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worldwide April 2005
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WHAT
FUN!
The
newspapers are always reminding us that the US expeditions to
Afghanistan and Iraq were carried out for humanitarian reasons, so it
is good to be reminded from time to time of the mind-set of some of
the combatants in those conflicts. "‘Actually it's quite fun
to fight them, you know. It's a hell of a hoot. It's fun to shoot
some people.’ Lieut. General James Mattis, who commanded U.S.
Marine expeditions in Afghanistan and Iraq, in comments during a
panel discussion for which he was later reprimanded" Time
(14 February).
MIND
THE GAP
The
gap between the rhetoric of politicians and the economic realities of
capitalism is a very large one. Here is a recent example. "As
Tony Blair argued that a precautionary approach to greenhouse gas
emission was vital to prevent environmental disaster, the European
Commission threatened legal action because the UK wanted to raise the
amount of carbon that industry is allowed to pump out under the
European emission trading scheme. The government was accused of
caving in to business led by the Confederation of British Industry" The
Observer (20 February). They are messing up our
world, how
do you feel about that? Pass the inhaler we feel a little sick.
USELESS
TOIL
One
of the most attractive features about a future socialist society is
that it will do away with a lot of dangerous, dirty and nasty
occupations. Think of a society without arms manufacture, armies,
policemen, jailers, prostitutes, bankers, insurance men and debt
collectors. One of the multi-billion dollar industries that will
disappear is the advertising and marketing con game. How big an
industry is revealed in the following figures of some of the big
global advertising spenders. "Procter & Gamble $5.6 bn,
Unilever $3.54 bn, General Motors $3.4 bn." The Observer
(27 February). It is reckoned that $60 billion will be spent this
year telling you what kind of toothpaste to use, clothes to wear,
food to eat and what kind of credit card is "in" this year.
What a madhouse.
NICE
FOR SOME
In
January we reported that according to the International Labour
Organisation 1.4 billion, the highest number ever, were living on
less than $2 a day and 550 million were living on less than $1 a day.
So it is only proper that we report the other side of the coin as
reported by the 2005 Forbes dollar billionaire list. "Topping
the list for the 11th year running is the Microsoft boss Bill Gates,
worth £24.1 billion. The 19th annual list shows the world's
rich getting ever richer, with a total of 691 billionaires.Lakshmi
Mittal, the steel magnate who has backed the Labour Party, increased
his net worth by £9.7 billion to £13 billion" The
Times (11 March).
RIDING
THE TIGER
Piers
Morgan was made editor of the News of the World when he was
only 28 years of age. Within two years he was editor of the Daily
Mirror, a job he held for nine years until his "exclusive"
of fake pictures of British guards abusing Iraqi prisoners was
exposed. He has now published his memoirs The Insider: The Private
Diaries of a Scandalous Decade. It is the usual mix of
celebrity-spotting and anecdotes that such memoires tend to be. Here
is an extract from a book review that reveals the high-minded
thinking of our leaders. "Before the 1997 general election
Morgan suggested to Blair that he shouldn't forget his friends at the
Labour-supporting Daily Mirror in his cosying up to Murdoch to
win the "vote" of the The Sun. ‘Piers, I had to
court him‘, said Blair. ‘It is better to be riding the tiger's
back than let it rip your throat out. Look at what Murdoch did to
Kinnock‘" The Times (12 March).
READ
IT AND WEEP
Jeffrey
D.Sachs, head of Columbia University's Earth Institute and special
adviser to UNO chief Kofi Annan has just written a book called The
End of Poverty. Being by a reformer who thinks that capitalism
can solve the problem of world hunger, the book has limited value,
but what cannot be denied is the mass of information that Sachs has
gathered on the state of world hunger today. It makes for awful
reading. "Currently more than 8 million people around the world
die each year because they are too poor to stay alive." Every
morning our newspapers could report "More than 20,000 people
perished yesterday of extreme poverty." How? The poor die in
hospital wards that lack drugs, in villages that lack anti-malarial
bed nets, in homes that lack safe drinking water. They die
namelessly, without public concern. Sadly such statistics rarely get
written" Time (14 March).
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