Last night I caught up with #ALifeOnOurPlanet on Netflix. Massive kudos to David Attenborough for the great shift he has made. Just two years ago, he called such film-making a “turn-off”. But here he confronts us directly and unflinchingly with the facts.
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When I spoke to him in 2016, he was dismissive of #rewilding. Now he calls on us to “rewild the world”. To change your opinion so far, so late in life, is a remarkable thing, and I honour him for it.
I don’t agree with everything in the film. His faith in decoupling – the idea that economic growth can safely continue as long as we switch to renewable energy – is misplaced. It appears to be an impossible dream: tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.10…
Vertical farming will not make any significant contribution to feeding the world (and most such ventures already seem to have failed).
He takes no account of demographic momentum, which means his claim that we can radically alter the human population trajectory is misplaced.
But overall, it’s an excellent film. It was great to see him promoting the environmental benefits of a plant-based diet, and the crucial challenge of reducing the area of land and sea required to feed us, then rewilding the spared places, drawing down carbon.
It has, though, reignited my anger with the BBC. For 25 years it flatly refused to make such films. This has now changed. But from c.1992 until 2018, proposals for docs like this were rejected out of hand, usually with a string of expletives, by the BBC’s channel controllers.
Producers I knew emerged in tears from such meetings, having been sworn at and shouted at by the BBC’s controllers for the temerity of proposing environmental programmes. Production companies that specialised in them either went bust or switched to reality TV.
As a result, the BBC (and Channel 4) completely failed during this era to represent the reality of what was happening on Earth. In fact, they actively suppressed it. Why? Because environmental messages are counter-aspirational. It was all about fame and fads and fashion.
In my view, the organisation most responsible for preventing the rapid and effective environmental action we needed in the UK was not Exxon, not the Conservative Party, not even the Murdoch empire. It was the BBC.
By shutting down the subject, creating the impression that all was well and we could party on, the BBC (and Channel 4) issued the fossil fuel companies, and consumerism in general, with their social licence to operate. We should not forget this, or forgive it.
Now this has changed, and the BBC, like Netflix, is finally making strong environmental programmes again. But we will never recover those 25 years.
And I fear that we will never recover *from* them.
A handful of environmental docs did slip through the net during this period. But they were so awful that it would have been better if they hadn't been made. Their quality reflects the loss of expertise caused by the controllers' war on this content. See:
monbiot.com/2018/11/11/in-…
As that article documents, they were so misleading as to be counter-productive. Altogether, a massive fail by the BBC for 25 years, on both quantity and quality.

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More from @GeorgeMonbiot

9 Oct
Before I begin this thread, let me make it clear that I do not in any way blame Dominic Cummings or Dido Harding for their antecedents. What interests me is the way power is acquired, transmitted and sustained in the United Kingdom.
1/13
2. This is Field Marshall Sir John Harding. In 1949, he was sent to Malaya to suppress the insurgency. British actions were notoriously brutal, using Agent Orange, scorched earth campaigns, hunger as a weapon and concentration camps. It’s not clear how much of this he did. Image
3. From 1952, as Chief of the Imperial General Staff, he advised the British government on suppressing the Kikuyu revolt in Kenya. This involved the mass murder of civilians, torture, mutilation and mass imprisonment in concentration camps and fortified villages.
Read 13 tweets
8 Oct
I'm getting a pile-on of people claiming I can't write about #JulianAssange for the Guardian, because I'd immediately be sacked.
Inconveniently for this narrative, the exact article they're demanding I write has already been published ... by the Guardian.
theguardian.com/commentisfree/…
But let's not allow the facts to spoil a good conspiracy theory.
It turns out that the people spreading this rumour are the same ones who spread the false story that Steve Bell had been sacked from the Guardian.
They may not agree with everything the Guardian says and does (nor do I), but they shouldn't propagate lies.
Read 4 tweets
8 Oct
An extraordinary shift, and credit where it's due.
BUT: the great unsayable, that the BBC won't allow anyone to voice on air, is that the driver of planetary destruction is not "excess" capitalism, but capitalism itself.
bbc.co.uk/news/science-e…
I write about here. I challenge @BBCNews to represent this view. theguardian.com/commentisfree/…
And here.
The problem is not the adjective.
It's the noun.
theguardian.com/commentisfree/…
Read 7 tweets
7 Oct
What is Trump?
He’s the culmination of decades of oligarchic power.
Decades in which billionaires became the motive force of politics.
Dethroning Trump in November is crucial. But the bigger task is dethroning the system that made him possible.
Thread/
We can’t expect Biden to do this. His sole political virtue (an important one) is that he’s not Trump. We need to see a grassroots revolution in the Democratic Party, that brings people like @AOC and @CoriBush to the fore, overthrows the power of money and puts the people first.
Ultimately, the aims should include overturning Citizens United, banning major donations, stamping out dark money, regulating Facebook and turning the US, for the first time in its history, into a functioning democracy, where every adult has a vote and every vote has equal weight
Read 6 tweets
7 Oct
News in the UK is the propaganda of the oligarch, amplified by the BBC.
This week's column.
theguardian.com/commentisfree/…
For the BBC, politics begin and end in Westminster. But all new and thrilling political ideas are hatched outside the citadel of power. By excluding "marginal" issues and "marginal" voices, the BBC ensures it's always aligned with the status quo, and always behind the curve.
The really big questions – such as the gathering collapse of our life support systems – are, most days, off the agenda. Above all, because the BBC is unconsciously led by the oligarchs’ agenda, it fails to confront the biggest issue in politics: money.
Read 5 tweets
5 Oct
The permissions granted for intensive chicken sheds by @PowysCC, without consideration of the cumulative impact, are a disgrace. They are turning the lovely River Wye and its gorgeous tributaries into open sewers.
theguardian.com/environment/20…
We are well aware of the economic power of big business. But in Wales, the *cultural power* of farmers is one of the strongest forces of all. The government and local authorities appear to give them everything they ask for, regardless of the environmental and social cost.
We are rightly horrified by the Brazilian ranchers who are torching the Amazon. But similar (though smaller) disasters are happening in our nations, justified by similar arguments: guardians of tradition, stewards of the countryside, true patriots etc.
Read 4 tweets

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