Superstorm Sandy—a People's Shock? 
Seizing the climate crisis to demand a truly populist agenda
by Naomi Klein 


Rockaway
 resident Christine Walker walks along the beach under what is left of 
the boardwalk in the borough of Queens, New York, Monday, November 5, 
2012, in the wake of Superstorm Sandy. (AP Photo/Craig Ruttle)

Less than three days after Sandy made landfall on the East Coast of the 
United States, Iain Murray of the Competitive Enterprise Institute 
blamed New Yorkers’ resistance to big-box stores for the misery they 
were about to endure. Writing on Forbes.com, he explained that the city’s 
refusal to embrace Walmart will likely 
make the recovery much harder: “Mom-and-pop stores simply can’t do what 
big stores can in these circumstances,” he wrote.

And the preemptive scapegoating didn’t stop there. He also warned 
that if the pace of reconstruction turned out to be sluggish (as it so 
often is) then “pro-union rules such as the Davis-Bacon Act” would be to blame, 
a reference to the statute that requires workers on public-works projects to be 
paid not the minimum wage, but the prevailing wage in 
the region.

The same day, Frank Rapoport, a lawyer representing several 
billion-dollar construction and real estate contractors, jumped in to 
suggest that many of those public works projects shouldn’t be public at 
all. Instead, cash-strapped governments should turn to “public private 
partnerships,” known as “P3s.” That means roads, bridges and tunnels 
being rebuilt by private companies, which, for instance, could install 
tolls and keep the profits.

The overriding principle must be addressing the twin crises of inequality and 
climate change at the same time.

Up until now, the only thing stopping them has been the 
law—specifically the absence of laws in New York State and New Jersey 
that enable these sorts of deals. But Rapoport is convinced that the 
combination of broke governments and needy people will provide just the 
catalyst needed to break the deadlock. “There were some bridges that 
were washed out in New Jersey that need structural replacement, and it’s going 
to be very expensive,” he told The Nation. “And so the government may well not 
have the money to build it the right way. And that’s when you turn to a P3.”
Ray Lehmann, co-founder of the R Street Institute, a mouthpiece for 
the insurance lobby (formerly a division of the climate-denying 
Heartland Institute), had another public prize in his sights. In a Wall Street 
Journal article about Sandy, he was quoted arguing for the eventual “full 
privatization” of the 
National Flood Insurance Program, the federal initiative that provides 
affordable protection from some natural disasters—and which private 
insurers see as unfair competition.

But the prize for shameless disaster capitalism surely goes to right-wing 
economist Russell S. Sobel, writing in a New York Times online forum. Sobel 
suggested that, in hard-hit areas, FEMA should create “free trade zones—in 
which all normal regulations, licensing and taxes [are] 
suspended.” This corporate free-for-all would, apparently, “better 
provide the goods and services victims need.”


Yes that’s right: this catastrophe very likely created by climate 
change—a crisis born of the colossal regulatory failure to prevent 
corporations from treating the atmosphere as their open sewer—is just 
one more opportunity for more deregulation. And the fact that this storm has 
demonstrated that poor and working-class people are far more 
vulnerable to the climate crisis shows that this is clearly the right 
moment to strip those people of what few labor protections they have 
left, as well as to privatize the meager public services available to 
them. Most of all, when faced with an extraordinarily costly crisis born of 
corporate greed, hand out tax holidays to corporations.

Is there anyone who can still feign surprise at this stuff? The 
flurry of attempts to use Sandy’s destructive power as a cash grab is 
just the latest chapter in the very long story I have called The Shock 
Doctrine. And it is but the tiniest glimpse into the ways large corporations 
are seeking to reap enormous profits from climate chaos.

One example: between 2008 and 2010, at least 261 patents were filed 
or issued related to “climate-ready” crops—seeds supposedly able to 
withstand extreme conditions like droughts and floods; of these patents 
close to 80 percent were controlled by just six agribusiness giants, 
including Monsanto and Syngenta. With history as our teacher, we know 
that small farmers will go into debt trying to buy these new miracle 
seeds, and that many will lose their land.
Unlike the disaster capitalists who use 
crisis to end-run democracy, a People’s Recovery... would call for new 
democratic processes.

When these displaced farmers move to cities seeking work, they will 
find other peasants, indigenous people and artisanal fishing people who 
lost their lands for similar reasons. Some will have been displaced by 
foreign agribusiness companies looking to grow export crops for wealthy 
nations worried about their own food security in a climate stressed 
future. Some will have moved because a new breed of carbon entrepreneur 
was determined to plant a tree farm on what used to be a 
community-managed forest, in order to collect lucrative credits.

In November 2010, The Economist ran a climate change cover 
story that serves as a useful (if harrowing) blueprint for how climate 
change could serve as the pretext for the last great land grab, a final 
colonial clearing of the forests, farms and coastlines by a handful of 
multinationals. The editors explain that droughts and heat stress are 
such a threat to farmers that only big players can survive the turmoil, 
and that “abandoning the farm may be the way many farmers choose to 
adapt.” They had the same message for fisher folk inconveniently 
occupying valuable ocean-front lands: wouldn’t it be so much safer, 
given rising seas and all, if they joined their fellow farmers in the 
urban slums? “Protecting a single port city from floods is easier than 
protecting a similar population spread out along a coastline of fishing 
villages.”

But, you might wonder, isn’t there a joblessness crisis in most of 
these cities? Nothing a little “reform of labor markets” and free trade 
can’t fix. Besides, cities, they explain, have “social strategies, 
formal or informal.” I’m pretty sure that means that people whose 
“social strategies” used to involve growing and catching their own food 
can now cling to life by selling broken pens at intersections, or 
perhaps by dealing drugs. What the informal social strategy should be 
when super storm winds howl through those precarious slums remains 
unspoken.

For a long time, climate change was treated by environmentalists as a great 
equalizer, the one issue that affected everyone, rich or poor. 
They failed to account for the myriad ways by which the superrich would 
protect themselves from the less savory effects of the economic model 
that made them so wealthy. In the past six years, we have seen the 
emergence of private firefighters in the United States, hired by 
insurance companies to offer a “concierge” service to their wealthier 
clients, as well as the short-lived “HelpJet”—a charter airline in 
Florida that offered five-star evacuation services from hurricane zones. “No 
standing in lines, no hassle with crowds, just a first class 
experience that turns a problem into a vacation.” And, post-Sandy, 
upscale real estate agents are predicting that back-up power generators 
will be the new status symbol with the penthouse and mansion set.

It seems that for some, climate change is imagined less as a clear 
and present danger than as a kind of spa vacation; nothing that the 
right combination of bespoke services and well-curated accessories can’t 
overcome. That, at least, was the impression left by the Barneys New 
York pre-Sandy sale—which offered deals on Sencha green tea, backgammon 
sets and $500 throw blankets so its high-end customers could “settle in 
with style”. Let the rest of the world eat “social strategies, formal or 
informal.”

So we know how the shock doctors are readying to exploit the climate 
crisis, and we know from the past how that would turn out. But here is 
the real question: Could this crisis present a different kind of 
opportunity, one that disperses power into the hands of the many rather 
than consolidating it the hands of the few; one that radically expands 
the commons, rather than auctions it off in pieces? In short, could 
Sandy be the beginning of a People’s Shock?

I think it can. As I outlined last year in these pages, there are changes we 
can make that actually have a chance of getting 
our emissions down to the level science demands. These include 
relocalizing our economies (so we are going to need those farmers where 
they are); vastly expanding and reimagining the public sphere to not 
just hold back the next storm but to prevent even worse disruptions in 
the future; regulating the hell out of corporations and reducing their 
poisonous political power; and reinventing economics so it no longer 
defines success as the endless expansion of consumption.

At the same time as we ramp up alternatives, 
we need to step up the fight against the forces actively making the 
climate crisis worse.
These are approaches to the crisis would help rebuild the real 
economy at a time when most of us have had it with speculative bubbles. 
They would create lasting jobs at a time when they are urgently needed. 
And they would strengthen our ties to one another and to our 
communities— goals that, while abstract, can nonetheless save lives in a crisis.

Just as the Great Depression and the Second World War launched 
populist movements that claimed as their proud legacies social safety 
nets across the industrialized world, so climate change can be a 
historic moment to usher in the next great wave of progressive change. 
Moreover, none of the anti-democratic trickery I described in The Shock 
Doctrine is necessary to advance this agenda. Far from seizing on the climate 
crisis to push through unpopular policies, our task is to seize upon it 
to demand a truly populist agenda.


The reconstruction from Sandy is a great place to start road testing 
these ideas. Unlike the disaster capitalists who use crisis to end-run 
democracy, a People’s Recovery (as many from the Occupy movement are 
already demanding) would call for new democratic processes, including 
neighborhood assemblies, to decide how hard-hit communities should be 
rebuilt. The overriding principle must be addressing the twin crises of 
inequality and climate change at the same time. For starters, that means 
reconstruction that doesn’t just create jobs but jobs that pay a living wage. 
It means not just more public transit, but energy efficient 
affordable housing along those transit lines. It also means not just 
more renewable power but democratic community control over those 
projects.

But at the same time as we ramp up alternatives, we need to step up 
the fight against the forces actively making the climate crisis worse. 
Regardless of who wins the election, that means standing firm against 
the continued expansion of the fossil fuel sector into new and high-risk 
territories, whether through tar sands, fracking, coal exports to China or 
Arctic drilling. It also means recognizing the limits of political 
pressure and going after the fossil fuel companies directly, as we are 
doing at 350.org with our “Do The Math” 
tour. These companies have shown that they are willing to burn five 
times as much carbon as the most conservative estimates say is 
compatible with a livable planet. We’ve done the math, and we simply 
can’t let them.

We find ourselves in a race against time: either this crisis will 
become an opportunity for an evolutionary leap, a holistic readjustment 
of our relationship with the natural world. Or it will become an 
opportunity for the biggest disaster capitalism free-for-all in human 
history, leaving the world even more brutally cleaved between winners 
and losers.

When I wrote The Shock Doctrine, I was documenting crimes of the past. The good 
news is that this is a crime in progress; it is 
still within our power to stop it. Let’s make sure that this time, the 
good guys win.

© 2012 The Nation 
Naomi Klein is an award-winning journalist and syndicated columnist and the 
author of the international and New York Times bestseller The Shock Doctrine: 
The Rise of Disaster Capitalism, now out in paperback. Her earlier books 
include the international best-seller, No Logo: Taking Aim at the Brand Bullies 
(which has just been re-published in a special 10th Anniversary Edition); and 
the collection Fences and Windows: Dispatches from the Front Lines of the 
Globalization Debate (2002). To read all her latest writing visit 
www.naomiklein.org. You can follow her on Twitter: @NaomiAKlein.

http://www.commondreams.org/view/2012/11/06-1

[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



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