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Routine
and complex labour
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How
to make opportunity equal: race
and contributive justice. By
Paul Gomberg. Blackwell, 2007.
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The
author of this slimmish book is a black American philosophy
professor. He discusses race or racism on nearly every page, at one
point making the extreme claim that "Race is class made visible
and vicious." But race is arguably not the main theme of the
book. Gomberg believes that "we need to share labor, including
the boring work most of us like to avoid, if everyone is to have an
opportunity to develop all of their abilities."
The
good news is that the author knows something about socialism and
appears to like the prospect: "Imagine a society without markets
and their insistence on productive efficiency. Production may be
oriented toward meeting needs, not producing whatever can be sold
profitably to those with money." And "We each benefit from
the production of needed things because we each receive from the
common stock."

But
the bad news is that other passages in the book reveal his confusion
about what socialism means: “Market socialism does not abolish this
norm [that each advances economically by their own efforts] but
shifts the locus of responsibility from the individual to the
worker-run firm." And Gomberg writes about "large
working-class socialist and communist parties" in Europe,
parties that may be given those labels but actually support some form
of capitalism.
Gomberg
writes much about what he sees as the division between routine and
complex labour, but leaves us unclear about what this distinction is
and how it affects society. At one point he says the "division
between the organization of labor tasks and the execution of those
tasks is the division of society into a class society of laborers and
those for whom they labor." - in short, a society divided into
workers and capitalists. But elsewhere he claims that "the
division between complex and routine labor is primarily a division
within the working class."
This
contradiction can be resolved only if we accept that within
capitalism there are two kinds of distinction: between the owners and
non-owners of capital and a distinction (perhaps better described as
a gradation) between those who supply routine or complex labour,
unskilled or skilled, at lower or higher rates of pay, giving orders
to other workers or not doing so.
Gomberg's
front cover features a black worker sweeping the stairs. Socialists
living in the capitalist world often have to do unpleasant work in
oppressive conditions to get money to live. When work is done to meet
the needs of people not capital there may be some horse-trading about
who does what and for how long. But sociable volunteering, not
monetary compulsion, will be the name of the game.
STAN
PARKER
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UFO
Religion. Inside
Flying Saucer Cults and Culture. By
Gregory L. Reece. IB Tauris. 2007. £11.99
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Why
should socialists be interested in UFOs? Well, if they really are
alien spacecraft then all humans should want to know the truth about
them. UFOs should really be called UAPs –
unidentified aerial phenomena rather than unidentified flying objects
– since there undoubtedly are unusual aerial phenomena that do need
explaining, and generally can be in terms of weather balloons,
reflections, optical illusions, etc. To call them “flying objects”
is to beg the question.
Reece
is not really interested in those he calls the “nuts
and bolts” ufologists –
those who seek to employ scientific methods to gather verifiable
evidence that they are alien spacecraft – even if he thinks that
haven’t had any success in this. His interest is those who believe
in all sorts of weird and wonderful stories about them – the
abductees, the contactees and those who say that aliens built the
Pyramids and lived in Atlantis.
His
is a book about why some people believe these things in the same way
as others believe in the myths propagated by the various religions.
Hence the book’s title. His style is
gently mocking. For him, those who claim to have been abducted and
experimented on or had sex with aliens are either hoaxers,
fantasists, attention-seekers or in need of psychiatric help.
It’s
the “contactees” – those who claimed to have met
aliens and to
have come back with a message from them – who really interest him. In
the 1950s and 60s the message they
reported was that the
visiting aliens wanted us humans to achieve world peace and harmony
and to stop testing atomic bombs in the atmosphere. Those who think
that aliens built the Pyramids and the like also saw aliens as higher
beings trying to help us.
Reece’s
conclusion is that these imagined aliens are “modern
gods” with a modernised version of what
the god(s) of traditional religions are said to teach. Like them,
they are the creation of the human mind, a reflection of a human
aspiration for a world of peace and harmony.
He
is concerned, however, that, in recent years, some of these new gods
have turned out to be as nasty as the old ones. He instances
Scientology and the Heaven’s Gate cult,
both of which preach, in a modernised form, the old anti-human dogma
that our bodies are evil and that the aim of life is to prepare for
our “souls”
(considered by these two cults to have come from outer space) to
leave them so that we can progress to a higher dimension. I hadn’t
realised before that the Mormons believe that their god was
originally an extra-terrestrial. One now wants to become the US
President as if the present incumbent didn’t
have nutty enough religious views.
ALB
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Thinking
Allowed. A Manifesto for Successful Political Change in Britain and
the World.
By Sarah Young.
Northern Sky, PO Box 21548, Stirling FK8 1YY.
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This
short, 30-page pamphlet criticises capitalism for treating us as
passive consumers, denying us any control of our lives. The author
rejects us following any of the “revolutionary
parties of the left” as a supposed
way-out, precisely because they too are organised on a top-down basis
and only seek passive followers, discouraging popular participation.
She
sees the embryo of a popular, participatory revolutionary movement in
the voluntary activities, “vocational
work” (people seeking “to
serve the common good by taking on jobs in education, health or other
socially related work, and often on low pay”)
and single issue campaigns that thousands are already engaged in.
While
accepting that these show that people are capable of organising (and
should organise) themselves without leaders (whether career
politicians or professional revolutionaries), we have to say that she
exaggerates the potential of such activities and seriously
underestimates the need for any do-it-yourself revolutionary movement
such as we favour too to be consciously revolutionary.
ALB
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Sicko
Written and directed by Michael Moore.
What
a devastating indictment of the US health care system this film is!
Fifty million Americans have no health insurance, and eighteen
thousand die because of this each year. The focus of the film,
however, is on those who do have such insurance — and are therefore
not the most badly off — but find it of little use when they need
it most.
The
insurance is with health maintenance organisations or HMOs, though
they should really be called wealth maintenance organisations, as
they are most concerned about the wealth of their owners and top
executives. People pay for health insurance or have it provided by
their employer but, when it comes to the crunch and they fall ill or
have an accident, the HMO will try every trick in the book to avoid
paying up. Surgical procedures may be categorised as experimental and
therefore not covered, or people may be denied treatment because they
did not disclose some prior medical condition or even failed to
diagnose it themselves.
It
is the individual cases Moore presents that give the film its impact.
One child died because the HMO insisted she be treated in one of
their own establishments rather than the hospital that the ambulance
had taken her to. A man who had lost the tips of two fingers in an
accident with a saw had to choose which one should be replaced, as he
could not afford both. A sick and disoriented woman was dumped in the
street by the hospital when she could not pay her bills.
Moore
contrasts the American system with those in Canada, Cuba, France and
the UK. He makes great play with the fact that the cashier in an NHS
hospital doesn’t receive payments from patients but instead pays
out, reimbursing some of them for their travel expenses. The original
NHS idea of free treatment is trotted out, courtesy of Tony Benn, but
disappointingly there is no discussion of the extent to which it no
longer applies. Further, there’s little if any investigation of the
real quality of health treatment in these countries.
All
in all, though, this is a forceful attack on the idea that medical
treatment should be based on considerations of profit. And just
before the end comes a refreshing thought, that society should be
more concerned with ‘we’ than with ‘me’.
PB
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