“What happens in America happens in Europe ten years later”, or so the saying goes. While some will argue that this number is closer to fifteen or twenty, the popular wisdom that Europe is a passive, almost helpless adopter of everything American often goes unchallenged. According to that worldview, Europe would be perpetually lagging behind its younger transatlantic cousin, overtaken in culture, policy, or science, unable to produce ideas with worldwide reach, too fragmented and multilingual to matter. The intellectual centre of gravity of the West, we are told, resides in the country whose universities populate the top 30 positions of the Academic Ranking of World Universities, a table published each year by a private consultancy firm based in Shanghai. The market capitalisation of US software companies, or the box office generated by tirelessly-exploited superhero comic franchises, would be all the more evidence that the domination of US culture is undeniable.
And yet, one cannot help but to notice the absence of a significant and intellectually fertile debate coming from that part of the world on the era-defining issues of the twenty-first century, especially after the death of Murray Bookchin. The meta-crisis of climate change and the destruction of ecosystems represents an unprecedented challenge, for it is the first time humanity has had to face a problem (albeit entirely self-inflicted) that threatens the very existence of its civilisations. It is not an issue that will be fixed simply by buying more electric cars and by installing more solar panels. Entirely new economic models in the face of ever-declining resources and an ever-warming climate, the question of the need for growth, truly sustainable transportation and agricultural practices, climate-resiliency of cities; these are some of the issues that need revolutionary thinking.
With the recent presidential elections in the United States, it is a striking observation to make that a lot Europeans seem to pay at least as much attention to the US presidential campaigns as those of their own national and European politicians, and given the importance they seem to give to that particular North-American country, it is worthwhile to ask what can be expected from it on the issues that will really matter in this century. The unfortunate answer being, I argue, not much. This is by no means an attempt at diminishing the efforts of the US academics, politicians, and activists who push policy and discourse on environmental issues in the right direction (Senators Bernard Sanders and Elisabeth Warren come to mind). Their efforts are to be lauded and supported, and ideas should never be judged on where they originate from. However, it does seem to be that case that, in the Western hemisphere, it is mostly in Europe that a fruitful discussion on the aforementioned societal problems is taking place.
Despite talks about how technology could make it possible to
grow our economies at an exponential rate indefinitely, at no point in recent history has a decoupling between world GDP and CO2 emissions been observed. In other words, the so-called “green growth” is a myth. How then, could humans prosper in the next hundred years? The
paradox of a world economy relying on an eternal exponential growth on a planet
with finite resources was a focal point of the work of the “Club of Rome”, an international
group of academics, industrialists and heads of state founded in 1968 at the Accademia dei Lincei in Rome. Their first
report, “The Limits of Growth”, analysed current trends in the use of resources,
and predicted a brutal drop of GDP and world population at some point in the twenty-first century. This collapse, they argue, could however be averted
by a gradual, controlled decrease of human economic activity towards
sustainable levels. More recently, these theses have been picked up by French
engineer Jean-Marc Jancovici, whose organisation The Shift Project aims at practically
defining how the economies of France and Europe could be made
ecologically-sustainable, that is, how they would function without the axiom of
eternal growth. Another pivotal issue of this century is the acceleration of
economic inequalities, without any doubt a major obstacle in the way of a
peaceful transition towards an ecological post-growth world. Thomas Piketty, a
professor of economics at the École des hautes études en sciences sociales in Paris, brilliantly quantified the problem in his book “Capital in the Twenty-First Century” and proposed pathways towards its
resolution, such as the instauration of a global tax on wealth. His work went to inspire the economic policy of 2020 US presidential candidate Elizabeth Warren. Beyond academic
debates, Europe has also been a fertile ground for citizen and political
action. Circular economy initiatives have flourished in many European cities,
and Europe was a pioneer in adoption of waste recycling and valorisation
practices; both key enablers of a post-growth world. Denmark and the
Netherlands have also led the charge on sustainable mobility for several
decades, with bicycle infrastructure, train and public transport networks being
developed to the point where owning a car barely even makes sense anymore. Under
the leadership of their socialist mayors, major metropolises such as Paris or
Barcelona are also undergoing massive transformations to make the individual
car obsolete.
By contrast, few, if any, notable circular economy initiatives are heard about in the US, and what little ecological debate there is focuses on incentivising the use of marginally less polluting alternatives of current technologies, rather than on questioning the well-foundedness of the current system. On mobility, the total reliance on unsustainable means of transportation for both intra-city and inter-city trips, that is, cars and airplanes, and the total absence of any serious support for developing public transport and rail networks to levels seen in Europe or Asia offers little reasons to be hopeful. In the country where 50% of the area of an average city is dedicated to cars alone, there doesn’t even seem to be much of an awareness of how pervasive car dependence is. The lack of sustainable mobility initiatives may not be so surprising, however, given the absence of a significant green party to push these issues into the political arena, which is dominated by a duopoly comprised of the Republicans (far-right) and Democrats (centre). On the academic front, much of the intellectual output of the US left seems to be directed at issues such as racial and gender rights, which were settled 20 years ago or more on this side of the Atlantic. Most of Europe has reached a point where having LGBT people in high-ranking governmental positions is considered so normal it is hardly even talked about anymore. Indeed, when Petra de Sutter was appointed deputy prime minister of Belgium earlier this year, mentions of her being a trans woman came mostly from Anglo-American press; Belgian newspapers focusing on her career and talent as a deal-broker instead, as they would with any other member of the government regardless of their gender or sexual orientation. More politically, issues like universal healthcare, abolition of death penalty, or affordable education are still highly contentious in the US whereas they have been making consensus across the whole political spectrum in EU countries for a long time: Europe can now focus on the next steps. The situation is naturally not perfect in the EU as a whole, as attested by the situation in Poland and Hungary, but the actions of these governments are denounced from all sides, and more importantly, these countries are unable to influence the state of the discourse elsewhere in any significant way.
If I point out the ideas that occupy the US left were internalised in Europe several decades ago, those discussed by the US right, on the other hand, are squarely stuck in the nineteenth century, and it can be affirmed without much restrain that the societal debate amongst US conservatives in the last decades has really produced nothing of value. Not that there hasn’t been attempts. The most notable of which has been the promotion of the “Third Culture” by the likes of John Brockmann and Jeffrey Epstein. Starting from Charles Snow’s these of the “Two Cultures”, which discusses how twentieth-century Western philosophical discourse has been shaped by a schism between “literary” and “scientific” academics, advocates of the Third Culture posit that tech billionaires and software moguls have an equally-prominent place in the realm of philosophical ideas: far from being mere money-making schemes, talks of connecting all humans on social media, logging all geographical data on privately-owned servers, or developing advanced AI capable of predicting economic events, would come from profound ontological reflections on the human condition. On environmental issues, Silicon Valley companies are convinced that producing hundreds of millions of smartphones per year, billions of microchips, and operating millions of servers to satisfy growing needs for computational power and data storage comes at a zero ecological cost as long as solar panels are being installed atop their headquarters. These kinds of ideas have been widely propagated through media like TED conferences. It is, of course, all a sham. The veneer of intellectuality and progressiveness that Third Culture proponents tried to apply on plain and simple free-market capitalism rapidly dissolved when scandals such as Cambridge Analytica or the Epstein affair were revealed, and the “tech” world was exposed for what it is: a cash-making industry like any other.
Of course, the European progressive would naturally cheer any development that goes in the direction of a fairer US society, but if in search of inspiration, will likely be frustrated at the lack of novel ideas coming from across the Atlantic. On the left: the reanalysis of every issue through the prism of identity politics and critical theory, on the right: the repackaging of libertarian ideas that become outdated as soon as they are broadcast. The New World, it seems, is decidedly still engulfed in old battles.
As the US busies itself with solving yesteryear’s issues, then, leaving Europe as the thought leader on societal solutions to the climate emergency, let us hope for the planet’s sake that Europe has what it takes to make itself heard, and that “what happens in Europe happens in America ten years later” will become an adequate summary of transatlantic exchanges of ideas.
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