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How to Blow Up a Pipeline Kindle Edition
The science on climate change has been clear for a very long time now. Yet despite decades of appeals, mass street protests, petition campaigns, and peaceful demonstrations, we are still facing a booming fossil fuel industry, rising seas, rising emission levels, and a rising temperature. With the stakes so high, why haven't we moved beyond peaceful protest?
In this lyrical manifesto, noted climate scholar (and saboteur of SUV tires and coal mines) Andreas Malm makes an impassioned call for the climate movement to escalate its tactics in the face of ecological collapse. We need, he argues, to force fossil fuel extraction to stop--with our actions, with our bodies, and by defusing and destroying its tools. We need, in short, to start blowing up some oil pipelines.
Offering a counter-history of how mass popular change has occurred, from the democratic revolutions overthrowing dictators to the movement against apartheid and for women's suffrage, Malm argues that the strategic acceptance of property destruction and violence has been the only route for revolutionary change. In a braided narrative that moves from the forests of Germany and the streets of London to the deserts of Iraq, Malm offers us an incisive discussion of the politics and ethics of pacifism and violence, democracy and social change, strategy and tactics, and a movement compelled by both the heart and the mind. Here is how we fight in a world on fire.
- LanguageEnglish
- PublisherVerso
- Publication dateJanuary 5, 2021
- File size1142 KB
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Editorial Reviews
Review
—David Wallace-Wells, author of The Uninhabitable Earth
"The definitive deep history on how our economic system created the climate crisis. Superb, essential reading from one of the most original thinkers on the subject."
—Naomi Klein, author of This Changes Everything and The Shock Doctrine
"The best book written about the origins of global warming ... Like Naomi Klein's This Changes Everything, Fossil Capital trenchantly demonstrated that capitalism and capitalists are responsible for climate change."
—Michael Robbins, Bookforum
"How to Blow Up a Pipeline is a challenge to the left, and an important one."
—John Foster, The Battleground
"A short and gripping manifesto which aims to wrench the climate movement out of its complacency"
—Bright Green
"Timely ... Malm delivers the essay in his usual lucid and fiery style"
—Ecologist
"One of the most important things written about the climate crisis."
—Wen Stephenson, LARB
"A profoundly necessary book"
—Scott W. Stern, LARB
"Advocates powerfully against despair and powerlessness."
—Tatiana Schlossberg, New York Times
"Written passionately...Malm argues that it may be too late to avert climate crisis, but it is far from too late to ameliorate suffering."
—Sawarin Suwichakornpong, Bangkok Post
"Malm offers a critical, passionate and hopeful assessment of where it might go next. Malm's refreshing humanist ethos combined with his Marxist radicalism make him one of the most exciting contemporary writers on the climate crisis, this forceful new entry into his repertoire is no exception, though perhaps a different beast from his more academic work."
—Political Economy Research Centre
"Refreshing and provoking"
—It's Freezing in LA
"How to Blow Up a Pipeline makes a strong case for looking beyond non-violent activism"
—VICE
"A humble and nuanced case... it’s hard to read this book without daydreaming about sabotaging the private jets of the ultra-rich."
—Tim DeChristopher, Yes Magazine
"While the book does not live up to its titular promise of providing instructions to detonate a pipeline, it does make an unflinching case for carrying out such activities in advanced capitalist countries."
—James Wilt, Canadian Dimension
"Malm [has] captured the rising fury of climate activists"
—Pilita Clark, Financial Times
"Impossible to dismiss"
—David Wallace-Wells, Times Literary Supplement
"Malm is right. Shunning all violent acts will only prolong the worst. No new fossil fuel infrastructure can be created, and we need, as a society, to dismantle what we already have"
—Devi Lockwood, VICE
"By ruling out direct action, the climate movement robs itself, in Malm's view, of its only serious means of leverage."
—Adam Tooze, London Review of Books
"Bracing"
—Financial Times
"If you want to do something about the climate crisis instead of wallowing in despair, there's no better place to start than Andreas Malm's short treatise on the virtues of eco-sabotage. Provides a radical sort of hope."
—Abigail Weinberg, Mother Jones
"Malm calls for the formation of a radical flank to the popular climate movement...[he] finds the peaceful discipline of the climate movement to be remarkable but stifling in its single mode of action, calling it gentle and mild in the extreme."
—James Mumm, Social Policy magazine
"An impassioned argument for climate activists to move beyond non-violent protests...Even for those who disapprove of How to Blow Up a Pipeline, it is a useful guide to the noisiest climate activist voices."
—Economist
"A seductively well-written and well-researched book that argues climate activists should abandon their longstanding "commitment to absolute non-violence", and instead "escalate" their campaign by "physically attacking the things that consume our planet", such as fossil fuel infrastructure."
—Andy Beckett, Guardian
"Dynamite"
—David Hughes, Time Out
"[A] persuasive and optimistic rebuttal of climate fatalism"
—Glasgow Guardian
"A rousing case for property destruction as a tactic in the pursuit of climate justice."
—Simran Hans, Guardian
"This is a book as weapon, a manifesto for forcing change framed by the legacy of the suffragettes' direct action, civil rights movement protests, anti-apartheid boycotts, national liberation armed striggles."
—Philosophy Football
About the Author
Product details
- ASIN : B084V7M2JT
- Publisher : Verso (January 5, 2021)
- Publication date : January 5, 2021
- Language : English
- File size : 1142 KB
- Text-to-Speech : Enabled
- Screen Reader : Supported
- Enhanced typesetting : Enabled
- X-Ray : Enabled
- Word Wise : Enabled
- Sticky notes : On Kindle Scribe
- Print length : 209 pages
- Best Sellers Rank: #462,537 in Kindle Store (See Top 100 in Kindle Store)
- #256 in Economic Conditions (Kindle Store)
- #292 in Environmental Policy
- #399 in Political Economy
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The first section, "Learning From Past Struggles" (5-63) marshals historic evidence to show that the claims made by some activists about the strictly non-violent nature of certain social movements is inaccurate. From the movement against slavery, to the suffragettes, to the movement for Indian independence, to the Civil Rights Movement and the ANC in South Africa, the use of direct action involving property damage was in fact an important part of the tactical arsenal. Malm argues for the sociological social movement theory concept of the "radical flank effect" (Haines 1988) where a radical wing of a movement pushes the authorities to negotiate with and meet the demands of a more moderate wing.
In the central section, "Breaking the Spell" (65-132) Malm makes an ethical argument for direct action. There are those who see damage to property as non-violence since it does not harm people. Malm rejects that view, accepting the prevailing view that property damage is a form of violence, but making a crucial distinction between violence to property and violence to people. He makes the utilitarian argument that given the failure of corporations and governments to act, the climate movement must begin to escalate its tactics to shut down the fossil fuel infrastructure. Not in a haphazard way, but deliberately and carefully. He uses the example of two young women who sabotaged the Dakota Access Pipeline in Iowa as a prime example. And he excoriates the Extinction Rebellion group in London for blocking a train taking working class people to work as a perfect negative example of how to choose targets.
Finally, in the last section "Fighting Despair" (133-161) he argues with Roy Scranton, Jonathan Franzen, and others who have publicly declared that "resistance is futile" and that we should just accept inevitable doom. This is fine until he comes to radical environmentalists of the period before his activism -- Earth First! chief among them. He dismisses these organizations committed to sabotage, or ecotage, as ineffectual because "[t]hey were not performed in a dynamic relation to a mass movement, but largely in a void" (155). He is wrong about that -- I have both academic and activist knowledge of the subject -- and he might be surprised to find that some of the tactics he promotes associated with the excellent German anti-coal group Ende Gelände are taken right out of the Earth First! repertoire. But that doesn't detract from his main argument.
*** *** ***
This provocatively titled book makes an important contribution to the movement, I hope it is widely read, debated, and applied.
Malm's two previous books are also superb: "Fossil Capital" (2016), the published version of his Ph.D. dissertation, and "The Progress of This Storm" (2018), in which he takes on the influential theory of Bruno Latour.
The book is a fascinating perspective on climate protests and resistance to the capitalist march to a climate apocalypse. At times one of the most radical things I’ve read, and at times one of the most straightforwardly logical. It’s absolutely given me something to think about regarding climate fatalism and personal philosophical choices regarding my impacts on climate and my fellow residents of the world. This one will stick with me for a long time, and I think anyone who reads it with an open mind and in good faith will feel the same way.
Top reviews from other countries
Wie man eine Bombe baut verrät das Buch aber nicht. Das muss man - wie immer - im Internet recherchieren.
Für einfache Sabotage reicht aber auch der inzwischen deklassifizierte Field Guide aus dem 2. Weltkrieg, der allerdings leider auch nicht verlinkt ist.
Das Fazit von Douglas Adams wäre folglich wohl: Mostly harmless!
Contrary to the name, the book is definitely more a non fiction manifesto of the "why" for 'certain types of activities' than a how to guidebook per say, or a fictional narrative centred on its themes, though no less incitful for that.





