basic income is sort of short term and practical and sensible thing to do. I'd like to think of it probably as a transitionary step to a different way of thinking. It may be something that manifests or something that pushes us in that direction. My sense is that the way we have organised our society now is we're tied into a whole bunch of economic structures and institutions. And those economic structures and institutions all have their origins in the scarcity that was associated with the early agricultural societies.

So there was this kind of constant fear, this constant obsession with scarcity. We no longer live in that era. We now live in an era of such astonishing abundance, you know, at a cost to our planet as well. Yet all our economic institutions are based on this fundamental assumption of scarcity. You know, look at it, the basic definition of economics, the study of how we distribute scarce resources, but what if resources aren’t scarce?

The Ju/‘hoansi didn't think resources were scarce. They thought they lived in a generous environment, which fed them pretty much everything that they needed. And I think the fundamental shift we need to do is to transition effectively to an economics, which recognises that scarcity, the kind of scarcity that shaped our economic institutions actually no longer exist. And that requires a fundamental reshaping of the economy. I think taking steps like universal basic income, I think is a really good way of going about it. Improving redistributive mechanisms ultimately begins to take the steam out of hierarchy.

In fact, by simply giving everybody universal basic income, the amount of money you'd save, administering convoluted and ridiculous social grant systems that we have at the moment, would be huge. I tend to think that greed tends to be more of a cultural phenomenon and in the same way that Ju/‘hoansi de-value greed, a matter of fact, that you don't devalue it, it’s just a cause for ridicule and mockery. So I think it is a cultural phenomenon and therefore I think it is eminently changeable.

LC: Universal basic income seems to be an idea whose time has come. Whilst I believe it is essential for us to make the personal choice as we can every day to try and help push towards an environmental future, it is also important to recognise our own limits, and the political and social reality we sit within. So what are the policy ideas we can get excited about? Personally I'm inspired by the concept of universal basic income, carbon dividends and different manifestations of the green new deal that are seeing political voice now.

Like any bold political idea, all of these ideas have different ways of manifesting. Different risks, different opportunities, but it's only by piloting testing and learning, we’ll see what works. Indeed, flexibility was central to president Roosevelt's original approach to the New Deal, after which the Green New Deal is often muddled. He said it is common sense to take a method and try it. If it fails, admit it, frankly, and try another. But above all, try something.

You can hear more from Professor Guy Standing, James Suzman, Natalie Foster, Mayor Tubbs, Elon Musk, as well as many others in my book, Who Cares Wins, which is out now in hardback, e-book and audio book narrated by me. Join me on the next episode of this podcast, where I'm going to explore the fundamental question of whether we can create system change from the inside.

Friday 03.19.21
Posted by claudia delgado
 

WCW Episode 2

Lily Cole: Welcome to Who Cares Wins, with me Lily Cole.

Paul McCartney: We find ourselves amazingly positioned with them in time and space. I mean, it's just us and them. So I don’t know, I think this is a very strong argument for giving them a break.

Pat Brown: My feeling is if we can take, you know, a low double digit fraction of the market for ground beef, the beef industry will be at the tipping point because you know that it's just a matter of time before that industry is gone.

James Suzman: In order to hunt an animal you have to see, live and experience the world through the animals that you're hunting perspective, their senses. And that creates a sort of level of empathy, and with that a level of profound respect and acceptance.

Alice Waters: The only thing that's going to save the planet is falling in love.

Isabella Tree: You know, nature has had millions and millions of years of R&D and we always think we know best and the technology, you know, will fix it. You know, we'll fix the mess we've got ourselves into. But I think we have to be very mindful of hubris and take a step back and think, how does nature perform? Nature already has the solutions, I think.

Lily Cole: At the heart of every issue that intersects with the environment you find contradictions tensions and divergent perspectives, and these issues are complex and changing. Most of us want a happy life and a healthy planet. But many people have different ideas about the right way to travel towards it. In this new podcast series, I'll be sharing parts of my research from my book Who Cares Wins, interviewing some of the leading and conflicting voices in contemporary debates, such as technology, food, gender, politics and looking at how they intersect with our environment.

I see myself a bit like sellotape, ribbon or string holding together divergent voices and sort of asking ,’who cares who wins?’

Reduced meat diets such as vegetarianism, flexitarianism, veganism, or my favourite ‘vague-enism’ have grown on a massive scale in recent years, largely in response to the scientific consensus that we need to reduce the amount of meat we're eating if we want to be serious about mitigating climate change.

This conversation has never been more relevant now in light of COVID 19 as scientists also warn that three quarters of infectious diseases are zoonotic, passing from animals to humans because of threats to biodiversity, the fact that there's less and less wild land and our intensive animal agriculture systems. Yet whether we need to stop eating meat entirely or produce it in a different way, is at one of the most polarised parts of the environmental debate. And this week I'm going to try and explore both sides of the arguments, speaking to two pioneers in the alternative meat industry and speaking to two pioneers in the slow food movement that advocates regenerative agriculture.

Paul McCartney is one of the most successful recording artists of all time. Yet the McCartney name spoke first to me through Linda McCartney foods. As a young vegetarian growing up, Linda McCartney's alternative meat products were my go-to at family barbecues and events. And I wanted to speak to Paul about why he and his late wife Linda decided to make those pioneering steps into the fake meat market 30 years ago.

Paul McCartney: When I met Linda, one of the immediate things was our love of animals. That was a huge bond between us, that we loved animals. And she had, I say, this warm innocent view of animals, but we ate them because we were both brought up traditional eaters. We were on our farm in Scotland one day and it was lambing season and the lambs were running up and down the field. Such joy of spring, you know, they'd just been born and now they were safe. They were out in the sunshine, winter had finished. So life was looking good and they would just run from one end of the field. And it was as if one of them said, ‘let's go back!’ and they’d all go, ‘yeah!’ and run to the other end of the field, and they just kept running.

And we were looking at it and loving it. Then we just looked down and realised we were eating leg of lamb for Sunday dinner. We went, whoa, wait a minute and we made the connection. So we said, oh, you know, maybe we should try and do something about this. What do you say we try and go vegetarian. And that was what we did, but it was kind of daunting this idea.

And we always used to say ‘the hole in the middle of the plate’, you know, because if you serve a normal meal, then take the meat out, what's left? It’s strange things around the outside, like vegetables and stuff. So we had to fill that hole and this became our mission and we used to do this kind of thing and try and work out ways to replace what had gone, leaving the hole in the middle of the plate.

So we started gradually just to fill that hole with ideas. We realised that it was actually a lot of fun, even though it started off being daunting, it was now like a kind of mission. And I say to people now who sort of say, ‘Oh God, I want to go veggie’. I say, do you realise how thrilling it is at a point in your life? Let’s say to the age of 20-21 or something that you've been at home you've eaten one way basically, then you suddenly at college or you're on your own, or you've got your own flat, and now you have got the choice. And the whole idea of actually reprogramming yourself is really exciting.

And that led us then to Linda forming a food company. She said that when writing her first cookbook, people would come and see us, friends or relatives, kids, and stuff, and say, I'd love to go veggie, but I wouldn't have the slightest idea how to, and so she said, well, you know, I'm going to write a book. I'm going to get together and write a book. So I can just say to them, here's a copy of the book. There you go. Throw it on the table. There's how. So that became motivation for that.

And then we started with the kind of things we wanted to eat, but that didn't exist. Like burgers again, you know, I wanted to do a barbie. Well, I wasn't going to do meat. So we developed these burgers and, and in testing them in the early days, some of them would fall through the grill. So we would make sure that they were kind of solid enough to not fall through the grill, that they were tasty, that we could offer them to people who didn't normally eat vegetarian food. And we said, look this is good. You need to try this. So we had a very exciting time really, coming up with those things.

Lily Cole: Was that the first of its kind, would you say in terms of that, because now you go into a health food store and there's a million options, right? So for alternatives to meat, was that pretty new?

PM: Yeah. You couldn't get it. You couldn't get it. There was one restaurant that we knew of in London called Cranks and that says it all. It was called Cranks. They'd cleverly named themselves because they knew that's what people thought of them. When I was a kid, there was sausages. Walls made sausages, skinless, which I kind of like, because I never liked skinned sausages. I always thought of it as a skin. Oh, this is strange little animal skin, something weird, you know? So I kinda liked the Walls skinless, even though they were meat. So we modelled our sausages on that. We didn't have to bother trying to make a skin. So anyway, you know, those became quite a hit. And so we enlarged the food business and it caught on.

LC: When Linda McCartney foods was founded in 1991, the environmental arguments were less clear and instead it was an issue of animal rights that drove Paul and Linda.

PM: So there was the animal welfare, which was certainly the start of it all. And the word that always springs to mind there is compassion. Because when I was growing up, even though we were traditional meat eaters, just, you went to Sunday school, you were indoctrinated with religion because it was just at school.

And you're always hearing about Jesus and suffer little children to come unto me and the compassion. So I was always very attracted to that. So, you know, that's cool, this idea that you know, we should be compassionate, kind hearted. I liked that idea. So, so to me, I think that still is a major argument that if we are on this little sphere in space, that is perfectly situated between, you know, the distance from the sun, they do say that if we were a mile closer to it we’d be fried, if we were a mile further away, we'd be frozen. So that makes us perfect. That makes us a miracle planet.

And then on this planet, there have evolved creatures. Some of which are us. Some of which are these others. To me, I always say, look, you know, we've got these fellow creatures. I want to give them the their shot. Like I want my shot. I want my kids to have their shot at life. And that's how I feel. I extend that to living creatures. They’re our sort of friends. We find ourselves amazingly positioned with them in time and space. And it's just us and them. So I don't know. I think there's a very strong argument for giving them a break.

Then the environmental thing came into it, and the more you look into that, you realise that, you know, if it was just two cows on a farm, or a couple of cows on the farm and the farmer’s only way of making an existence is by farming those animals, then, I don't necessarily agree with them, but I don't have a big problem with that. But when it's McDonald's and it's billions of cows to feed that monster, then I think that's where the problem lies. This over production.

I remember driving down once from somewhere like LA, down to the border, Sila Jose or somewhere. I can't remember exactly, but it's a long long long road, a hundred mile interstate. As you drive along it, to your right are pens of the same cow. So it's 10 miles of this cow and it's brown and white and just the whole landscape was just filled with these guys and you go, no, there's something wrong with that.

LC: The McCartney family, including their children, Mary and Stella, are real activists and have been trying to encourage people to reduce the amount of meat they eat through the initiative, Meat-free Mondays.

PM: So we mentioned it and we thought, yeah, Britain needs this. And we just said to people, we’ve been asking you for years to just go veggie, but maybe that's a little difficult. Maybe that's a lot to ask some people. It's inconvenient. It's not going to be easy for you. So here's another idea. Just stop for one day a week. Monday seemed like a good idea, particularly because of the weekend blow out. And what's nice, what I really love is it's in schools. It's in a lot of schools now and the kids love it.

LC: Nearly 30 years on with greater demand and huge technical innovations, we are now seeing a boom of companies thinking about how to make fake animal products in interesting ways. I met with Pat Brown, the Stanford scientist, and founder of impossible foods who are producing plant-based burgers, using GMO that taste, look and even bleed like meat. You'll hear in the background, the sizzling of a burger, they were cooking for me at their labs in California. As I spoke to Pat about their mission. Pat, doesn't believe we're going to reduce the global demand for meat by simply asking people to stop eating it. Instead, he aims to disrupt the market in a different way.

Pat Brown: I’m all for people voluntarily changing their behaviour. And I'm not cynical about it, but I just know it's not going to happen. I think that, and we've done a lot of surveys about this. It's very interesting. Actually, 10% of people will say they're vegetarian or vegan, but 97% of them have also eaten meat in the past three months.

So go figure. But anyway, the point is that persuading people, educating people about the issues, trying to make them feel guilty. Any of that kind of stuff is a complete waste of time as far as I'm concerned. Not that I don’t love education, I'm all for it. I wish people cared more and knew more about this, but I went to the COP 21 conference two years ago, or three years ago, whatever. And everybody there is like, you know, devoted their whole lives to trying to address environmental issues and stuff like that. They all went out and had steak for dinner and they knew the problem. So education is great. You know, I'm going to start working on that myself.  

So the only way to solve the problem is to basically say, people are not going to change their behaviour. And therefore it falls on us to figure out a way to produce those foods that delivers everything they want and outperforms the foods from animals, and just compete in the marketplace and take those industries down. That's why I founded this company and that's our goal - completely replace animals in the food system by 2035, which we will do.

I'm completely confident we're going after beef first, because it is the single most impactful win we could have, is to take down the beef industry first. And if we succeed in doing that, it will basically send a signal to the financial markets, that people who are raising any of these kinds of foods depend on, that it's a terrible investment. That this whole technology is going the way of, you know, the horse and carriage and therefore make it harder for those people to get access to the loans and investment they need to stay in business.

My feeling is if we can take, you know, a low double digit fraction of the market for ground beef, the beef industry will be at the tipping point because you know that it's just a matter of time before that industry has gone.

LC: Do you know what you feel is the next priority?

PB: From an environmental standpoint I would go after fish next, but the interesting thing about this is that I'm thinking of it in terms of how the economics of the whole system respond to what we're doing. Like, I feel like if we capture a significant chunk of the US beef market basically, it will be very disruptive to the economics of the pork and chicken industry. Why? Because it's obvious you're next and, and it's doable and there's nothing that's going to stop us. It's just a matter of time.

LC: There are other environmentalists who worry that the mono crops on which fake meats often depend, present new challenges for our environment. And I wondered were there any risks to success that Pat had considered.

PB: Yeah. That's a super good question. It's actually something that, you know, we have spent a lot of time thinking about - is that we need to plan for basically putting those industries out of business and make sure that what replaces that is as good as it can possibly be in all the ways that matter.

The one thing you would give, I would give livestock credit for, reluctantly, is that they can turn any plant into meat, right? And so one of the things that we're looking at on a forward-looking basis is, we don't want to be dependent on any small number of crop inputs for our ingredients. So we're working on developing a supply chain for a protein that can be isolated from leaves of any plant.

The protein in leaves is incredibly high quality from a nutritional standpoint, which sort of makes sense because the vast majority of animals on earth get all their protein from leaves, but it's relatively dilute.

LC: Palm oil, you know, almond milk gets critiqued as well because of the huge amounts of demand.

PB: And this has been part of our design principle. We are thinking constantly about, is there any way that we can anticipate that this is going to create a problem and make sure that we either avoid it, or we have a plan for it. This burgers. We just, independently did a life cycle audit analysis and we can say based on data that the greenhouse gas emissions involved in producing this are a 10th of the greenhouse gas emissions of the cow version. And we have audited data you can look at. A 10th of water. A 10th, the fertiliser, and less than a 20th, the land area. You almost, can't not be that much better, just given that the current system is so horrendous that you'd have to be deliberately trying to be remotely as bad.

LC: Is that compared to averages in meat production, factory farming production, kind of grass, pasture raised cows, like what do you base the comparison on?

PB: So ironically, although despite the fact that it has this kind of halo image, grass fed beef production is much more environmentally destructive than, you know, the factory farm. Because it's habitat destruction and degradation and loss of biodiversity. That there's 10 times more cow biomass on earth than every wild vertebrate combined.

Okay. 10 times more total cows than every mammal, bird, reptile and amphibian put together, right now on earth. And that means that we're taking all the land and resources and photosynthetic productivity that previously supported diverse species and just focusing on making cows. And that is a catastrophe.

And as you may know, from the world wildlife fund, that the total number of wild animals living on earth today is less than half what it was 40 years ago. And if you look at their data or any other data, you realise that it's almost entirely due to use of animals in the food system. It's, you know, fishing for fish. Hunting, hunting's a small factor. Habitat destruction, degradation is overwhelmingly it. And although palm oil is a factor, it's a very small factor compared to animal agriculture. And so we are, in my mind, we're in the very late stages of a catastrophic meltdown in biodiversity, that we haven't even begun to see the full effects on, on us.

Because if, as you've probably read, in many parts of the world, the population of flying insects, which are responsible for pollinating a very large fraction of wild plants, has had a meltdown. And what's going to be the consequences of that? Well, what's going to happen is that these plants over time are not going to be able to replenish themselves. Or not as efficiently, but that's not going to happen right away. But 20 years from now, you're going to have further shockwaves of biodiversity loss, just due to that. So right now, animal agriculture takes up about half of Earth's land area. The large majority of that is cows. In the US 40% of the entire land area is devoted to raising cows for beef.

If we could snap our fingers and make that industry go away,  immediately 40% of the land would no longer have any economic value for agriculture. And it's not like when people sometimes say, Oh, well, now you just have to grow more plants to replace the cows. No, actually you're gonna have to grow less plants because so many of the plants are being used to feed the cows.

And I mean, you know, agricultural plants, the point is that you get a huge return on reduction, environmental impact by freeing up that land. And if you want to bring down atmospheric CO2 concentrations, the only reasonable way you can do it in a finite amount of time is by photosynthesis and turning atmospheric CO2 into biomass.

The recovery of the land that's being used for animal agriculture will pull out 17 years worth of fossil fuel emissions, out of the atmosphere as CO2, which if you could turn that clock back by 17 years, that would be extremely valuable because it would give people more time to get their act together.

LC: Pat Brown's vision is very clear. In his mind, if we moved absolutely away from farming animal products, we would free up a huge proportion of the world to rewild. Yet interestingly, I met with one of the pioneers of rewilding projects and she believes there is an important role that animals can play in certain types of agriculture. In her book, Rewilding, Isabella Tree documents her and her husband Charlie's journey to take their inherited farmland and turn it into an enormous wildlife project, Knepp wildlife estate in West Sussex, England. I went to visit her one sunny day at Knepp to learn more about her thoughts on meat and rewilding.

LC: First of all, thank you so much. It was a joy driving through and seeing the fallow deer

Isabella Tree: Yeah, fallow box.

LC: It was so beautiful. At first I thought they were a sculpture actually, because they were just so perfect and so close as well, to me as a human. Do you want to start by telling me a little bit about Knepp and your background and the transition that you've made here from farming to what it is now?

IT: Yes, my husband inherited this estate, and it's three and a half thousand acres, in the 1980s from his grandparents. And when we inherited it was an intensive arable and dairy farm, but it was losing money hand over fist. That was really just because his grandparents hadn't invested in infrastructure. They didn't know the latest technologies. You know, we were all set really to carry on our lives being intensive farmers. And that's what Charlie had studied at college at Cirencester agricultural college.

And so for 17 years, you know, he threw everything he could at it to try and make a profit. You know, he invested in infrastructure. He amalgamated dairies together, made efficiencies. He changed our breed of cows so that they were better milkers. We experimented with different varieties of crops. And obviously we put more and more chemicals on the land, you know, more fertiliser, more pesticides, or herbicides, more fungicides, everything in an effort to increase the yields of the crops and the yields of the milk and make a go of this farm. But we're on really, really heavy clay. This is low wield Sussex clay, and it's kind of infamous for being kind of like concrete in the summer. I mean, you walk out there now it's absolutely hard under foot and in places where you don't have restored soils, you get these cracks where you could literally, certainly when we were farming, you could put your hand in, right up to your shoulder. It's just unfathomable. And you can't get heavy machinery sometimes in a wet winter, like the one we've just had, you can't get machinery onto the land for six months. So there's no growing of spring crops. You can't maintain your ditches, your fences, you can't just do anything that normal farmers would be doing on better, more stable soil. So that really puts you at a disadvantage in a global market and facing a future where you don't know; I mean, the only thing that was keeping us afloat just was subsidies, but we could see down the line that that was going to disappear.

And so in 1999, Charlie, my husband made the bold decision to give up farming. I think it was a bold decision because it really went, I mean, literally against the grain. It went against the whole ethos of his family, of our neighbours of I think really what, what British people have come to expect of the landscape. It's every single inch of land has to be plowed up and used for agriculture.

And of course that's a very false premise because we know that we are over producing food where we're certainly over-producing arable. And that's why we've started to feed grain to cows. That's why we've started to feed maze to our cars. And it's really driven by subsidies. We already know that we produce enough food globally for more than 10 billion people, and we're 7.5 billion people now. We have to stop wasting food and we also have to move to regenerative agriculture. And if we do that, there is plenty of space for nature, plenty of space for rewilding projects like this.

And so in 2000, when we decided to look at alternatives to farming, we were very inspired by a Dutch ecologist, Frans Vera, whose thoughts about how our landscapes would have looked before human impact have really changed in the last 20 years, how we think of conservation and how we could bring biodiversity back. Because what he's saying is that in our sort of analysis of what our landscapes look like, we've only ever looked at it from a botanical point of view. We've looked at the vegetation and the trees. We've never thought about the zoology. We've never thought about wildlife.

And if you appreciate the huge herds of animals that would have been here in the past before human impact, so herds of bison of aurochs, the original ox, tarpan, the original horse, elk, reindeer, red deer, wild boar, beavers by the millions. If you start putting them back into the landscape, as they would have been, you suddenly get a much more dynamic and sort of kaleidoscopic, mosaic of habitats, than this kind of close canopy vision we often have in our heads of ubiquitous forest.

These animals would have disturbed that vegetation. They would have debarked trees. They would have pushed trees over. They would have kept open clearings. They would have trampled, rootled, made messy margins around the rivers. They would have coppiced trees and they would have created much more of a sort of Savannah like landscape. So what Frans is really saying is that if you want to recover biodiversity and you want to recover the systems on which species, including our own survive, then the way to do that is to introduce free roaming animals into the landscape again, and to let them drive the system, let them create dynamism again in landscapes that have kind of undergone what scientists called a catastrophic shift to kind of depletion.

And it's almost like putting these animals back. And obviously you can't put them all back because we hunted a lot of them to extinction, but you can put proxies of them back. You can put their descendants. So we have old English Longhorn cattle instead of aurochs and we have Exmoor ponies instead of Tarpan and Tamworth pigs instead of wild boar.  And these will drive the system, so they will pull the glider back up into the sky so it can fly again.

LC:  So once you made that decision to try and rewild your land, how long did that take and what was that process?

IT: Well, we weren't brave enough to do it all in one go so slowly we took fields out of agricultural production. We took the worst fields out first and left the best till last best. The best wasn't saying much, but we stayed farming those really into about 2008 I think. So the land came out in stages. It's really been, you know, a sort of 20 year process. It feels very much like a sort of African landscape, like the Bush, like the Serengeti. I mean, it really does feel like you're out there in the wild and any minute you could turn a corner and there's going to be a giraffe or a leopard up a tree, it feels completely different to anything you recognise in Britain today.

We certainly should not be eating meat that's produced in intensive systems where animals are fed grain. It's not only unsustainable, it's bad for the animals. It's also bad for the humans that eat those animals. It's bad on every level. But there is a role I think for animals in a system like this and in regenerative agriculture too. And there is a market, I think now for people who want to eat less meat, but want to be really certain where that meat comes from. And to be as ethical as they possibly can about it.

As soon as you take animals out of the equation, you're negating every species that would feed on dung, that brings that dung back into the soil ,that regenerates the soil. You’re taking out of the equation just things like animal hair, which so many birds need to make their nests. You're taking out of the equation the capability of a cow, for example, to transport 230 different seed species in its gut and its fur. And it's one of the most important vectors for getting flora from one place to another. And this whole movement of minerals and nutrients that would have been transported around the landscape and the great migration of the animals of the past. So they’re a vital dynamic part of natural processes.

LC: And what would happen if you had those animals and you didn't kill them for meat?

IT: Then you would get an increasing population and eventually you would get an overgrazed system we're familiar with in our industrial landscapes. And then you're faced with, you know, an animal welfare issue. So in the Oostvaardersplassen in Holland, they didn't kill them. That's the natural process in the wild, in the Serengeti for example, you would have boom and bust scenarios where you have huge herds of animals starving. The population would collapse. The vegetation would come back and then slowly the population would grow again. Nature performs on these boom and bust scenarios.

But we feel we have to be pragmatic about it. We don't want to live with starving animals on the doorstep. And we also don't have apex predators. I mean apex predators wouldn't actually control the numbers to the same degree. I think in the wild, they only account for about 10% or 15% of mortalities. But what they would do is they'd harry the animals around. They put much more stress on them and so their reproduction rate would go down. That would have a big impact too on the vegetation.

So we're very aware that we're not living in a landscape of fear here at Knepp and that our animals are very loosely grazing, they’re very relaxed. But what we can do is, and this is pretty much the only management we do, is control the numbers. So you don't want too many, to allow those populations to rise without killing them, or you would get an overgrazed system. And eventually they would anyway run out of resources. You don't want too few, or you would get the closed canopy woodland, which is very species poor, and undynamic.

You know, if you're wanting to conserve with biodiversity and dynamic natural processes, you're going to have to intervene quite a lot. So you'll have to coppice your woodland or disturb your soils yourself. So say if you've only got 20 acres, you might be able to bring in a pig for a few weeks to rootle the soil and disturb it, open it up so that seeds can come in and germinate and you can get much more diverse flora.

But you wouldn't be able to sustain a pig in 20 acres all year round without feeding it, or intervening in some way.

LC: So I interviewed Pat Brown, the founder of impossible foods. They are developing a molecularly identical burger to meat, but it's all plant-based and he's a scientist and it's kind of amazing when you try it. It does taste like meat. What's your position on the alternative meat market?

IT: We have to keep innovating and we have to keep thinking of alternatives. And all of these are kind of very exciting ideas on paper. I think the crucial question is, are they carbon neutral? So it's not even actually carbon neutral. They have to be carbon sequestering. That's the vital, vital piece of evidence I think, to test whether they are sustainable.

So when you talk about regenerative agriculture, and you're looking at systems that involve rotations of livestock, where the dung and the urine and the trumping of the vegetation back into the soil, all that system is actually regenerating soils. And the potential for carbon sequestration of those systems is absolutely vast. It's probably the single most powerful answer we have to climate change, is restoring our soils. So if these systems of the impossible burger or lab-based technologies, if they are not sequestering carbon at the end of the day, at the end of the process, it's not just enough to be carbon neutral. They have to be acting positively for the climate. And if they don't do that, then I would argue it's unsustainable.

I think it's much more interesting to look at things like fermentation, the process of growing kelp and those sorts of programs, I think have enormous potential. And why would it be surprising that work more closely with nature that are going to be successful in the long term?

You know, after all nature has had millions and millions of years of R&D and we always think we know best and that technology, you know, will fix it, you know, will fix the mess we've got ourselves into, but I think we have to be very mindful of hubris and take a step back and think, how does nature perform? Nature already has the solutions I think.

LC: So in your vision of things, we would be eating a lot less meat, but it'd be coming from better sources, basically.

IT: Yes, it would be pasture fed only meat. It would be a meat from regenerative agriculture, and it would be from rewilding projects. And a lot less of it, absolutely. I think the important thing about industrial farming is the carbon cost. The massive carbon cost of it on top of everything else. But it's the carbon cost of producing the grain to feed the animals in the first place, the transportation. At every single level of that process is a carbon cost. Even the buildings themselves, even the transportation of water to feed the animals, is a carbon cost. So it's the overall picture of emissions that we need to look at rather than isolating just the methane. If you look at a pasture fed system or regenerative agriculture system or rewilding system, the methane emissions pale into insignificance when you look at the net carbon sequestration of the soils and the plants that that grazed system is driving.

LC: What would be your concerns, if you do have them, about what a 100% vegan world might mean and how that might impact the way we're growing other parts of our food staples?

 IT: I think we would see a very impoverished biodiversity. We would lose a huge amount of potential for the soils to regenerate using animals in the system. I find it very difficult to imagine not having animals out there at all.

LC: Do you think there are potential dangers to the rising trend of alternative meat markets?

IT: I think we have to look at where all our food comes from. And if we're just simply going to shift from meat proteins to soy or almond, you know, that can be even more destructive if we're not careful. We’re looking at a huge areas of rainforest being deforested because of those crops, maize too. So all those corn alternatives. We've got to start thinking about where everything, even our plant based food comes from. Rice is incredibly greedy for water, and it's also a big emitter of methane and nitrous oxide. So it's one of the biggest carbon, greenhouse gas emitters.

So, you know, we have to think really, really carefully about what we're eating, where it comes from, how it's produced. And it does all come back to the soil. If the way our food, whatever it is, is produced is degrading our soil then that is a bad thing. It's not only going to be unsustainable because we'll run out of soil to grow anything in because it will keep disappearing. But it also means that we have no solution for climate change, because it's all in the soil. You can turn to a plant-based diet, but actually our food is actually getting less nutritious all the time. You know we have to eat about 10 tomatoes to get the nutrition of one in the 1950s. So it's that idea of every single inch of the land being ploughed, is ingrained in us from that moment of crisis, and I suppose trauma of having nearly faced starvation in the Second World War but things have moved on and we now have varieties of crops that are producing higher yields and ever before, we've got less land under arable, I think, than we had even before the Second World War now in the UK even though our population has rocketed. so we can produce more food from less land than ever before. We've just got to start getting smarter about how we do it.

LC: Knepp Estate is fairly unique for producing meat from rewilded land. They use abattoirs to kill the animals, but are trying to get permissions to shoot on land, which would make them much closer to the model of animal consumption that humans have practiced for hundreds of thousands of years. Indeed, my friend anthropologists James Suzman argues that gatherer hunter communities were the most sustainable human societies on Earth, practising their way of living for hundreds of thousands of years. I asked him about what we could learn from the sun bushmen in the Kalahari desert about their relationship to eating meat.

What is your perspective on the way that we eat meat nowadays, comparatively to the way that our gatherer hunter ancestors ate meat? And do you think there's a version of eating meat today that would be better?

James Suzman: A forager’s meat was the most fundamental and important of all foods. So there was a very potent spiritual element to it, you know, when a hunter pursued an animal, it created a very potent empathetic bond between them. And in fact, there's very good reason to argue that all these sort of animistic cultures, the ones who actually considered animals to have souls were largely cultures that focused on individuals hunting.

And if you're pursuing an animal on foot, you develop that intensely personal bond. To be able to hunt that animal, you have to know, Ju/‘hoansi for example, talk about the spirits conjoining during the process of the hunt. They merged two spirits, the hunter and the hunted merged together into one being. In order to hunt an animal, you have to see, live and experience the world through the animals that you're hunting perspective of their senses. And that creates a sort of level of empathy, and with that a level of profound respect and acceptance of their personhood.

Now meat for most of us in the supermarket, most of the meat that lies in the racks and on the shelves, comes from basically factory farming and factory farming is a hideously depersonalising process. It's converting living creatures into kind of chattels and on the whole, they lead very bleak, very brief lives before they get shuffled into an abattoir where people kill them all and fairly disrespectfully as well. I mean the process of mass slaughter is a fairly grim process. And that's partially because where a hunter, like a Ju/‘hoansi that goes when they're pursuing an oryx bull, they'll see the animal in that moment, pursued at death at its magnificent best. But it's a question of respect. When you're sitting in a slaughter house, one fifth of their natural lifespan, you’re seeing them, animals of their diminished worths. It sort of takes all the respect away from it. So I think there is a place for meat,  but in my worldview, there's not much of a space for factory farming.

Animals eat other animals, it is just the nature, but this kind of idea of mass producing cattle or chickens is just horrendous. And there's also the environmental impact. I mean, when we look at, for example, the quotient of mammalian biomass on the planet, you know, now most of the mammalian biomass in the planet is made up of humans and their domestic animals, some astonishing number, like sort of 80, 90 %. Whereas 10,000 years ago, humans and their domestic animals didn't make up even a fraction of 1%.

So that is where the severe impact lies, is actually broader environment. And also this diminution of the animals that we eat and as somebody who is a meat-eater and who has hunted as well, it's reflected in everything, it's reflected in the experience of eating meat. Factory farm meat doesn't taste good. And it doesn't taste good partially because we've diminished the soul of the animal that we've slaughtered, in both its life and the way we kill it.

LC:  Finally, I spoke with Alice Waters, the pioneering chef and activist, who in 2015 was awarded the national humanities medal from President Obama for her work bringing together the ethical and the edible. For decades Alice has advocated the slow food movement and regenerative agriculture, and set up edible school yards across the United States, which encouraged classrooms to move into the garden. Alice is skeptical of any type of fast food, meat, or otherwise, and believes that our attitude to eating needs to be more holistic.

We spoke on the phone with my daughter playing in the background and she told me why she thinks local, seasonal and organic is a key to solving our climate crisis. Like Izzy and James, she believes there is a role for animal agriculture to play in our world, but the way we're farming meat needs to change.

Alice Waters: Patrick Holden in England is very interested in the same thing. And they're talking about making all of the farming in England sustainable by 2042, to eliminate factory farming. I believe that farming needs animals as part of the big picture of farming. At the restaurant I feel like we’re probably a little too meat heavy, and I want to change that. I want to do at least one or two meals,  that downstairs in the fixed price menu that are vegetarian. And we're sort of going towards that right now.

LC: Why do you feel that having animals is an important part of a healthy farm dynamic?

AW: Well, it has to do with certainly manure on the grasslands. It has to do with, um, I mean, I'm saying this not from knowledge of my own but from the people I admire most like Wendell Berry. The chickens just dig up the bugs and they fertilise and make the land ready to be clamped. We have a chicken tractor at the school that we move around the chickens so that they can fertilise at different sites that's going to be seeded.

LC: I asked Alice, why so much of her work has focused on children. And I was moved by her philosophical response.

AW: The way that you eat becomes the way that you think. And so when you're eating fast food, you're digesting the values that come with food. The idea that it’s ok to eat in your car. The idea that more is better. The idea that time is money. The idea that cooking and farming are drudgery, all come from a fast food industry that wants you to forget about the seasons, wants you to believe that you can have anything, any time, 24/7, any place in the world. And these are the ideas that are really destroying the planet.

LC: The emphasis on local and seasonal, how absolute is that for you? Like, do you ever in your own personal life eat non-seasonal non-local food?

AW: I am absolute on that. I find it a huge pleasure. When you eat second rate fruits and vegetables all year long, when the good thing comes around, you’re bored. My parents had a victory garden during World War Two and they didn't have much money. So they had to grow all the food that we basically ate. And that was a very early edible education for me. Also, my mother wasn’t a good cook and that was a problem. But I have definitely memories, of eating strawberries out in the garden and eating apple sauce that my mum made from the tree.

And so I have a real connection to nature. And that's what we’re hoping to give to children in schools, is that love of nature. The only thing that's going to save the planet is falling in love. And fortunately, it's pretty easy when you're four and six.

LC: Yeah. Yeah, no, I agree.

AW: You wanna lie down on the grass and climb a tree. You want to be outside.

LC: We have a three-year-old and last year we grew our own vegetables in the countryside and it was so magical.

So, what do I think? There's something to learn from the different perspectives within this debate. Everyone seems to agree we need to eat less animal products, and if we are going to eat them, we need to move to much, much healthier ways of farming animals.

That seems very clear. The pragmatist in me gets very excited about companies like Impossible Foods, because I see them as a gateway to push against factory farming, without draconian political policies we're unlikely to see anytime soon. Having been vegetarian for 22 years, I'm also selfishly quite happy to see the rise of interesting alternatives on the market.

That said Alice's philosophy speaks to me so profoundly. And I think we have to be very mindful about the alternatives we're creating and other unforeseen impacts it may have. Ultimately the philosophy of local, seasonal, organic feels right. And we made find that the soil underneath our feet holds the very solutions to solve the climate crisis if we can empower it.

So who wins or maybe there is no winner and that's the point. There's something to learn from different perspectives, as we try to figure out how to get to sustainability and perhaps happiness.

You can hear more from Paul McCartney, Pat Brown, Isabella Tree, and Alice Waters as well as many others in my book, Who Cares Wins, which is out now in hardback e-book and audio book. Join me next time on this podcast, where I'm going to explore the intersections between our environmental reality and questions of inequality.

Friday 03.19.21
Posted by claudia delgado
 

WCW Episode 1

Lily Cole: Welcome to Who Cares Wins,  with me Lily Cole.

Mark Boyle: We’re very used to right now in modern society not having to to wait for a long time for anything, we've got used to speed. So I'm kind of having to retrain myself in some ways, to live in a slower way, to have more patience.

Elon Musk: It's optimistic if we take action, if we take action and we push for sustainable energy generation. Then I think we can be optimistic.

Lily Cole: At the heart of every issue that intersects with the environment you find contradictions, tensions and divergent perspectives, and these issues are complex and changing. Most of us want a happy life and a healthy planet. But many people have different ideas about the right way to travel towards it. In this new podcast series, I'll be sharing parts of my research from my book Who Cares Wins, interviewing some of the leading and conflicting voices in contemporary debates, such as technology, food, gender, politics and looking at how they intersect with our environment.

I see myself a bit like sellotape, ribbon or string holding together divergent voices and sort of asking ,’who cares who wins?’

In his book, The Wizard and the Prophet, Charles Mann describes the history of the environmental movement as a fundamental battle between two philosophical perspectives, where wizards wants to innovate their way out of crisis and believe that it's through technology and innovation, that we will solve our greatest challenges.

Profits want to simplify, reduce, slow down and question the idea that we should be hurtling towards some radically different future than what perhaps our ancestors might've lived. My friend Mark Boyle is the quintessential prophet and I've long been fascinated by the way he thinks and impressed by the way he lives, always putting his theories into quite serious practice. After living without money for three years, he since made the commitment to live without any modern technology, stepping away from anything made since the industrial revolution, which means no electricity, washing machine TV, laptop, car, mobile phone, not even a pen.

Mark Boyle: In general I spend more time feeling really happy, feeling really alive, feeling really like this is the right choice. Maybe 5% of the time, it feels like no, this is crazy. I’m probably crazy.

LC: Mark made that decision because he believes that the technological progress we've seen is fundamentally unsustainable and damaging to the natural world and that he would be a hypocrite to be campaigning for the environment using, say his metal and mineral filled laptop. Of course, if you want to find out how Mark is finding this experience beyond reading his book, Way Home, you have to go and visit him, which is what I did a few years into his experiment. I went to Ireland to hear what he had learned so far.

MB: What I've actually learned from doing it is that I'm actually a lot happier. My sense of aliveness is a lot stronger. My connection to the natural world is a lot stronger. My mental and physical wellbeing is healthier. They were kind of surprising lessons I got from it, as opposed to being the original motivation. My plan is to continue like this for the rest of my life. If anything, I want to go further on the path to, you know, to gradually do things more primitively.

LC: What would that look like?

MB: It’d be living entirely off the land, you know, 100% from the landscape around me. To live off a particular landscape takes time. I've been back here five years now, and we're probably 90% of the way. Definitely not self-sufficient yet.

LC: Mark’s cabin is filled with books like Confessions of a Recovering Environmentalist by Paul Kingsnorth. His waste bin, collected over five months, contains less than mine does after a week. You might be able to hear Mark disappearing now and again, throughout the interview, as he tops up piles of wood for heating.  Mark shares why he doesn't buy into the tech will save us narrative and his motivations that pushed him to embrace his tech free existence.

MB: I find the technological world to be inherently destructive and violent. And ultimately, unsustainable. If I unpicked one mobile phone, I can show you how devastating that one phone is, regardless of whether you use it once, or you use it a hundred times. The initial production often requires a global network of factories and transport systems and mining and quarries and resource extraction that most of us wouldn't want to be done in our names. Renewable energy would be a big step forward in terms of our impact on the planet right now. Ultimately, I don't think these things are going to make much difference in the end. They're still reliant on an industrial ideology that is laying waste to the entire planet. I've yet to hear one person explain to me how you can produce a solar panel without the damage to the natural world.

LC: What items did you have to get rid of when you first made that decision?

MB: When I gave up using technology, the key things people think about really are your phone, laptop, and therefore email, music  in some ways because I’ve no radio, no way of playing electronic music. I play some tin whistle myself, and we have some sessions. Things like washing machines, toasters, central heating, car. The list goes on. If you think of everything you use electrically, and I've had to give all those things up and in doing so, things take a lot longer. I've probably never been happier. Lots of things I’ve given up, it comes with its own frustrations. It's not the easiest life at times. You know, it's a very elemental life, that involves being hungry sometimes, involves being tired. But for me, it's a very rewarding life, connects me to the natural world and it feels rich in its own way.

LC: How long do certain things take you?

MB: I suppose for people washing your clothes, it’s a matter of, you throw your clothes into the washing machine. You go off and do something else for an hour and you come back and probably put them in the dryer. For me, I've got to go first and get some spring water, bring the water back up, heat it in the range, which takes about an hour and a half to warm up, then start washing using soap wart and spring water.

And then the washing process itself is probably about 45 minutes of good labour. So in about, probably in about two and a half hours of kind of constant work, I’ve got my clothes washed. I guess that the link between our connection to the process and the amount of energy we use, you know, the closer the consumer is to the resources involved than the less likely we are to waste. The problems begin  I think, when we're disconnected from what we consume.

LC: And how long does it take you to do other things like fish?

MB: If you want to fish, I have to cycle for 20 km to the nearest lake, probably fish for three or four hours, or until I catch fish. And then cycle back. It’s not always successful. You know, sometimes I may come away with three or four fish, sometimes none. And for me, that's another important aspect of the way I live is that it's really good to feel hunger sometimes, you know,. We’re so used in the West just being fed three times a day, often with too much food, we never get to experience the feeling of being hungry and that changes the perception of the world, even what it means to be human.

I've also found that it really hone your skills, you know, if you cycled 20 km to go fishing, you definitely get better quicker at fishing. If you know that you're not going to eat that evening otherwise, it focuses the attention.

LC: And are there months of the year that you don't have any vegetables in the garden?

MB: There is a time in the seasonal calendar, which is known as the hungry gap. It's a period where you get the least variety of food. You don't really look forward to that time of year, but when you come in the spring, then, and the food starts coming back out, you really relish that time of year, that burst of life, where you,  it's almost a celebration.

LC: For many people, myself included technology keeps us connected to our loved ones and strangers across great distances. And yet technology paradoxically can make us less present to the people around us in real life. Think of phones at the dinner table or TV in bed. Mark once wrote to me, ‘I hear many people spend more time in bed touching and playing with their smartphones than their lovers.’ So I wondered when I met him, on a human level, how his relationships had been affected by this decision.

LC: How has this change affected your relationships?

MB: When you give up technology and therefore phone and email, uh, Skype and WhatsApp, and then it definitely changes your relationship with friends and family. I can no longer contact faraway friends very easily. And if I do it’s by post. Well, it was actually quite difficult this summer, in terms of my own personal relationship.

My ex-girlfriend was traveling in Portugal and I had no way of picking up the phone and talking with her, you know, it was, it's been three months since we spoke, actually four months. And in that time we broke up, which, you know, she wrote to me in only way, the only way she could communicate with me was through letter.

So it was quite hard. There's no route of expression for the emotions involved. So it was kind of like almost a one way communication. She was, she was traveling. So there's no way of even really writing back during that period. And. So, yeah, that came with difficulties, you know, we're very used to the modern age of Skyping or WhatsApping and that kind of instant communication. I’ve had to wait months to, to get any more understanding about my own kind of personal relationship. So you've got two months of sitting with kind of news and no way of actually talking about the emotions involved.

LC: I first met Mark in 2012, because we were both working on platforms encouraging free acts of kindness within communities,  an idea I explore at length in my book. Mark built his first so-called gift economy online, but has since developed the concept in the real world by building on his land, what he calls The Happy Pig.

MB: So we set up a free hostel that's based on a kind of gift values. So people can come here and can stay for between a night, sometimes six months. Some people would come to just relax and get some time out of the city. Some people want to come and learn how to kind of live off the land and really get stuck in.

LC: How’s your relationship with money now? Like, I mean, you lived obviously without money for a few years.

MB: I lived without money for three years, between 2008 and 2011. That experience really changed my relationship with money obviously. Since then, I've moved back to Ireland to set up this project where the original intention was to allow other people to experience life with little or no money.

Right now I use money very minimally. Most weeks I spend nothing at all, but I guess my biggest expense is the kind of the social aspect of going to the pub sometimes with friends. Yeah, you can definitely get through 20 quid fairly easily in a pub.

LC: How would you describe an average day for you?

MB: One of the beauties of it is that each day is different, but there is a certain kind of core structure to the day. I wake up usually without an alarm clock, just with the natural light. And from there, at this time of year in autumn, I generally go blackberry picking or picking some kind of berry for breakfast. I'd come back. I gather some firewood, set this fire for the evening and then come back and make breakfast, do maybe washing up from there from the previous night, which is more complicated for the fact that I don't have running water in the cabin. And so I've got to go down and collect the spring water from the bottom of the lane and cart that back up. I use it to clean the dishes and from that point onwards the day starts to vary. Some days I spend working in the fields,  another day I could spend a day writing then off fishing in the evening.

So each day it does become a lot more varied depending on the weather, the season and I guess it's almost what my own energy is like.

LC: Is there anything that you miss?

MB: I miss music, all the old bands that I grew up with, you know, it's, in some ways they kind of all died in one day, you know, there's no more immortality in the music world for me. From a practical perspective, I think the washing machine is the biggest loss. The difference in not having a washing machine and washing machines, you know, is huge, and that’s probably the job I like the least.

So in some ways too, I guess all the different gadgets, you know, for me, even like the ability to send a quick text message or email and to save you having to cycle a long distance or, you know, or go through kind of more lengthy process of writing a letter and bringing it to the post office and then waiting probably a week or 10 days for a reply. Sometimes that can feel frustrating because you want an answer right now. We're very used to right now in modern society, you know, we're not happy to wait for a long time for anything. We've gotten used to speed. So I'm kind of having to retrain myself in some ways to do live in a slower way, to have more patience and to not expect everything to be handed to me right now, which is a good lesson.

LC: And then the last question is, do you feel this is work? How has your concept of work evolved?

MB: What is work? In some ways I spend seven days a week working, in that I go collecting water, there's always jobs on the land to do. I'll write whenever I feel like writing. So if you think of those things as work, then I'm working quite a lot.

But those things don’t feel like work to me, just feel like things that I enjoy doing. I enjoy going fishing. I enjoy growing food. I enjoy the walk down to the spring in the morning to collect water and speak to some of the neighbours. So the lines between work and play start to blur. I think that's a good thing. I think not knowing whether work is work or whether work is play is probably a very happy place to get to. And so I think I continue being confused on the issue for a bit longer.

LC: On the topic of work and play, I found myself on the other side of the world in San Francisco, examining the untouched swimming pool at the house of one of the most successful entrepreneurs in the world.

Elon Musk: I felt the temperature, you know, it was always too cold.

LC: Wow, you’ve never been in your own pool? No, you have to do it.

Elon Musk: Yeah, well, certainly.

LC: Whilst everything Mark Boyle says makes rare, lucid and poetic sense to me, I worry about our pragmatic need to embrace so-called green tech in a world with few souls as brave or radical as Mark. If billions of people aren't willing to step back in time, technology arguably has an essential role to play in the drive towards sustainability. Green tech promises to de-materialise products, provide renewable energy, electrify transportation, and make cities smart.

So who better to discuss green technologies progress and potential with than Elon Musk, the CEO of Space X and Tesla Motors. The embodiment of the wizard philosophy and the hope that tech may save us. As an electric car owner myself, I wanted to know why he decided to focus on building them.

Elon Musk: With Tesla, certainly the whole point of Tesla it's electric cars and solar power and battery storage. I think at this point, the industry is heading strongly towards electric vehicles and almost every car company has now announced they’re doing electric vehicles, that’s the goal. When we started the company, the goal was to get the industry to move towards electric cars. At the time, there were no production electric cars, not even short range. But electric vehicles had been written off, as you couldn’t make the technology work. And even if you could, nobody wanted an electric car. So we had to show that you could make long range electric cars that looked good, handled well, were better in every way than a gasoline car. And then if you made one, that the recharge time would not be a fundamental issue.

And the industry as a whole is moving rapidly towards electric vehicles. On the idea of an electric car, it existed for a long time, 150 years ago. The issue was not the idea of an electric car, because that idea was around for a long time. The difficulty was making an electric car company succeed and not go bankrupt.

LC: Well done!

EM: So far so good, pretty dicey!

LC: Is the hope at some point that all of the Tesla cars will be powered through renewable energy?

EM: Yes. I think overall things are going well on the car side of things, going into electric. Things are going OK on solar power.

LC: Do you get frustrated? Because I do. And I'm not really a company like that. Do you get frustrated that there's not just a mass movement towards solar, for example, and renewable technology? That it is moving slowly.

EM: Yeah. I think like how would one measure the fundamental good of Tesla.  And the fundamental good of Tesla would be to what degree has Tesla accelerated the advent of sustainable energy, by how many years. That’s how I would frame it, like by how many years did we accelerate it?

But for Tesla it would have taken 10 years longer, let’s say. Then that's how I would measure the good. We will get to sustainable energy for sure. The question is just how much environmental damage occurs between now and then.

LC: And are you worried that enough environmental damage would happen that it would threaten civilisation? Or are you optimistic?

EM: I think there are other threats to civilisation. It would, it would harm civilisation, but not end civilisation. It risks causing dislocation of half a billion people or more, with rising water levels and extremes of temperature and more energetic weather, and that kind of thing.

That would be terrible, and it would be the cause of a tremendous amount of strife. And it could be a triggering event for ending civilisation, if it sort of triggers WW3 or something.

LC: And is this something you worry about or do you feel optimistic that technology and potentially politics will solve these problems in time?

EM: I think, I mean, it's hard to estimate exactly. I’m fairly optimistic. If you think things will not be fine, and you take action, then they probably will be fine. But if you are complacent and say everything will be fine, we don't need to take action, then they will not be fine. It's like a self unfulfilling prophecy.

It's optimistic if we take action. If we take action and we push for sustainable energy generation, then I think we can be optimistic. Yeah. We want to thread the needle in the right way and not be complacent and thus prolong the situation and have a worse environmental situation nor be despondent and think, okay, there’s nothing we can do.

We want to be in the middle of there and say like, if we really do our best and try very hard, then probably there will be some environmental harm but it won't be too bad. That's the right approach. And, and I think if people just really keep pushing it in that direction, then we'll have a pretty good, pretty good future.

And there will still be issues. And there'll be some environmental damage along the way. But if we keep pushing, I think overall things will be good.

LC: I’d only intended to interview Elon about his adventures on planet earth, but we quickly spiralled into a black hole discussing the practicalities of space travel along with his 12 year-old son, Kai.

EM: Actually, I want to send Kai to Mars. Kai, do you want to go to Mars? Step right in. Step right up. Who wants to go?

Kai: Well, when the colony is officially developed, yes.

EM: Well, who’s going to benefit if not you? Well somebody has to do it! It doesn’t have to be you. But there definitely have to be some people that are going to take the risk of going there and building up a self-sustaining city on Mars.

LC: Where did the idea come from? Where did that desire come from?

EM: Well, this is not actually some sort of personal desire to go to Mars. It's just that I think we should become a multi-planet species and spacefaring civilisation. I think it would just be a far more exciting future if we're out there among the stars, than if we are forever confined to Earth.

LC: So it doesn't come from a place of worrying about planet Earth. It comes more from a place of excitement and exploration?

EM: I think it’s both. That’s an important defensive argument for humanity or life as we know it to be on many planets in case something happens to one of the planets. Then at least the light of consciousness will not be extinguished. As far as we know. I find it more motivating the idea of adventure and excitement about the future and going out and finding out what's out there.

LC: And how far are you away from sending someone to Mars?

EM: I think we might be able to do it as of four years or five years. We’re building a big rocket.

LC: Okay. And have you got people signed up to go?

EM: Oh, we won’t have any trouble finding volunteers or even people who will pay for it frankly.

LC: Have you been to the biosphere two project?

EM: Yeah, I have.

LC: Me too. So that's quite an interesting analogy, right?

EM: I went there ages ago.

LC: Do you know this project?

Kai: Yes.

LC: And they ran, we were talking to the scientists who set it up and they, I can't remember the story exactly. But they, like, there was one thing that was wrong…

EM: you know, I think it was like they absorbed oxygen.

 LC: Exactly that, and they couldn't work out why.

EM: Yeah, it was pretty,  like they should have given it a trial period to figure out what the heck's going on. But basically the concrete was sucking up oxygen,  I believe. Something to that effect. And so they were all having like hypoxia, like basically oxygen starved in this, because it was a completely self-contained environment.

LC: So that's the perfect analogy, right, of what you're saying, that like one thing is awry…

EM: It’ll be a little easier, in fact, well, maybe a lot easier on Mars because Mars has all of the ingredients that we need for our civilisation. So there’s a lot of water, ice. It has an atmosphere which is mostly CO2, but it has some nitrogen and argon. The red colour on Mars is rust, iron oxide. Pretty easy to get iron, big steel. Long-term you could do what's called terraforming Mars, so you could warm up Mars. You would have a liquid ocean about a mile deep on about 40% of the surface. But the fast way it would be a series of giant thermonuclear explosions.

Kai: What, what alternatives would there be from nuclear explosions?

EM: You could have reflectors in orbit that reflect…

Kai: It would have to be colossal.

EM: Yes. Yeah.

Kai: That does not seem feasible.

EM: You could take Phobos and Deimos, those are Mars’ two moons and you could convert Phobos and Deimos into a giant reflective solar shield. You just need to polish it. You can basically make most things reflective.

LC: This is your brain at night.

EM: I was like, I know that there's a few ways to skin the cat and that's one of them, but that would take, it would really take a long time. Whereas thermonuclear power, that's easy.

LC: Are there any other ideas I should be aware of? Things you're excited about or technology you think I should look at?

EM: There’s artificial intelligence. When you think of it as more like, it's like the genie in the bottle. Because the proponents of artificial intelligence will say, well, it's going to cure cancer and all these things. So it's like, okay, well, you know, something could do all those good things, it could probably do some bad things too. So you kind of like lose control of the situation, but it will not be up to us. It will be up to this super-intelligent machine. This is what gives me the least cause of optimism is AI. Like all these other problems are attractable. We can talk about electric cars and solar power, and that will allow us to have sustainable, renewable, clean energy.

We can become a space faring civilisation with rockets, we can provide free education through the internet. These are all like, these are problems that, you know, we can work on it and make better.  AI, I'm like, wow, what do we do there? You know, if you have some super powerful genie out of the bottle, they won't get back in.

And I'll say, I feel like it's sort of a nuclear arms, race. The physicists all knew, well not all, but let’s say predominantly knew, that you could create an atomic bomb, but they were not going to make it. However, if the Nazis got the bomb, that would be really bad. You don't wanna deal with the bomb, so we've got to make the damn bomb.

So then we had the bomb, then the genie’s out of the bottle. We’ve got nuclear bombs.

LC: Ironically Einstein wrote all these books about passivism.,,

EM: But he co-signed the letter to Roosevelt about making the bomb. It was actually this guy, Leo Szilard who really was pushing it,  like, we'd better make the damn bomb or the Nazis will make it, and then we're screwed.

LC: And you think it’s a similar psychology behind AI,  trying to get to the front of that race basically?

EM: Yeah.

LC: Do you think there's likely other forms of life in the rest of the universe?

EM:  There might be, but where are they? It's pretty strange. Like the universe seems to be about 13.8 billion years old, which is very old compared to human civilisation.

LC: So that makes you think that there has been life before?

EM: Probably, maybe that went in and out of existence. It's no longer there. There must be something going on. Either way, it’s just very improbable for life to exist. You know there’s something called the Drake equation. In order for life to exist there are all these criteria that for life, as we know it to exist. But there are a lot of stars. And so if you say, okay, all these things lining up is very unlikely, but they're also very large number of stars. So you combine the very large number of stars with the very unlikely probability of life. You should still see a lot of planets with life, and yet we see no signs of it.

LC: Well, that might just be that we can't as it’s too far away.

EM: Yeah. That's one of the explanations. It's cool. It's usually called the Fermi paradox. If there are aliens, where are they and why do we see no signs of them? Very odd.

LC: Are there any other, um, ideas you have that you want to do before you die?

EM: Thanks you for asking you these questions because it is prompting me to think more about these things, because I get stuck in the day-to-day battles and it's important to lift your gaze from time to time and say why are you doing this? What's the goal? I guess, for the flight team, to go to the moon, go to Mars. And hopefully AI is not too terrible, is very pleasant and just takes care of everything. But then what would be our relevance? How would we find value? It would just be like having a very big trust fund or something, and then you lose meaning in some way. I don't know.

LC: So, what do I think? Well, I can't help finding both visions compelling in different ways. If I had to put money on one, I think the philosophy of the Moneyless Man, Mark Boyle is a safer long-term bet for our species survival. Indeed gatherer-hunter communities living similar lifestyles have existed for hundreds of thousands of years on our planet.

But life isn't always about playing safe. We are an adventurous species. We want to have fun. And there are lots of modern comforts that I feel very, very grateful for. I mean, personally, I love having a washing machine. I love being able to connect with my friends and family around the world, and I wouldn't want to give up those tech luxuries anytime soon.

I also can't help but find the idea of spacefaring super exciting in spite of its awful connotations of colonisation and the fact that we really need to work out how to live sustainably on this planet before we start taking over other ones. I do hope the technology will green itself and will allow the comforts that many people take for granted to become more sustainable and more accessible.

That said, I think there's a lot we can learn from the wisdom of people like Mark, who see the world in a different way, and that our hurried embrace of techno capitalism should be more mindfully considered, always measured against its risks and costs.

By going offline. By slowing down. By adopting voluntary simplicity. By putting our fingernails into the soil and rediscovering our connection to both our local and natural community, we might find ourselves healthier and happier.

So who wins? Or maybe there is no winner and that's the point; that there's something to learn from both the prophets and the wizards amongst us, that we need them all. And that our choices might reflect both paths in different ways. You can hear more from both Mark Boyle, Elon Musk, and many other prophets and wizards in my book,  Who Cares Wins, which is out now in hardback and ebook, and I narrate in the audio book.

Join me next week on this podcast where I'm going to discuss the highly contentious issue of food.

Friday 03.19.21
Posted by claudia delgado