Throwing Out the Free Market Playbook: An Interview with Naomi Klein
Perhaps one of the most well-known voices for the Left, Canadian
Naomi Klein is an activist and author of several nonfiction works
critical of consumerism and corporate activity, including the best
sellers
No Logo (2000) and
Shock Doctrine (2007).
In your cover story for the Nation last year, you say
that modern environmentalism successfully advances many of the causes
dear to the political Left, including redistribution of wealth, higher
and more progressive taxes, and greater government intervention and
regulation. Please explain.
The piece came out of my interest and my shock at the fact that
belief in climate change in the United States has plummeted. If you
really drill into the polling data, what you see is that the drop in
belief in climate change is really concentrated on the right of the
political spectrum. It’s been an extraordinary and unusual shift in
belief in a short time. In 2007, 71 percent of Americans believed in
climate change and in 2009 only 51 percent believed—and now we’re at 41
percent. So I started researching the denial movement and going to
conferences and reading the books, and what’s clear is that, on the
right, climate change is seen as a threat to the Right’s worldview, and
to the neoliberal economic worldview. It’s seen as a Marxist plot. They
accuse climate scientists of being watermelons—green on the outside and
red on the inside.
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