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The
Guardian (5 June) ran a story by George Monbiot about
pharmaceutical companies’ promotion of
baby formula in the Philippines. The article, together with readers’
responses, is online at http://www.guardian.co.uk/comment/story/0,,2095325,00.html.
As
in other underdeveloped countries, the majority of the population in
the Philippines has access only to polluted water. As formula has to
be mixed with water, its widespread use instead of breastfeeding
kills thousands of children every year. Nevertheless, the
corporations promote it in the most ruthless fashion. For instance,
they encourage their saleswomen to dress as nurses to gain the
confidence of young mothers. The Philippines government has tried to
restrict the promotion of baby formula, but the Pharmaceutical &
Healthcare Association of the Philippines (PHAP), representing the
manufacturers and backed by the US government and Chamber of
Commerce, has led a campaign to thwart the attempt, using lobbying,
diplomatic pressure, legal action and (apparently) targeted
assassinations.
All
this is, indeed, horrifying, and indignation is a natural and healthy
reaction. But against who or what should we direct our indignation?
Irrelevance
of nationality
Often
enough, indignation expresses itself as national hatred, typically as
anti-Americanism. America Puts Profit Above Babies’
Lives – runs the headline over the
print version of the article. Of course, the American government and
American business do put profit above babies’
lives (and above everything else). But the same is true of other
countries. Ordinary Americans tend to feel that accusations against “America”
are
aimed at them too and respond in like manner: “You
British are just as bad!”
Nothing
could be more irrelevant to the issue than nationality. The first
target of activists opposing the promotion of baby formula in
underdeveloped countries was Nestlé –
a Swiss company. The members that PHAP represents include European,
Australian, and Japanese as well as American companies. They are
equally ruthless.
Bad
guy approach
But
blaming “America” – or the Jews or the Japanese,
perhaps,
or some other nation or ethnic group -- is a form of the broader
phenomenon called moralism. Alternatively, we might call it “the
bad guy approach.” Track down the “baby
killers,” the evil people responsible for
the evil deeds and do something about them. Do what exactly? Here
things generally get fuzzy, but one Guardian reader has an
answer: “The world right now needs
another Revolution like the Bastille when all
these greedy,
unprincipled, corrupt and criminal politicians/industrialists are
rounded up and are summarily executed.”
That
should do the trick! Or would it? The “revolutionary”
remedy has already been tried – in
France, Russia, China and other countries. And yet there are still
plenty of “bad guys”
around, in those countries as elsewhere. Why should more shootings
help? The more adaptable “bad guys”
survive the “revolutions”
by switching to the winning side in good time, and any who do get
shot are readily replaced. What we have here is obviously an
expression of extreme feeling, a fantasy of revenge, rather than a
carefully thought-out solution. The moralistic approach stirs up
emotions so powerful that thinking is paralysed.
Evil
deeds without evil people
Really
evil people are few and far between. They are not the crux of the
matter. Most of the people involved in making and selling harmful
products are not truly or intrinsically evil. The saleswoman dressed
as a nurse to sell more baby formula and earn her commission, the
Chinese tobacco farmer, the Afghan poppy grower, the armaments worker
making landmines that will maim and kill children as they play –
they are all doing evil things. Their deeds are evil, but they
themselves are not, for they have to make a living somehow. They have
to feed and clothe their own children.
Even
the corporation executives who organize the evil deeds are not doing
evil as a free and deliberate choice. They are required by law to do
whatever is necessary to maximize profits for their shareholders.
They could, of course, give up their positions and join the working
class, but you can understand why so few of them would want to do
that! The shareholders, in turn, do not feel obliged to concern
themselves with the morality of the businesses that provide their
dividends. Everywhere we look we find moral ambiguity. Evil is
certainly being done, but no one is clearly to blame –
only the social arrangement that we refer to as a system.
Some
of us are lucky enough to come by a livelihood that allows us the
luxury of a clean conscience (more or less). Some are not so lucky.
The appropriate target of our indignation is the system that
places people in such excruciating dilemmas, penalises altruistic
impulses, rewards ruthless egoism, and inexorably turns “good
guys” (or potential “good
guys”) into “bad
guys.” It is only by understanding the
system that we can devise a way of freeing people to heed the voice
of their conscience and freely contribute their talents to society,
without thereby jeopardising their families’
survival and wellbeing.
STEFAN
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