Some recent news I thought was relevant to the discussion:
Amazon Workers Strike Over Virus ProtectionIt's likely nothing will come of this but it'll be interesting to see if it gains any momentum at all, and may be worth considering as we decide where to spend our money in the coming weeks/months. Amazon is one of the largest employers in the United States and the most highly valued company on earth, despite not paying any corporate income tax for the last 2 years. Although to be fair they did pay a whopping 1.2% of the $14 billion they made in 2019...
While we should absolutely encourage eachother to flex our buying power as much as possible, I'm also of the opinion that the scope of the problems some of you bring up require much larger systemic responses from around the world... something I don't see happening anytime soon. If it were as simple as buying green/locally we would've saved the world back in 2008 when farmers markets became trendy and everyone started changing their lightbulbs (that's a joke lol). The fact is that a very small percentage of people and corporate interests are directly responsible for the existential threats facing our time (runaway climate change and rampant ecological devastation, growing wealth inequality, expanding militarism, etc...), and it's in their best interests to continue business-as-usual. There's only so much we can do as consumers to demand change at whatever pace the market is able to provide it without falling in on itself.
I think the economic disruptions we're beginning to see unfold as a result of the pandemic are the closest we'll ever get to the domino effect we need for critical mass to take place. Just from what I'm seeing locally, people who have otherwise been entirely non-political are having real conversations with their neighbors about what it means to survive collectively without relying on the larger economic system. People who've never cared about where their food comes from are scrambling to learn how to grow produce sustainably and for a lot of people. The community garden in my neighborhood has always had empty plots leftover that go unused every year, and yet last I heard they're quickly running out of space as more and more people keep signing up. And while it almost certainly won't happen, ordinary people are talking about indefinitely canceling rent for everyone in the city. I think that's a huge deal.
I honestly don't believe we're going to see the sort of immediate global coordination needed to "win" a more egalitarian society; unfortunately I don't think humans get to have a Disney ending to our story. But as crises like this become more commonplace we will be forced to adapt at the local level, and humans happen to be great at adapting. My hope is that we'll develop more resilient and sustainable communities that may lack many of the creature comforts we enjoy now, but at least keep afloat amidst the fallout of late stage capitalism, or globalization, or rapture, or whatever words your preferred ideology uses to describe the moment we find ourselves stuck in.
"Consciousness grows in spirals." --George L. Jackson
If you can just get your mind together, then come across to me. We'll hold hands and then we'll watch the sunrise from the bottom of the sea...
But first, are you experienced?