But as Klein tells viewers in the new video, everyone should be paying attention to the fossil fuel markets because the drop in oil prices is only further proof that the prevailing global economy is failing, even on its own capitalistic terms.

“Not that long ago,” she explains, “oil was at $100 a barrel but now it’s hovering at around $50. Make no mistake, when it comes to the most critical commodity in our economy —from $100 to $50 in six months—that’s a big shock.”

And according to observers of the energy market like independent journalist Nick Cunningham, regressive forces are already using the glut in oil revenue to impose their own self-interested policies. “From Anchorage and the Alberta tar sands to the Gulf Coast,” Cunningham wrote last month, “the collapse in oil prices is being used as an excuse by right-wing governments to further gut social spending and shrink critical services for the poor.” Cunningham cited the state of Louisiana, led by Republican Governor Bobby Jindal, as a specific example of a place where the pain of falling oil prices is placed on the public while corporate interests continue to be insulated. He wrote:

But Klein says it doesn’t have to be this way. Instead of “disaster capitalism”—the term she coined to describe how elites impose austerity and other policies that benefit the wealthy and powerful during times of disruption—there is a counter-example, which she calls a “people’s shock” in which progressive policies are imposed during these episodes of upheavel in order to re-establish equity and push beyond the status quo with bold policies and solutions that benefit people, communities, ecosytems, and—in this case—the planet as a whole. “Could [the current collapse in oil prices] be the shock that we harness for our big shift?” she asks. “I think it can be.”

For example, she continues, “Low oil prices means that we can introduce a fair and meaningful carbon tax—something that is much harder to do when petrol is expensive. And if we don’t do it… oil prices will just encourage more dirty consumption. The money raised from that tax could go to green infrastructure which, in turn, would create a whole lot of jobs—the one million climate jobs that some labor groups have been calling for. And that kind of job creation makes a hell of a lot more sense than what the fossil fuel companies are currently demanding, which is a new wave of tax cuts and other bailouts, apparently so they won’t lay off more workers. That’s insane.”

According to Klein’s argument, “If public money is going to spent on energy jobs, it has to be for the jobs that will save us… not cook us.”

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