There is nothing surprising in the declaration that the world has changed during the Covid-19 pandemic. There is the enormous human toll of it: the illness, suffering and death of individuals, the grief of families, and the wear and tear on health care providers, the economic fear and devastation, and the psychic toll for many.

     However, there has been another side to all this (Imagine, Part I). With exceptions for the misguided (to put it kindly) and more antisocial parts of the U.S., the world has become quieter, even where there is some reopening. There are fewer cars on the road, fewer airplanes in the sky, and fewer people on the streets. The gigantic cruise ships are sitting idle. The streets of tourist cities that were once crammed with people are suddenly liveable. Museums that were once filled with hurried and harried people snapping selfies are passable and calm; a visitor now can see and contemplate a painting or artifact. We are staying home, spending more time with those amiable companions – ourselves – and with our loved ones (not all of them, of course, as there are those whom we cannot visit under present circumstances). We have calmed down and this is a good thing.

     And as a bonus, temporarily at least, we have also reduced our fossil fuel burning, with resulting lower carbon emission levels. The clear skies over cities have provided us with a glimpse of what is possible, what we can do to save our planet. As terrible as this pandemic has been, it also provides us with a chance to take stock, and to modify how we live in a way that will benefit both ourselves and the rest of earth’s creation.

     (For any climate change deniers in my vast reading audience, for now I will just say: cut the bullshit.[i]  I will deal with you another time.)

     And so, I (and many others[ii]) propose that we seize this crisis as an opportunity to make permanent modifications in how we live, modelled on what we are doing now: not to change everything, but just to adjust and adapt. Slow down and make the recovery greener.

     First is simply, once the pandemic ebbs, to stay home more and do less in the world. We, in the wealthy West and North, have been living like it is an ongoing party in our personal amusement park, complete with all the candy, rides and entertainment we could ever want. But this is not sustainable, and the planet is showing us that. And really, we must ask: is that how we want to live?

     And so, my proposal is to do less in the world:

  • Drive less: For many jobs, we simply do not have to drive every day to offices or other settings, including educational. The pandemic has shown this clearly. Of course, this is not true for all work – caps doffed to all those brave souls, from the grocery clerk to the nurse, who show up every day to serve and help the rest of us. But stating the obvious, technology enables many to work just as, or more, effectively from home. Perhaps one day a week in the office would satisfy social and schmoozing needs, as well as the usual managerial obsession with employee surveillance. Hybrid teaching and learning models could cut education-related travelling in half. Couple that with the sensible idea of reducing the work week to four days – which also has the advantage of spreading the work and money to more people – and bingo, we are the winners of a big door prize. Imagine less commuting, more comfortable working conditions, and more time for creative indolence.
  • Travel less (we Baby Boomers especially): The crowded planes, the crowded ships, and the crowded cities are not doing anything for us anyhow. The streets in famous cities like Prague have become choked with throngs of jostling people; the museums of, say, Paris or London, are impassable thickets, and the cafés in Venice are sinking with the collective weight of thousands of wine-guzzlers. We could relieve all this simply by doing less travel. Baby Boomers for example: take a trip every second year, instead of one or two every year. Business travellers: cut it in half, use Zoom and the like instead. Imagine fewer flights: a bit more expensive, but without the cattle-calls in the airports, room to stretch and move in our seats, actual food to eat, and the end of nickel-and-diming us for our luggage and such.
  • Dock the cruise ships: Park half the fleet of these floating colossi. The carbon impact of the ships is horrendous. The Oasis of the Seas, for example, uses a gallon of fuel every twelve feet, or to put it another way, gets 0.0023 mpg. Imagine ships moored and converted into mixed populace condos and rental apartments with built-in public-access community centres, party rooms, swimming pools, and playlands.
  • Limit the cars and roadways in the cities: restrict access for cars and open the streets mainly for delivery, public transport, walking, cycling, including electric cycles and scooters, and sitting. Imagine our cities as accessible urban parks and living spaces, rather than mere travel grids for self-propelled metal containers.

     Of course, there are so many other things we could add to calm ourselves and save the planet: buy less junk (and thereby owe less money), build smaller houses, drive smaller vehicles, and so on. We know what the list is. And, of course, these are only a part of what we need to do to address climate change. We know very well the items on that more extensive list are too. More on that another time.

     Naturally, there are serious economic implications to consider. We have been living addicted to expanding consumerism and growth. If we make these changes, the economy will slow, and we will have to figure out how to live sustainably and support people more broadly than we have been, and probably with less money streaking in and out of our individual chequing accounts.

     To its credit, modern capitalism has generated more wealth, health and human well being than humanity has ever seen. It must be complimented for that. Thank you, industrial capitalism. However, the current economic model of perpetual growth is simply not sustainable. It is simple, really, when you look at biology and nature: “Exponential growth inside a finite system leads to collapse.”[iii] The planet is telling us clearly where we are headed, but we are living in a state of denial about it.[iv] In order to continue this growth, it is necessary to consume and dispose at ever higher levels, in order to keep the money machine going, so that, as Haruki Murakami, puts it, “waste [has become] the highest virtue one can achieve in advanced capitalist society.”[v] It is killing the planet, and seems to be driving us crazy as well.

     The market fiction of Adam Smith’s “invisible hand,” will not save us from this. He was a smart fellow, to be sure, but the uncritical adoption of the metaphor constitutes magical thinking.  It is a self-serving idea, that if we pursue our individual profit, that will result in the greatest good for all.[vi] It lets us off the hook of taking responsibility. It is not, in fact, the pursuit of our individual greed that will solve our problems, but rather it will be our capacity for a creative reimagining of the way we live. We are not without solid economic models of how to do this[vii], as I mentioned in Part I. But we have to change our vision of what constitutes a good life – keeping most of what we do but incorporating our experience during this pandemic.

     And so, we can say that there has been a positive side to the changes we have made to cope with Covid-19. The reduction in climate-change gases is notable. But so are other modifications: buying and spending less, less rushing around, more time developing interests and talents, more time reading and thinking, more cultivating of home life overall – even literally, more gardening.

     Imagine incorporating these things into our post-pandemic lives and enjoying ourselves in a quieter, less frenetic and less anxiety-riddled way. Imagine, at the same time, doing our planet, its creatures, and Gaia, a great favour.

     Imagine greater freedom. Imagine less worry about the state of our planet – for ourselves, for our children and grandchildren, or as the North American Aboriginals put it, the Seven Generations to follow. Imagine more serenity in our lives. Imagine more time to be our still human selves.

     “You can say I’m a dreamer…”

______________________________________________________________________________________

[i] Frankfurt, Harry G. On Bullshit. Princeton University Press. 2005. Pages 16-17.

[ii] Proctor, Kate. Just 6% of UK Public Want a Return to Pre-pandemic Economy. The Guardian. June 28, 2020.

[iii] Powers, Richard. The Overstory. W.W. Norton & Company. 2018. Page 321.

[iv] Kolbert, Elizabeth. Field Notes from a Catastrophe: Man, Nature, and Climate Change. Bloomsbury Publishing. 2006. And Friedman, Thomas L. Hot, Flat, and Crowded: Why We Need a Green Revolution and How It Can Renew America. Farrar, Strauss and Giroux. 2008.

[v] Nurakami, Harruki. Dance Dance Dance. Vintage Books. 1994. Page 19.

[vi] This is partly a distortion of Smith’s ideas in any case. He thought that governments should intervene sensibly as needed in order to optimize free markets.

[vii] “By simulating a variety of scenarios, we have seen that ‘no growth’ can be disastrous if implemented carelessly…we have also seen that slower growth, leading to stability around 2030, can be consistent with attractive economic, social and environmental outcomes: full employment, virtual elimination of poverty, more leisure, considerable reduction in GHG emissions and fiscal balance.” Victor, Peter A. Managing Without Growth: Slower by Design, Not Disaster. 1st ed., Edward Elgar Publishers, 2009. Page 183.

6 thoughts on “Imagine: Covid-19, The Great Opportunity (Part II)

  1. Katerina the Aeolian Harp Maker🎼🎶 says:

    Your piece is a triumph! Direct, clear, eloquent. Thank you for getting these thoughts into words and getting the words into print. Bravo!
    And I love you❤️

  2. Katerina the Aeolian Harp Maker🎼🎶 says:

    Your piece is a triumph! Direct, clear, eloquent. Thank you for getting these thoughts into words and getting the words into print. Bravo!
    And I love you❤️

  3. Great words of wisdom…if only we would heed them!!! Kurt Vonnegut once said, “everyone wants to build and nobody wants to do maintenance.”
    So we have bigger spreads, more garbage, etc., etc.,etc..Covid has forced us to slow down and keep it simple…I hope we will remember this lesson. But I’m not going to bet on it!
    Belinda

    • Thanks for the note, B. and how true, the quote from Vonnegut! Ah, I am not that optimistic myself, when for example, I see big pick-up trucks, SUV’s etc. (as I have several times this month) in parking lots locked up and kept idling while the person shops in the grocery store – so that the air conditioning will keep it cool for when they come out, I presume. Too, I recently saw a Lincoln Navigator (of all things) with a bumper sticker calling for action on Global Warming! Say what?! The Spanish Civil War writer and prisoner, Antonio Gramsci, touted the idea of “pessimism of the intellect, optimism of the will” (origin attributed to a novelist I don’t know, Romain Rolland) – much debate about what Gramsci meant, but I take it simply, meaning be real about the problems, but stay but stay optimistic that our actions can solve, or at least mitigate them. I hope that is the case. I worry a lot about the world I am leaving for my grandchildren, Josephine and Holden.

  4. Meh. Sadly, not here. Traffic is back to sucking and there are too many people out wearing face masks like underwear parked under their dicks.

    We could all use with working less. As the old saying goes “He who dies with the most toys still dies.” Doing office jobs from home has worked out but the bosses still think people have been watching soaps and eating bon-bons when they’ve been working 10+ hour days because they have a work ethic the bosses lost a long time ago.

    I suggested the 4 day work week back when gas was approaching $4/gal. It took a pandemic to get gas mileage to 3 weeks per gallon.

    • Thanks Dr. Dave. I won’t comment on the colorful simile about face-masks. 🙂
      Yes, I’m a tad “Meh,” also. I feel I have to try at least to consider what is possible. We really don’t have to live like this. But I am not optimistic; in fact, I am gloomy about the possibilities for the planet. I am 99.5% sure we will just go back to what we were doing — maybe more work-from-home and hence less commuting. Lots of people seem to like it, and why not — so if the managerial surveillance obsessives can manage their emotions, it could help!
      In any case, there is no alternative but to fight on for a livable planet for our grandchildren and the children after that. P

Leave a Reply to peterscottcameron_tq252m Cancel Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

You may use these HTML tags and attributes:

<a href="" title=""> <abbr title=""> <acronym title=""> <b> <blockquote cite=""> <cite> <code> <del datetime=""> <em> <i> <q cite=""> <s> <strike> <strong>