Things are getting serious. Dozens
are dead and hundreds more are missing. Thousands of homes and
businesses burned down. And three raging fires, one in the north of
the sate and two in the south, are still not under control. There are
scenes that could be the aftermath of an American or Russian bombing
raid in the Middle East – bodies littered on the ground, people
burned to death in their cars, families devastated with grief at the
loss of homes and loved ones.
Donald Trump chimed in on the line
propagated by Fox News for weeks. It’s because of bad forest
management by California, a state that’s – by American standards
– liberal and anti-Trump. Fox even claimed it was because the
people running California were ‘socialists’ (!)
In the world of Instagram thing are
even more serious – Actor Gerald Butler and singers Miley Cyrus and
Robin Thicke have had their houses burned down. Luxury houses on the
Malibu beachfront have been destroyed. Trump’s response has been
criticised by Katy Perry, Leonardo di Caprio and Neil Young. Kim
Kardashian, Lady Gaga and Kanye West have had to be evacuated (can
this disaster get any worse?).
Trump says in his brief tweets that
it’s because of poor forest management. He forgot that 60% of
California forest is under federal management. Bad forest management
is not the underlying cause. Leonardo di Caprio said it was because
of climate change. That’s part of the story, but not the whole
issue.
Fires in the
California forests and chaparral (shrubland) are regular natural
events. Because of global warming they are becoming more regular, and
more likely outside of the hottest times of the year. Chaparral has a
high-intensity regime. “meaning when a fire burns, it burns
everything, frequently leaving behind an ashen landscape.”
Accordding to Ben
Engel: “Climate change contributes to the growing destruction from
California wildfires. Hot, dry weather conditions that help carry
fires for thousands of acres are often present nearly year-round now.
The state’s urban sprawl and encroachment into formerly undeveloped
land is the real catalyst, though, said former Sacramento
Metropolitan Fire District chief Kurt Henke.”
Mike Davis one of the most
articulate and insightful socialist writers we have today, has made
similar points many times, blaming what he calls ‘real estate
capitalism’. In October 2017, a year before the current diesters,
he said:
“Although the explosive
development of this firestorm complex caught county and municipal
officials off guard, fire alarms had been going off for months. Two
years ago (ie in 2015 -ed), at the height of California’s worst
drought in five hundred years, the Valley Fire, ignited by faulty
wiring in a hot tub, burned 76,000 acres and destroyed 1350 homes in
Lake, northern Sonoma, and Napa counties. Last winter’s (2016)
record precipitation, meanwhile, did not so much bust the drought as
prepare its second and more dangerous reincarnation. The spring’s
unforgettable profusion of wildflowers and verdant grasses was
punctually followed by a scorching summer that culminated in
September with pavement-melting temperatures of 41ºC in San
Francisco and 43ºC on the coast at Santa Cruz. Luxuriant green
vegetation quickly turned into parched brown fire-starter.
“The final ingredient in this
‘perfect fire’ scenario – as in past fire catastrophes in
Northern California – was the arrival of the hot, dry offshore
winds, with gusts between 50 and 70 mph, that scourge the California
coast every year in the weeks before Halloween, sometimes continuing
into December. The Diablos are the Bay Area’s upscale version of
Southern California’s autumn mini-hurricanes, the Santa Anas. In
October 1991, they turned a small grass fire near the Caldecott
Tunnel in the Oakland Hills into an inferno that killed 25 people and
destroyed almost 4000 homes and apartments.”
Underlying this is real estate
capitalism, “the financial and real-estate juggernaut that drives
the suburbanisation of our increasingly inflammable wildlands”.
Moreover:
“This is the deadly conceit
behind mainstream environmental politics in California: you say fire,
I say climate change, and we both ignore the financial and
real-estate juggernaut that drives the suburbanisation of our
increasingly inflammable wildlands. Land use patterns in California
have long been insane but, with negligible opposition, they reproduce
themselves like a flesh-eating virus. After the Tunnel Fire in
Oakland and the 2003 and 2007 firestorms in San Diego County,
paradise was quickly restored; in fact, the replacement homes were
larger and grander than the originals. The East Bay implemented some
sensible reforms but in rural San Diego County, the Republican
majority voted down a modest tax increase to hire more firefighters.
The learning curve has a negative slope.
“I’ve found that the easiest
way to explain California fire politics to students or visitors from
the other blue coast is to take them to see the small community of
Carveacre in the rugged mountains east of San Diego. After less than
a mile, a narrow paved road splays into rutted dirt tracks leading to
thirty or forty impressive homes. The attractions are obvious:
families with broods can afford large homes as well as dirt bikes,
horses, dogs, and the occasional emu or llama. At night, stars
twinkle that haven’t been visible in San Diego, 35 miles away, for
almost a century. The vistas are magnificent and the mild winters
usually mantle the mountain chaparral with a magical coating of light
snow.
But Carveacre on a hot, high
fire-danger day scares the shit out of me. A mountainside cul-de-sac
at the end of a one-lane road with scattered houses surrounded by
ripe-to-burn vegetation – the ‘fuel load’ of chaparral in
California is calculated in equivalent barrels of crude oil – the
place confounds human intelligence. It’s a rustic version of death
row. Much as I would like for once to be a bearer of good news rather
than an elderly prophet of doom, Carveacre demonstrates the
hopelessness of rational planning in a society based on real-estate
capitalism. Unnecessarily, our children, and theirs, will continue to
face the flames.”
>> The article above was written by Phil Hearse, and is reprinted from International Viewpoint.
2 comments:
Oh, yes it's always capitalism's fault isn't it. Never let a tragedy go to waste.
One of the fires is called the camp fire for a reason and the Woolsey one might have been from sparks from machinery. Either case these fires didn't start naturally and Trump is absolutely correct about the mismanagement.
You can't even cut a damn tree down without a fricken permit if it's in your own damn yard (or if you are a socialist the state's yard? Geez) anyway and you can't even take dead fall out of the forrests because of these damn marxist tree huggers running the state of cali.
The real cause of the wildfires is Socialism.
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