Perspectives
The answer is not Eco-Socialism … It is Eco-Anarchism. By Ted Trainer
Part 1: The global situation, and the alternative society required.
T
he major premise in the Eco-socialist perspective, i.e., that the global ecological problems cannot be solved in a capitalist economy, is sound. However it is argued here that almost all the other elements in Socialist theory are seriously mistaken.
Above all the general Socialist position fails to take into account the very different situation we are in compared with that which prevailed in the past. When no limits to growth were foreseen the primary goal was understandably to take the power to increase material abundance and to redirect industrial capacity to more equitable purposes. But now a sustainable and just world cannot be envisaged unless levels of output, “living standards” and GDP are dramatically reduced, that is, unless there is large scale degrowth to economies that do not grow. This rules out almost all Eco-Socialist proposals regarding goals and means, and requires adoption of an Eco-Anarchist perspective. The difference is far from trivial.
"Above all the general Socialist position fails to take into account the very different situation we are in compared with that which prevailed in the past."
The core Eco-socialist claim is that major problems, especially those involving the environment, cannot be solved unless capitalism is replaced by some kind of Socialism. This is a very 32 | Solutions | Fall 2020 | www.thesolutionsjournal.com
strong claim. But the argument in this first of two articles to be published by The Solutions Journal is that with respect to the nature of the required alternative society, and with respect to all of the elements within its strategic theory, the general Eco-socialist position is seriously mistaken. By explaining the grounds for these claims a case for a quite different theoretical position will be argued, viz., Eco-Anarchism. In this installation attention will be given firstly to the nature of the global predicament which sets the task to be grappled with, and then to its implications for the form a sustainable and just society must take. It will be argued that in general Eco-Socialist thinking does not begin with a satisfactory analysis of the situation and therefore does not focus on the basic implications for alternative social forms. In Part 2 implications for transition strategy will be considered, and major differences between the two perspectives will be shown. “Socialism” and ”Anarchism” are highly ambiguous terms and each includes several significantly different varieties. However it is sufficient for the following discussion to focus on the general disposition Socialists have to take control of at least “the commanding heights”