When people do things they shouldnât, they often try to distract attention from their actions. Guardian writer George Monbiot notes that many corporations fuelling the planetâs destruction spend significant resources to shift attention away from themselves and onto us.
âThe deliberate effort to stop us seeing the bigger picture began in 1953 with a campaign called Keep America Beautiful. It was founded by packaging manufacturers, motivated by the profits they could make by replacing reusable containers with disposable plastic,â he writes. âIn 2004, the advertising company Ogilvy & Mather, working for the oil giant BP, took this blame-shifting a step further by inventing the personal carbon footprint. It was a useful innovation, but it also had the effect of diverting political pressure from the producers of fossil fuels to consumers.â
âGreenwashingâ is another way corporations divert attention from their true ecological impacts. As British psychology professor Steven Reicher points out, âOne recent McDonaldâs spot boasts of the way the company is recycling cooking oil into truck fuel, coffee cups into greetings cards, and plastic toys into childrenâs playgrounds. The problem is that it makes no mention of the fact that McDonaldâs beef footprint alone constitutes 22 million metric tons of greenhouse gas emissions a year.â
Facing the real issues often leaves us feeling anger, anxiety and despair. While these are reasonable responses to the environmental crises engulfing us, the multi-billion-dollar self-help industry has profited enormously by convincing us that fixing ourselves is the priority.
How do we balance the need for personal change with systemic change, when both are necessary?
Personal actions can create consumer demand for sustainably made products, model greener behaviours and foster empowerment. But focusing on the personal runs the risk of eclipsing our responsibility to also marshal systemic change.
As Reichler notes, âMcDonaldâs advertising approach is emblematic of the way in which companies seek to continue with business as usual, by distracting us from where the real problems lie. Its adverts represent just one of many strategies by which this is accomplished. One of the most common methods is to turn the climate crisis from a systemic into an individual issue.â
Itâs hard to take on systems, but until we do, theyâll continue to grind up nature and spit out profit where rivers, forests and meadows once stood.
Systemic and environmental racism underpin these systems.
Systemic racism provides advantages (and inheritances), privileging white people in employment, education, justice and social standing. It enabled the mandate under which colonizers have invaded lands, occupied Indigenous territories and exploited nature for financial gain.
As a result of environmental racism, Indigenous and racialized communities have been placed at greater risk of living adjacent to land degradation and pollution from industrial activities and waste disposal.
Our economic system has strong hands upon the bellows. It promotes growth with no limits, which leads to such degradation of nature that around a million species are at risk of extinctionâmore than ever in human history.
This economic system also results in gross inequities. Itâs possible for one person to make $36 billion in a dayâmore than the yearly gross domestic product of some countries. As Monbiot writes, âThe richest 1 per cent of the worldâs people (those earning more than $172,000 a year) produce 15 per cent of the worldâs carbon emissions: twice the combined impact of the poorest 50 per cent.â He proposes âa new system, in which there is âprivate sufficiency and public luxury.ââ
In his words, âWhile there is not enough ecological or even physical space on Earth for everyone to enjoy private luxury, there is enough to provide everyone with public luxury: magnificent parks, hospitals, swimming pools, art galleries, tennis courts and transport systems, playgrounds and community centres.â
It’s a lot to take on, and itâs good to check out at timesâto find respite in binge-watching, books, self-care routines or natureâas long as we check back in. Change wonât happen until we demand it, and unless we face the flames (metaphorically and, increasingly, literally), there is little chance weâll be sufficiently motivated to put them out.
Itâs not all work. Joy can be found in dreaming up creative responses (think of the many clever protest signs!) and joining in community. To paraphrase Joan Baez, activism is the best antidote to despair.
David Suzuki is a scientist, broadcaster, author and co-founder of the David Suzuki Foundation. Written with contributions from David Suzuki Foundation Boreal Project Manager Rachel Plotkin.âŻ
Learn more at www.davidsuzuki.org.