“Damage and Destroy” Climate Zealots’ Final Solution?

From MasterResource

By Richard W. Fulmer — October 21, 2021

“Damage and destroy new CO2 emitting devices. Put them out of commission, pick them apart, demolish them, burn them, blow them up…. Sabotage, after all, is not incompatible with social distancing.” (Andreas Malm, How to Blow Up a Pipeline, 2021: 3, 67)

“How will Malm keep people from freezing to death in the winter or dying from heat exhaustion in summer after his followers have disabled power plants or the pipelines that supply them?” (below)

There are “no regrets” policy changes that can reduce CO2 emissions by expanding, not reducing, freedom. Repealing the Merchant Marine Act of 1920 (aka, the Jones Act), for example, would eliminate the Act’s enormous carbon footprint. The Act, which requires goods shipped between American ports to be transported on American owned, built, and crewed ships, makes it impossible for Americans to make full use of the veritable conveyor belt of ships that navigate our nations’ waters. 

A foreign ship, dropping imported goods off in cities along our east coast, cannot pick up products in New York and transport them to Miami. Instead, it must make the journey with partially empty holds. The Jones Act has helped raised the price of American-built vessels to the point that a ship built domestically can cost four times what it would cost to build in South Korea or Japan. 

As a result, the United States now has fewer than 100 Jones-compliant ships.  Goods are most efficiently transported by water. But, thanks to this law, much of our freight must be sent by rail and truck, resulting in wasted fuel and unnecessary CO2 emissions.

Repealing the Jones Act, however, is a heavy lift. It would mean gathering facts and arguments to confront powerful lobby groups, labor unions, and politicians. But fear not. Andreas Malm, a human ecology lecturer at Sweden’s Lund University, offers an easy workaround: Blow stuff up. In his new book, How to Blow Up a Pipeline: Learning to Fight in a World on Fire, Malm advocates the “intelligent sabotage” of fossil fuel infrastructure:

Damage and destroy new CO2 emitting devices. Put them out of commission, pick them apart, demolish them, burn them, blow them up. Let the capitalists who keep investing in the fire know that their properties will be trashed.

In a sympathetic interview with Vox, Malm acknowledges that the property destruction he advocates is violence: “But … It’s a lesser form of violence, qualitatively different from harming human beings.”

In an equally sympathetic interview with The New Yorker, Malm explains,

I am in favor of destroying machines, property – not harming people. That’s a very important distinction. 

But it is a distinction without a difference unless he can explain how to disable or destroy property and infrastructure on which countless lives depend without taking any lives.  

How will Malm keep people from freezing to death in the winter or dying from heat exhaustion in summer after his followers have disabled power plants or the pipelines that supply them? How will ambulances take injured patients to hospitals without gasoline in their tanks or, if they are electric, without charged batteries? Malm’s arguments lay the groundwork for mass murder – indirect mass murder, perhaps, but mass murder, nonetheless.

While Malm is not blind to collateral damage, he wears blinkers. In his book, he criticizes the environmentalist group, Extinction Rebellion (aka XR), for disrupting service at London Underground stations and inconveniencing working-class commuters. Yet he apparently doesn’t see that raising the price of energy through sabotage will hurt the poor more than anyone else. And, unlike the poor, wealthy people – the people who Malm is ostensibly trying to hurt – can afford to deal with power outages by installing (CO2-emitting) generators at their homes and businesses.

In his book and via interviews, Malm argues that a radical, violent fringe provides leverage to moderates within movements. Using the BLM riots as an example, Malm observes that moderates can, in effect, blackmail politicians by saying, “You can deal with us or deal with the militants.”

A new book by Joshua Cherniss entitledLiberalism in Dark Times: The Liberal Ethos in the Twentieth Century, effectively responds to people who, like Malm, resort to violence to achieve their political ends.  It opens with two questions:

How do humanitarian idealists become butchers of human beings?  How do they convince themselves that they are virtuous in their butchery?

Cherniss provides a partial answer:

Ruthlessness – understood as both a feature of action and a quality of thought and feeling that rejects all scruples, doubts, hesitation, and remorse in pursuing some ultimate purpose or serving some paramount principle – possesses an attractive simplicity and strength…. 

Many political evils, of course, stem from garden variety villainy – ambition, venality, the appetite for domination or longing for submission.  But righteous ruthlessness is particularly troubling, insofar as it can transform apparent virtues into terrible vices. 

As a disillusioned Communist in Vasily Grossman’s “Life and Fate” reflects, the terrible paradox of Communism was that it ‘freed people from morality the name of morality’; for the sake of a ‘fine and noble’ cause, it justified killing, crippling, uprooting and terrorizing, and licensed ‘pharisees, hypocrites, and writers of denunciations.’

This showed how ‘the very concept of good’ can become ‘a scourge, a greater evil than evil itself.’  The combination of idealism and cynicism in the pursuit of noble goals through brutal means is particularly potent in its appeal, and horrific in its consequences.

Road to Mutual Ruin

Andreas Malm claims that property destruction is necessary for the defense of the planet and of humanity. On what moral basis, though, could he object if people were to destroy his home or his university to protect themselves? 

What would be his response if people, refusing to return to clear cutting forests for a bit of warmth or to slaughtering whales for a bit of light, destroyed his means of spreading his gospel of destruction? How could he object? And where would the violence end?

Marshalling facts and arguments and confronting powerful lobby groups, labor unions, and politicians is a heavy lift. Developing new, cleaner technology is, perhaps, an even heavier lift. But they are both much lighter loads than is embarking on a war of all against all.

————-

Richard W. Fulmer is coauthor (with Robert L. Bradley Jr.) of Energy: The Master Resource (Kendall-Hunt: 2004) and author of approximately 30 articles, book reviews, and blogs in the classical liberal tradition.

Writing for the Foundation for Economic Education, Fulmer is a past winner of FEE’s annual Eugene S. Thorpe writing competition and Beth A. Hoffman Memorial Prize for Economic Writing.

He is a member of FEE’s Faculty Network and a former senior fellow at the Institute for Energy Research.

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Editor
October 22, 2021 7:51 am

Yes, Terrorism is the Solution!

Private Terrorism or Governmental Terrorism, all the same.

October 22, 2021 7:56 am

“How will Malm keep people from freezing to death in the winter or dying from heat exhaustion in summer after his followers have disabled power plants or the pipelines that supply them?”

Malm is clearly a coward who has no qualms about the end game which is, in fact, to destroy the lives of humans and depopulate the earth. This vision is shared by many of the radical environmental lobby and even voiced by some explicitly. Malm tries to pretend his sabotage strategy is harmless when he knows it is the opposite.

We need to understand that there are many people like this who truly want the destruction of human society. We should never be fooled by their alternate explanations of motivation or their intellectual mumbo jumbo arguments. There are causes and effects.

Energy system destruction will be the cause of human suffering and death. Paradoxically it will also lead to environmental degradation when 8 billion people try to survive without modern infrastructure. The outcome will be that every living protein source becomes food, every stick of vegetation fuel, every other human a competitor for resources and all human society will descend into constant conflict over the remaining scraps till the human population shrinks to medieval numbers living in destitute conditions. Then Malm and his ilk will be happy, or more likely long dead.

Paul Johnson
October 22, 2021 8:29 am

Malm and others advocate energy sabotage, but parents objecting to Critical Race Theory are the “domestic terrorists”?

ResourceGuy
October 22, 2021 8:33 am

Speaking of Damage and Destroy, this would be a great time for Russia to restrict oil sales to Europe and divert volume of oil and gas to China for extra storage there. A target price of $120 oil and new record highs for gas would be about right to sink the greens or at least get them to overplay their hand with even more wrong way bets in response. Do it before NH winter to make a point.

Richard Page
Reply to  ResourceGuy
October 22, 2021 3:42 pm

Putin will sell the gas to EU and fulfill the existing contracts as well as any new ones. He knows that this time next year they will need more – the year after that, still more and so on. He’s got a guaranteed market and future sales all tied up with a neat bow. Why on earth would he want to jeopardise that just to make a political point?

Felix
October 22, 2021 8:52 am

One of the most annoying phrases to me is “human rights, not property rights”, especially when used to justifying destroying or confiscating property.

Property is not a thing with rights; but the right to own and control your property is the most basic human right. You own yourself; you are your own property. Whether someone steals a chair you made, or threatens to kill your family if you do not make them a chair, is just two sides of the same coin: theft and slavery.

When criminals destroy property, they are stealing from all the people who invested their property (money and time) in making and using that property.

Zig Zag Wanderer
Reply to  Felix
October 22, 2021 12:33 pm

You will own nothing (the government will own everything).

You will be happy (or else).

ResourceGuy
October 22, 2021 9:28 am

Climate Tora Tora Tora!

Don’t forget the fuel depots, the ships at anchor, and the planes.

There will be a great awakening afterwards.

MarkW
October 22, 2021 9:40 am

Socialists in general, lack the ability to consider anything they do to be wrong.

Paul Penrose
October 22, 2021 9:43 am

To people like Malm, I say, bring it. But don’t be surprised if you receive (vigorous) push back from the people who’s lives you will be destroying.

D Cage
October 22, 2021 9:44 am

So by that logic as a computer modeller who works to QA rules that reject climate science as having no validity I can freely sabotage any “green” installations. Here my training on local programmed mowers using a local version of GPS combined with my childhood hobby of building large model aircraft with two Kg load capacity and making very big bangs would be very useful. Most eco types seem to have the practical ability of a dense five year old so I would seriously recommend they keep well clear of this approach to their mindless religious cult.

Terry
October 22, 2021 12:31 pm

So any questions about whether global warming has become a religion? Suspect people like Malm will only be silenced by Islam’s takeover of Europe.

Lurker Pete.
October 23, 2021 1:26 am

Don’t we have laws against domestic terrorism? You can be sent to gaol for years just for owning/downloading the Anarchists cookbook, without even reading it! What’s different about this book?

Why do we even give these people the time of day?

October 23, 2021 1:29 am

Malm is employed by a state owned former old university founded in 1666. Since 1989, it has turned into a hard left tilted kindergarden for people who don’t want to grow up …

Toto
October 23, 2021 11:47 am

In the current election for Seattle City Attorney, we have a prime example.

On one hand, there is Nicole-Thomas Kennedy who proposes the decriminalization of misdemeanor crime, giving criminals an open season on Seattle residents and businesses.  

Her views are extreme, irrational, and destructive, stating that “property destruction is a moral imperative”, calling a violent rioter a “hero”, and thanking those that commit arson. In a tweet, she noted her “rabid hatred of police” and in other messages, she provided guidance on how to undermine the jury system. Her statements suggest profound irresponsibility.

Nicole Kennedy’s new plan is to have Seattle residents pay for damage done by criminals. Really poor idea.

https://washingtonmath.blogspot.com/2021/10/a-key-decision-for-seattle-voters.html

Ted
October 23, 2021 5:12 pm

Biden also praised the rioters working for his party. In the left’s view, it’s not ‘the ends justify the means’, it’s ‘the claimed intent justifies the means’.