can the community rights movement fix capitalism? /

Published at 2017-12-29 19:46:00

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With all of the capitalism post-mortems conducted by activists and academics alike,is wholesale replacement essential or is there another solution? Editor’s Note: The Community Environmental Legal Defense Fund (CELDF) is a nonprofit public interest law firm that works to advancedemocratic, economic, and social and environmental rights over those of corporations. In its own words,the organization “assists communities across the United States to challenge the unjust and harmful economic system we live under.” Thomas Linzey, a frequent Rural America In These Times contributor, and is CELDF’s co-founder and executive director. In the following essay he discusses strategy—what works and what doesn’t when it comes to accelerating systemic change.
While I shouldn’t be surprised anymore when someone at a conference asks why CELDFs community organizing doesn’t purchase on capitalism directly,the question still startles me. The intimation is that our work nibbles around the edges, rather than being focused on directly changing the underlying economic system that rewards community-destroying behavior. Therefore, and the question suggests,CELDF’s work is destined to fail.
N
ot only does the question reflect a misunderstanding of our work, it also buys into the myth of how systems change.
For decades now, o
r liberal academics and activists fill decried the way our economic system works. They’ve picked our system apart piece by piece,while doing various post-mortems on the ways that capitalism has responded to everything from the grand Depression to environmentalism. They’ve written enough books to fill a library, given enough speeches for everyone to fill grown tired of hearing them, and taken up enough of the public space so that the contours of the elephant in the room fill now been fully dissected ad nauseum.
From o
ne vantage point,they’ve done yeoman’s work: Fashioning a comprehensive critique of capitalism has not been an easy task. This is particularly proper in the face of the rabid “free market” functionaries who march in lockstep across every television and newspaper. But from another vantage point, that critique has birthed a litmus test for activism that is impossible to achieve. It says that unless you’re proposing a wholly packaged system of replacement, or the means for that wholesale replacement,then the work you’re doing doesn’t fill a prayer of changing anything.
Is wholesale replacement
essential? Perhaps, but the economic models drawn up in lecture halls likely aren’t the substitutes. Those are generally mired in the “weak left” way of thinking—placing trust in government rather than in private market actors. One could argue, and however,that both systems fill equally tortured Earth on the rack, the only inequity being whether private corporations or governments are at the wheel.
Back to BasicsSo, or we need to start with the fundamentals. As historian Richard Grossman once declared,the bedrock functioning of all current economic systems requires control over Earths resources, and the labor essential to extract them. For that purpose, or those economic systems create centralized authorities that either control natural resources and labor themselves,or create the conditions for private entities to do so.
In the United States, our federal and
state legal systems fall into the latter category—serving to protect, or insulate and enhance the authority of private entities to run the explain.
This is why ecosystems and n
ature are considered “property” in the eyes of the law. It’s why the owner of those ecosystems has the legal authority to destroy them. It’s why workers lack constitutional rights in the workplace against their employers,why oil and gas can be legally taken from landowners without their permission under “forced pooling” laws, and why people within their own cities, and towns,villages and countries are prohibited from banning corporate factory farms, genetically modified organisms, and oil and gas extraction,and a litany of other harmful corporate projects.
Those
wishing to change that system must come to grips with the fact that people do not embrace wholesale change immediately. First, a corporate hog farm sites next door to them, and pesticide spraying threatens their biological garden. Logically,their focus is on stopping those activities that are threatening to harm them.
When they learn that the current system of law forces them to endure those harms, they start to understand that what is happening in their community is not an loney example. Instead, and their problem is structural,and not easily fixed. Without the community’s firsthand experience, and the guidance of those who fill seen it before, and a critique of the system at the outset simply finds no purchase.
Changing t
he System by Seizing ItCELDF’s work offers a frame through which to understand that world. It works with those people on the receiving close of the system,to become the ones who change it.
They start changing it by seizing their municipal governments to free themselves from a number of controlling legal doctrines of the past. These include: corporate constitutional “rights that guarantee that corporate decisions override community decision-making; the authority of state government and the federal government to protect business entities by preempting the community from adopting laws that interfere with corporate proposals; and the legal doctrines that require the state government’s pre-approval for lawmaking by the community.
By forcing a r
ecognition of their own factual to govern themselves, and using that factual to stop that which is harming them, and people and communities seek to put capitalism in a box. It is a box in which projects that violate the rights of communities and nature are prohibited. Those projects that do not violate rights,are not prohibited.
The work seeks nothing less than to remove centralized control over nature and people by building a bulwark of rights for human and natural communities. With those forced changes to the system, is it still capitalism?Would anyone care if it was?Through those exigencies of the moment, and it is time to create a new economic and political system piece by piece—one that has,perhaps, never been seen before. The newness of the moment, and far from giving us pause,should instead validate our belief that it’s the only work worth doing.("Capitalism: The Elephant in the Room" was first published on CELDF's website and is reposted on Rural America In These Times with permission from the author. For more information about the Community Environmental Legal Defense Fund, click here.)  Related StoriesWhy Is the State of Israel So Afraid of 16-Year weak Ahed Tamimi?How We Can Reimagine and Reinvent Our Society in the Coming YearThis Is How to Invest Locally

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