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Al Gores An Inconvenient Truth: political posturing
and the Democratic Party
By Joe Kay
15 July 2006
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Al Gores documentary on global warming, An Inconvenient
Truth, is intended to serve one essential purpose: bolstering
the environmental and supposedly liberal credentials of the Democratic
Party and the former US vice president himself. Its aim, therefore,
is not primarily to treat the very real environmental problems
that it in part lays bare, but to create a new mechanism for ensuring
that these problems cannot find a serious solution.
From a stylistic or artistic point of view, An Inconvenient
Truth is very poor. The backbone of the film consists of a
slideshow presented by Gore, the 2000 Democratic Party presidential
nominee. The slideshow, staged as though Gore were giving a lecture
before what would appear to be a very carefully selected audience,
is interspersed with various strained attempts at humor, animated
skits, flashbacks of Gores life and experiences and more
detailed descriptions of certain environmental issues.
This is certainly no Fahrenheit 9/11, Michael Moores
2004 documentary, which, whatever its limitations, was able to
tap in to deeply felt sentiments among broad masses of people.
An Inconvenient Truth, directed by Davis Guggenheimwho,
besides two documentaries on Los Angeles public schools, has previously
directed episodes of television shows such as 24,
NYPD Blue, and Aliasneither inspires
nor provokes.
The production and distribution of the film are clearly bound
up with Al Gores political ambitionsspecifically,
his feeling out the possibility of seeking the Democratic nomination
for president in 2008. Over the past several years, Gore has positioned
himself as a liberal critic of the Bush administration on a number
of fronts. In January, he delivered a sharply worded attack on
the administrations repudiation of democratic rights, warning
that Americas Constitution is in grave danger.
(See What Al Gores
speech reveals about the state of US politics)
Behind Gores words and actions, and those of like-minded
individuals, lies a growing concern within sections of the Democratic
Party establishment, its periphery, or both, that figures such
as Hillary Clinton have been too discredited by their association
with the policies of the Bush administration, particularly the
war in Iraq. There is a fear that a growing mass radicalization
will simply sweep past a Clinton or a Kerry, creating genuine
dangers for the existing political set-up. Under such conditions,
a figure such as Gore might be called upon in an attempt to keep
oppositional sentiment contained within the two-party system.
There is an element of mythmaking involved in any attempt to
provide leaders of the Democratic Party a liberal or compassionate
face, a mythmaking in which An Inconvenient Truth fully
participates. The film presents Gore as a great environmentalist,
who has struggled throughout his political life to combat skepticism
about global warming and other environmental dangers.
The web site for Guggenheims documentary declares it
to be a passionate and inspirational look at one mans
fervent crusade to halt global warmings deadly progress
in its tracks by exposing the myths and misconceptions that surround
it. That man is former Vice President Al Gore, who, we are
told, in the wake of defeat in the 2000 election, re-set
the course of his life to focus on a last-ditch, all-out effort
to help save the planet from irrevocable change.
According to the film, it was Gore who held the first Congressional
hearings on global warming; Gore who wrote a book to highlight
the danger of global warming; Gore who sought while vice president
to raise the issue of global warming to national consciousness;
and Gore who now is seeking, one person, one family at a
time, to shift public consciousness and save the world.
More is involved here than individual self-aggrandizement (though
there is a strong element of that). Gore is brought forward to
reinforce or revive illusions that the Democratic Party can be
an instrument of social reform.
Regarding Gores own record, certain basic points need
to be made. During the eight-year period in which he served as
US vice president, no measures were put in place to deal seriously
with the problem of global warming. Nowhere in the various alarming
graphs Gore presents in his documentaryshowing a steady
rise in temperature, the melting of the polar ice caps and an
increase in carbon dioxide emissionsis there any indication
of an improvement between 1993 and 2001.
The major international environmental accord reached during
the Clinton administration, the Kyoto protocol, was a weak and
limited treaty that would only moderately reduce carbon dioxide
emissions. The Clinton administration pushed for various measures
that would have further weakened the protocols impact on
American business, including emissions trading and the extensive
use of sinksthe ability to reduce emissions
calculations through an accounting trick, by taking into account
carbon dioxide absorbed by already-existing forests and vegetation.
For all Gores attempts to present himself as a fierce
advocate of the environment, it is remarkable that during the
time when he would have had the greatest political influence,
he had no impact.
A point should also be made about Gores response to the
2000 elections, one of the most pivotal political events in recent
American history. In An Inconvenient Truth, Gore, who won
the popular vote in 2000 and would have won the presidency if
there had been a full recount in the state of Florida, treats
the hijacked election as an unfortunate event in his own personal
life, rather than a fundamental attack on the democratic rights
of the American people. He jokes at the beginning of the documentary
that he used to be the next president of the United States
of America.
Later on, he declares that the election result was a huge
blow to him as an individual, but that he concluded you
have to make the best of it. This unserious and politically
irresponsible attitude to the theft of an electionin which
Bush was handed the presidency by a 5-4 vote on the US Supreme
Courtis a continuation of the cowardly capitulation of Gore
during the crisis in November-December 2000 itself. The Democratic
Party nominee, far from waging a struggle to expose the anti-democratic
character of the Supreme Courts decision, did everything
he could to prevent the American public from drawing broader political
conclusions.
The essential contradiction in Gores presentation on
the environment is the same one that afflicts the Democratic Party
as a whole: the former vice president and his party attempt to
present themselves as oppositional, as concerned about the issues
affecting ordinary citizens, while at the same time defending
a social system that is ultimately responsible for war,
growing inequality, the attack on democratic rights and the devastation
of the environment.
Gore and the Democrats reacted in such a deplorable fashion
in 2000, in the final analysis, because they were far more alarmed
by the possible mobilization of masses of people in defense of
democratic rights, with all its implications, than they were by
the ascension of the Bush crowd to power.
The same issues arise in regard to An Inconvenient Truth,
even if one were to accept that Gore had the highest possible
motives. No doubt a section of big business in America is genuinely
alarmed about the economic and social consequences of global warming.
For example, the documentary notes that if the ice on Greenland
were to melt, global ocean levels would rise by about 20 feet,
leaving large portions of major urban centers submerged. This,
of course, would have a disastrous impact on the ability to conduct
business as well.
However, dealing with the genuine threat of global warming
would require a rational and internationally coordinated scientific
plan, including the provision of enormous resources for public
transportation systems and alternative forms of energy production.
Such a plan would necessarily cut into the profits and power of
private enterprises, and would also necessitate the transformation
of energy companies into publicly controlled entities, so that
energy policy could be controlled democratically.
A serious response to the environmental damage already sustained
and the threat of truly catastrophic future damage requires a
transformation of a socialist character. Global warming
cannot be solved within the framework of a system distinguished
by the existence of rival nation-states and the subordination
of all decisions to the interests of private profit. But the defense
of the capitalist system is the most fundamental concern of the
Democratic Party.
In this context, it is noteworthy that Gore barely mentions
the oil companies in his documentary. They receive only the briefest
reference during a discussion of global warming skeptics,
i.e., scientists funded by energy lobbyists to manufacture a dispute
over the reality of global warming. Nowhere is there a discussion
of the profit interests of the oil giants, or even a comment on
the strong ties between these companies and the Bush administration.
One encounters no mention of the secret Energy Task Force meetings
chaired by Vice President Dick Cheney, held in 2001, in which
energy companies worked out policy with administration officials
and reportedly pored over maps of Iraqi oil fields.
Gore and the Democratic Party have no interest in drawing attention
to the role of private profit in the devastation of the environment.
As part of his politically motivated evasion of the basic issues
behind global warming, Gore insists that the problem is not fundamentally
political or social, but personal and moral. It is
not a question of revealing the social interests that have prevented
any serious consideration of environmental questions, but of encouraging
people to make better individual decisions. The blame lies not
at the feet of energy companies and the private ownership of the
means of production, but of ordinary American people.
If an issue is not on the tops of their constituents
thoughts, Gore pontificates, it is easy for [politicians]
to ignore it. Politicians, both Republicans and Democrats,
in other words, have ignored global warming not because they are
beholden to the interests of big business, but because the people
who vote for them dont care about the problem.
The film ends with a question: Are you ready to change
the way you live? Viewers are directed to a web site, www.climatecrisis.net,
which advises consumers to turn down their heating in the winter
and air conditioning in the summer, and to use more efficient
light bulbs to save energy. After a presentation that paints a
dire picture of the future of life on earth if global warming
is not halted, such a conclusion would be laughable if it were
not so politically duplicitous and cynical.
The films form is determined by its essential purpose.
The concerns that many people have over the fate of the environment
are here deliberately channeled into the thoroughly impotent and,
from the standpoint of the American ruling elite, safe harbor
of consumer choice. According to the logic of the
film, such choice, combined with the efforts of visionary
figures like Al Gore, will ultimately save the day.
The real inconvenient truth about Gore and global
warming is that the political perspective he embodies is utterly
incapable of dealing with the problem.
See Also:
What Al Gores speech
reveals about the state of US politics
[26 January 2006]
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