Markets, Globalization & Markets, Globalization &
Development Review Development Review
Volume 4 Number 4 Article 6
2019
Water Avengers and their Endgame Water Avengers and their Endgame
David M. Boje
Aalborg University
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Boje, David M. (2019) "Water Avengers and their Endgame,"
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Vol. 4: No. 4, Article 6.
DOI: 10.23860/MGDR-2019-04-04-06
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Film Review
Water Avengers and their Endgame
At this juncture in history, with population increases and fossil fuel
emissions heating the atmosphere, we are creating a global heating crisis,
with water for all life as a major challenge. The United Nation (2019)
states that water is the primary medium through which we will feel the
effect of climate change”. As water becomes more valuable than oil, the
neoliberal capitalism solution is to treat water as a commodity for sale and
privatize city and municipal water systems. The counternarrative, as
Donna Haraway (2018), cognizant that water has emerged as a right and
a condition for survival of all species, including humans advises in
“Staying with the trouble for multispecies environmental justice”, is to build
thick kinships, human and cross-species.
It is as if the blockbuster movie, Avengers: Infinity Wars, shares a
common plot with the big fossil fuel firms heating the atmosphere; as well
as with multinational water businesses that pollute our freshwater
supplies, divert water so rivers no longer flow, and exhaust groundwater
so aquifers collapse. As global heating occurs, only the poles will be left to
grow food, and most of the rest of the planet will be uninhabitable. In the
new Avengers’ movie, the villain Thanos, a Titan, has a plan to wipe out
half of humanity across the entire universe, to save the other half, before
overpopulation exhausts all natural resources, and the greenhouse gases
overheat every part of the planet. The ‘Official Trailer’ for the sequel,
Avengers: Endgame, has Natasha (Black Widow) giving an update about
the ‘apocalypse’ to someone who has been around for some time. In the
trailer, we hear her tell someone: “Thanos did exactly what he intended to
do, he wiped out 50% of the world’s population”.
In the Infinity Wars, Thanos is on a twisted hero’s journey quest to
save 50% of humanity and the destroyed planetary ecologies by
downsizing the overpopulation. The difference between mega-
corporations and Thanos is that Thanos randomly selects whom to wipe
out via genocide. In contrast, ‘big water businesses’ steal water from the
poorest 50% of humanity in order to profit by selling freshwater at
premium prices to the super-rich 1% of the world population. In the teaser-
trailer of Endgame, Tony Stark (Iron Man) says he ran out of water four
days ago, which as is well known causes the body to have irreversible
dehydration damage. In our own times, the contemporaneous second
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decade of this millennium, some four billion people experience severe
water stress. For these billions, at least a month out of each year there is
no tap water.
To provide context for those who are not familiar with Avengers
series of films, Table 1 provides a chronology of these movies.
Table 1: A Simplified Chronology of the Avengers Movie Franchise
Date
Movie
Plot
2012
The
Avengers
Earth's mightiest superheroes come together, learn
to fight as a team to stop the villain Loki and his
alien army from enslaving humanity
2015
The
Avengers:
Age of
Ultron
When Tony Stark and Bruce Banner try to jump-
start a dormant peacekeeping program
called Ultron, things go horribly wrong
2018
The
Avengers:
Infinity War
Thanos, an intergalactic despot has the goal to
collect all six Infinity Stones, and use their
unimaginable power to eliminate half of humanity
(including half the Avengers), in order to
simultaneously deal with overpopulation and the
global heating crisis
2019
Captain
Marvel
Captain Marvel is an extraterrestrial Kree warrior
who finds herself caught in the middle of an
intergalactic battle between her people and the
Skrulls. She survives and arrives in 2019 just in time
to join the Avengers, helping to resolve the cliff
hanger of Infinity Wars
2019
Avengers:
End Game
With the help of remaining allies, the spared
Avengers reassemble once more, then use quantum
tunneling and time travel, in order to reverse
Thanos's actions and restore the exterminated half
of humanity, and end Thanos, as well
In his twisted quest, Thanos must collect all six Infinity Stones to
get the necessary power that the Infinity Gauntlet needs, so he can snap
his fingers, and return half of life in the universe to dust. The parallel to
‘big water business’ in the ongoing ‘Water Apocalypse’ is that these
enterprises need to assemble six kinds of their own versions of multi-
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colored gems (or, should we say, poison pills?) for their version of the
Infinity Gauntlet:
1. Space Stone (Purple) Big Water Business plans to build
mega-dams to keep Mediterranean Sea from rising and flooding
cities and beaches. Other mega-dams are planned to encircle
San Francisco Bay, Miami, etc. to keep them from flooding.
2. Time Stone (Orange) Mines are polluting rivers, lakes
and aquifers. Agribusinesses are over-pumping aquifers to the
point that they collapse, creating sink holes in the ground,
draining these precious water sources well before the time it
takes Mother Nature to replenish them. In response, big water
companies are privatizing municipal water systems.
3. Reality-Mattering Stone (Yellow) Big businesses are
building desalination plants to convert ocean saltwater into
freshwater, at a price that only the richest 1% can afford to pay.
4. Power Stone (Red) Bottled water corporations engage
in storytelling to fool consumers into believing that the (mostly
tap) water that they bottle in plastic with red, green, and blue
caps is not releasing quantum-nanoparticles of microplastic
throughout the food chain, and entering animal and human lung
tissues.
5. Soul Stone (Green) Businesses are already diverting
upstream river water for one nation at expense of ‘green’
freshwater needs of (less privileged) downstream nations,
resulting in predictions of ‘Water Wars’.
6. Mind Stone (Blue) The storytelling tactics of
multinational water businesses, taught and learned in business
schools, are seizing control of consumer and voter minds, who
are mesmerized into believing that there is no water shortage.
The first three stones (Space, Time, Reality-Mattering) are what we
the scholars working in the field of ‘quantum storytelling’ call,
spacetimemattering’, and the fourth (Power) shows how quantum
storytelling, done by corporate and intellectual perpetrators, is changing
the material world of freshwater access into polluted wastewater (Boje
2020, in review). It was not dentists, for example, who introduced
fluoridation into public water systems. Instead, Alcoa the aluminum
company found a way to dispose of their waste product in the
toothpaste. It was not nutritionists who added aspartame to soft drinks and
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to thousands of foods and beverages. Rather, it was a giant chemical firm
Monsanto, when it acquired the aspartame inventor J.D. Searle and
Company. Most people do not know the artificial sweetener used in Coca
Cola, Pepsi, NutraSweet, Equal, and so on is actually made from the
waste byproducts of genetically modified E. coli bacteria (Butler 2019). It is
produced using a cloned microorganism of host E.coli strain, a common
practice for factories making over 150 recombinant pharmaceuticals
approved by the FDA (Ferrer-Miralles et al. 2009). To keep selling these
toxins in the food, beverages, and pharmaceuticals to the public, it takes a
lot of fake storytelling by businesses making such waste byproduct
additives.
Ironically, or perhaps not so ironically, in December 2019, columnist
Luke O’Neil reported the following, about Donald Trump and Thanos, in
The Guardian (O’Neil 2019):
Donald Trump is a genocidal warlord hell bent on destroying half of
existence in the universe. That’s not a criticism from the unhinged
leftwing media, it’s apparently how the president and his team see
himShortly after the House brought two articles of impeachment
against the president for his efforts seeking foreign interference to
bolster his own political interests, the official Trump War Room re-
election campaign Twitter account posted a video to social media
that superimposed his face over that of the villainous Marvel comic
book character ThanosIn the scene from the movie Avengers:
Endgame, Thanos snaps his fingers, attempting to destroy the
diverse array of heroes from throughout the universe who’ve
teamed up to defeat him. I am inevitable Trump/Thanos saysThe
video then cuts to footage of Democratic leaders like Nancy Pelosi,
Adam Schiff, and Jerry Nadler who magically vanish much like in
the movie.
The movie Avengers: Infinity Wars was a blockbuster, the highest
grossing movie of 2018. It wove together the threads of eighteen
superhero films into one cohesive narrative emplotment. The fans have a
narrative expectation that the remaining Avengers (Ironman, Ant-man,
Black Widow, Ronin and so on) will rally and save the day. Here is the big
reveal: The narrative plot is radically different for the ‘big water business’
purveyors of denial and deception. A century of industrial capitalism,
carboniferous capitalism, and now ‘Water Capitalism’ (Loomis 2013, White
2013; Boje and Saylors 2018) has created a climate change’, which is
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destroying the global water cycle’ (GWC, also called Global Hydrological
Cycle, or GHC). Corporations snap their fingers and the Food and Drug
Administration (FDA) endorses everything chlorine, fluoride, aspartame
derived from E.coli organisms, and more and declares these substances
as safe for human consumption. The difference is there are no ‘Post-Snap’
Avenger-superheroes rallying to save humanity from a ‘business-as-usual’
big water business scenario. GWC is already in a downward spiral and
climate change is raising average temperatures that are melting
Greenland, Arctic and Antarctica ice, thereby raising sea levels and
creating increasingly unstable and extreme weather patterns.
The Endgame sequel saw the Avengers return to vanquish the
villain Thanos. The problem in real life is that there is no Ironman hero to
vanquish climate change. Indeed, in the absence of avenging-defending
forces, conglomerate and multinational water businesses seem obsessed
with the Thanos strategy: slow genocide of 50% of the world’s poorest
population, so they can sell water to the richest top percentiles. There is
not enough fresh water for all, so the plan seems to be to let half the
world’s population remain thirsty and die in a ‘Water Apocalypse.’
Together, we (the sensible, humane, forward-thinking folks) could
oppose ‘water-business-as-usual storytelling’ to create a different future.
There is the potential to create a zero-growth future, stop the mega-dams
and strip mines; and instead launch a ‘Blue Revolution’ to use the power
of solar energy, fix the leaky municipal infrastructure, stop privatizing
water and stop the bottled water corporations from commodifying water
and lobbying congress to look the other way. A ‘Blue Revolution’ means
we will have to get smarter about ‘fresh water virtual footprint’ of
businesses and change the curriculum of every business school that
markets fake storytelling corporations as heroes when they are villains
propagating false consciousness. It is well past the time to kick out the big
water business lobbyists from their cozy nests around the government and
education. The alternative is clear: work toward ‘Blue Revolution’ (Barnett
2011) future, and a ‘water ethic’ (Leopold 1997), that takes the entire
global water situation and not just the privileged 1 percent into
account.
I submit that There is no planet B’ (Boje 2019) we can go to, and
continue the growth capitalism that destroys the life carrying capacity of
planet Earth. The Avengers Movie Franchise titillates our humancentric
notions of survival by the help of superheroes with superpowers or big
techno gadgets, fighting the villains in the series of cliffhanger storytelling.
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Ironically the Avenger movie audience watches how superheroes and
demented villains deal with global heating and thirst, all the while guzzling
water, soda, and power drinks from single use plastic water bottles,
adding to their own dismal fate. Market capitalism asks the consumer to
recycle the plastic, after consuming an unhealthy diet. What Avengers
promotes is the same as ‘survival of the fittest’ capitalism, where those
with the wealth try to buy their way out, techno their way out, jump off the
planet, leaving rest of us, and all the living species of watery planets that
support life, to pay the price of greed and growth capitalism. Climate
disruption is no longer a future specter, but a punishing current reality that
without concerted changes in production, marketing, and consumption
will bring about the apocalypse that Thanos’ home planet experienced. At
least Thanos had a plan, a random way of picking survivors, a way to save
half the species. We just let the rich decides who lives or dies, let Trump
pull out of the Paris Climate agreements, appoint climate deniers to head
up agencies, a practice being repeated in Australia and Brazil. Without the
superpower nations, the big carbon emitters on board, is it at all feasible to
hold down global average temperature rise to 1.5 degrees Celsius? The
movie fails to deal with the species other than humans and aliens and
does not give hope beyond chasing villains to how to deal with the
pending extinction event that will happen unless we choose a very
different future than business-as-usual. What we need is a multispecies
storytelling where we begin listening to Gaia soon to avert the planetary
breakdown of living systems.
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References
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at: https://davidboje.com]. (in review)
Butler, Kristen (2019), “Aspartame Patent Reveals E.coli Feces Used,”
UPI, (accessed on January 9, 2019), [available at:
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used/8131377527919/].
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Vázquez and Antonio Villaverde (2009), Microbial Factories for
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