Bright Green Lies
How the Environmental Movement Lost Its Way and What We Can Do About It
-
- 10,99 €
Publisher Description
“This disturbing but very important book makes clear we must dig deeper than the normal solutions we are offered.”—Yvon Chouinard, founder of Patagonia Works
"Bright Green Lies exposes the hypocrisy and bankruptcy of leading environmental groups and their most prominent cheerleaders. The best-known environmentalists are not in the business of speaking truth, or even holding up rational solutions to blunt the impending ecocide, but instead indulge in a mendacious and self-serving delusion that provides comfort at the expense of reality. They fail to state the obvious: We cannot continue to wallow in hedonistic consumption and industrial expansion and survive as a species. The environmental debate, Derrick Jensen and his coauthors argue, has been distorted by hubris and the childish desire by those in industrialized nations to sustain the unsustainable. All debates about environmental policy need to begin with honoring and protecting, not the desires of the human species, but with the sanctity of the Earth itself. We refuse to ask the right questions because these questions expose a stark truth—we cannot continue to live as we are living. To do so is suicidal folly. ‘Tell me how you seek, and I will tell you what you are seeking,’ the German philosopher Ludwig Wittgenstein said. This is the power of Bright Green Lies: It asks the questions most refuse to ask, and in that questioning, that seeking, uncovers profound truths we ignore at our peril.”—Chris Hedges, Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist and author of America: The Farewell Tour
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
In this substantial if dispiriting volume, environmental activists Jensen (Deep Green Resistance) and Keith (The Vegetarian Myth), and journalist Wilbert deliver a thorough critique of the environmental protection movement and its reliance on renewable resources. Even recycling, they write, "requires an infrastructure that is harmful to both the environment and humanity," describing the vast amounts of energy required to recycle scrap metal and aluminum, and arguing that recycling is primarily a capitalist impulse: in 2015, for example, "the global recycling industry made more than $23 billion in profits." Electronic waste, meanwhile, often gets sent to Ghana or Pakistan, "where the country's poor pull apart or burn to ‘recycle' the metals, living day and night with the acrid smoke." In addition to skewering the "false assumptions" of recycling, the authors call into question the efficacy of wind turbines (blades are manufactured from "energy-intensive plastics made from petrochemicals"), hydropower (dams impact "cultural sites and hunting, fishing, and gathering places"), and other renewable energy sources. While the survey is detailed and exhaustive, and the steady beat of doom and gloom is sobering, the lack of viable solutions to balance it is disappointing. Climate-minded readers may feel more overwhelmed than empowered.