Sultan Knish
The World's Fair to Earth Hour marks the journey of a civilization
across the sky from light into darkness. In our new post-civilizational
time, we no longer celebrate human accomplishment by seeing a vision of
the future, instead we turn off the bright lights of civilization and
sit in the dark for an hour to atone for our electrical sins.
Earth
Hour stigmatizes human accomplishment as the root of all evils and
treats the lack of accomplishment as an accomplishment. For all the
pretense of activism, environmentalism celebrates inaction.
Don't
build, don't create and don't do-- are its mandates. Turn off the
lights and feel good about how much you aren't doing right now.
Humanity
is what is wrong with the world. It began with fire, then the
wheelbarrow, the lever and the ax, the mason, the carpenter, the
scientist, the visionary. It can end with you.
Just turn out the lights.
Environmentalism
has degenerated from valuing how much the skies and the oceans, the
butterfly and the beaver, the still lake and the blade of grass, enrich
our humanity into a conviction that all human activity is destructive
because the species of man is the greatest threat to the planet. Each
death, each act of undoing and unmaking, each darkness that is brought
about by the cessation of humanity becomes a profoundly environmentalist
activity.
Kill yourself and save the planet. Put out the lights,
tear down the city and let the earth revert to some imaginary primeval
paradise free of all pollution; whether it is the carbon breath of men,
dogs and cows or the light pollution of their cities.
Embrace the darkness.
While
we take electric light for granted, being able to read and write after
dark is a technological achievement that transformed our civilization.
Animals are governed by day and night cycles. Artificial light made it
possible for us to work independently of the day and night cycle. And
that made our literature and our sciences, our civilization, possible.
Like
all environmental gimmicks, Earth Hour is self-defeating as anything
other than an assertion of identity and faith. Far more energy is
consumed promoting it, than is saved by practicing it.
Websites
switch to black, even though displaying black on television sets or
monitors consumes more energy. Turning off electricity to entire
buildings after working hours and then turning it on costs more than
letting it run. And getting 90 million people across the country to turn
their power on and off at a scheduled time is an energy savings
disaster. And since power companies draw down on their more expensive
'green' generators first, Earth Hour actually shuts down 'green' power.
But
its sponsors don't claim that Earth Hour saves energy or prevents us
from polluting the globe. Like every environmentalist stunt from flying
rock stars around the world on jet planes to carving thousands of
statues made of ice and then leaving them to melt in a public square,
Earth Hour is described as spreading "awareness".
Spreading
awareness is the sole purpose of most environmental activism. Awareness
spreading doesn't improve anything, but spreads the ideology that
humanity is evil to make people feel guilty, outraged, hopeful or some
combination of the appropriate political sentiments in the face of an
imminent armageddon that can only be fought by convincing everyone to be
deeply concerned by it and disdainful of everyone who stands outside
their Chicken Little consensus.
It is a religious ritual for a
secular religion that has no god, but whose devil is the gear and the
microchip, the milk cow and the imported banana, the skyscraper and the
lathe.
The WWF, Earth Hour's godmother, has learned that shrill
attention seeking is a reliable fundraising method. One of the WWF's
more memorable fundraising methods was an ad showing hundreds of planes
headed toward the World Trade Center, to highlight just how much more
important their work is than fighting terrorism. Franny Armstrong of Age
of Stupid, which was promoted by the WWF, ran a 10:10 campaign in the
UK, whose ads featured environmentalists murdering dissenters, including
a group of schoolchildren. The ads are just ads, but London's leftist
former mayor, Ken Livingstone had said of Age of Stupid, "Every single
person in the country should be forcibly sat down on a chair and made to
watch this film."
That is the dark side of environmentalism. The
most active non-Muslim domestic terrorist group is environmental. The
undercurrent of violence finds easy purchase in environmentalism's creed
that the only real problem with the world is people.
No amount of turning off the lights is enough. Eventually you come around to having to turn off the people.
The
Nazis were among the most enthusiastic environmentalists of their day,
even the term 'Ecology' was coined by Ernst Haeckel, whose racial views
served as precursors to Nazi eugenics. But while Nazi environmentalist
believed that we were all animals, they insisted that some animals were
better than others. Modern environmentalists believe that we are all
worse than animals. In their view we are both natural and unnatural.
Natural because we come from the ape and unnatural because we are
intelligent. We live on the planet, but our intelligence excludes us
from ever belonging to it.
Tools are our crime against nature. We
make things. And we make things better. Earth Hour is our reminder to
drop our tools and stop. Stop thinking. Stop doing. Just stop.
The
incompatibility of productive man with the natural world is a
fundamental tenet of the environmental movement. Everything we do is
destructive because of what we are. We are tool builders, inventors and
producers. And the environmentalist movement is aimed at convincing us
to stop being these things. To turn off the lights, make do with less
and march back to the caves with a few clever ad campaigns and a catchy
tune.
Not
only mankind must go, but all the animals that man has domesticated and
bred-- cows, dogs and cats. That is why PETA kills thousands of dogs
and cats a year, promotes the euthanasia of wild cats and pet spaying
and its staffers have even been known to kidnap animals and then kill
them. It is why the Global Warming crowd has made cow emissions into
their whipping bovine.
It's not enough to kill man, tear down his
cities and put out his lights. His cats and dogs and his cows and sheep
must die along with him.
Environmentalism is not motivated by a
love for all creatures, but by the fanatical belief in the purification
of the earth from all traces of human civilization. The political
leftist romanticizes the noble savage over the civilized man and its
environmentalist arm romanticizes the jungle over the thousand acre
farm. It prefers the the swamp to the garden, the wolf to the dog, and
the tiger to the house cat.
This preference is not scientific, it
is emotional, rooted in an antipathy to industrialization and human
development. It wraps itself in the cloak of science, but it is a
reactionary longing for a romanticized nomadic past that never existed. A
way back to the lost eden of noble savages free from morality and
guilt.
In the environmental bible-- man is the source of all
evil. The transition from the nomadic to the domestic, the village to
the city, and the craftsman to the factory, is its version of original
sin.
The environmentalist began with a distaste for human
civilization and the fetishization of the rural farm life of the
peasant. The champions of this "naturalism" were invariably urban
artists and writers from the upper classes who were enthusiastic about
being in touch with nature. After them came the "Nature Fakers" crafting
myths about the high moral standards of wild animals. Domestic animals
in such stories were always wicked and dumb, while wild animals lived
deep and spiritual lives out in the woods. And so the animal kingdom was
subdivided into the noble savage and the uncle tom.
The world
was divided into two polar opposites, the green and the gray, in an
apocalyptic struggle. Either man would drown the world in industry, or
he would return to a natural way of life through a lethal virus (Mary
Shelley, The Last Man, 1826), a devastating war (H.G. Wells), oppressive
social policies (Edward Bellamy) or eco-terrorism (The Monkey Wrench
Gang). The more civilization grew, the more apocalyptic the scenarios
became culminating in the two great environmental myths; nuclear winter
and global warming. These apocalyptic myths have served the same purpose
for environmentalists as apocalypses do for all religions. They predict
a time when the sinful order is overturned and the earth is renewed to
make way for the faithful.
Man is the environmentalist's devil.
He must be beaten, broken and subjugated. Even the animals he has bred,
who are the spark of his genius, must be taken out and killed. Take away
his food and his power. Blame him for the natural cycles of the planet
and the inevitable extinction of species that goes on whether he is
there or not. Take away his technology and his inventions. Tell him that
the humblest bacteria is better than him for it is dumb and follows its
natural instincts while he insists on using his mind. Take away his
primacy and his learning. And then leave him in the dark.
The environmental movement is tenacious, fanatical and deceptive. Its creed is the undoing of all human progress.
There
is money to be made from that, as there is in all revolutions, but
beneath the inconveniences of living under an environmental regime, from
dirty clothes to high taxes, while being forced to listen to the
hypocrisies and false pieties of the Gorean clergy of environmentalist
activists heating their mansions while the poor freeze in energy
poverty, is the darker reality that environmentalism is an anti-human
movement with a vicious hostility toward man and the civilization he has
built.
Whatever he has built, it must destroy.
The gap
between darkness and light is a profound symbol in every civilization.
The light of knowledge pitted against the shadowy dark of ignorance. The
light reveals, but the darkness hides.
Civilization and the
moral code exist in the light of awareness, but the darkness is home to
unthinking bestial things. To call for a return to the darkness is a
profound act of symbolism. A civilization that celebrates a return to
the darkness for even a single hour is longing for a return to a deeper
state of darkness.
A darkness of the soul.
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