"..going back to the
#Enlightenment, the 17th century .. we get this
#mechanistic vision of the Earth as something that’s dead, as something that really exists only to provide people, you know, powerful human beings, with resources. And I think, at bottom, we just have to move away from that, move away completely to a different way of envisioning the
#earth "
https://www.democracynow.org/2021/11/10/the_nutmegs_curse #AmitovGhosh #writer not
#mechanist #NutmegsCurse reminds me of
#Galeano #stories #killed by
#resourcecurse
“A Process of Violence”: Indian Author Amitav Ghosh on How Colonialism Fueled the Climate Crisis
As talks at the Glasgow U.N. climate summit accelerate, we look at how the roots of the climate crisis date back to Western colonialism with award-winning Indian author Amitav Ghosh, who examines the violent exploitation of human life and the natural environment in his new book, “The Nutmeg’s Curse: Parables for a Planet in Crisis.” Ghosh speaks about the political significance of fossil fuels in global politics, saying that “if fossil fuels were to be completely substituted at scale, what you would have is the complete inversion of the world’s geopolitical order.” Ghosh’s previous books include “The Great Derangement: Climate Change and the Unthinkable” and the novel “Gun Island.”
Democracy Now!'... Bookchin argues that
“the most fundamental message that social ecology advances is that
the very idea of dominating nature stems from the domination of human by human.”
For an ecological society to develop, first the inter-human domination must be eradicated. '
https://roarmag.org/essays/bookchin-kurdish-struggle-ocalan-rojava/
#Bookchin sees the root of our #mechanistic #exploitation of the #Earth as a dead provider, as a #resourcecurse : Is the core problem the some #eople exist only to provide others with #resources ?

Murray Bookchin and the Kurdish resistance
Bookchin’s municipalist ideas, once rejected by communists and anarchists alike, have now come to inspire the Kurdish quest for democratic autonomy.
ROAR Magazine