“…Still, as already described by Roberts in The Long Depression, 3 in a moment of long depression of capitalism, mainly from the 1970s, there is, on the one hand, a fall in the profit rate of productive capital, as provided by the law tendency of Marx, 18 and, on the other hand, the exacerbated growth of fictitious capital, occupying the center of economic and social relations. 13 It is in this context that the recovery of profit has demanded ultraliberal policies from the ruling class; at the same time, the advance of conservative social forces (and many neofascists) is perceived in an attempt to reheat accumulation and "encourage" market projections. This effort to save capital today cannot take place without the extremely intensive exploitation of the environment, destroying it inexorably.…”