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POVERTY
RECRUITS 
"The
economic crisis could help the military recruit and retain troops,
Pentagon officials said Friday, potentially ending years of
extraordinary bonuses and waivers that have become necessary to keep
enough troops to fight two wars. "We do benefit when things look
less positive in civil society," said David S.C. Chu ,
undersecretary of defense for personnel and readiness." (Yahoo
News,
10 October) In other words, when young workers are desperate enough
they join the armed services. The best recruiting agency for the
armed forces is poverty. You need to eat? - go kill. That is
capitalism for you.
WAR
IS MENTAL
We are all familiar
with the TV ads for the British Army that portray an exciting,
fulfilling career but what many of the impoverished youths at whom
the ads are aimed may not be aware of are the following facts. “The
number of British military personnel discharged from the armed forces
following a `nervous breakdown has risen by 30 per cent since the
start of the Afghan war. More than 1,300 have been medically
discharged since 2001 when operation first began against the Taliban,
new figures revealed. Of these, 770 belong to the army, which has
borne the brunt of overseas operations in Iraq and Afghanistan.
...The rising numbers of service personnel leaving for psychological
reasons will fuel concerns that thousands of soldiers face being
traumatised by their experiences in Iraq and Afghanistan. Health
charities claim that as many as one in 10 soldiers will develop a
mental health problem from the horrors of combat." (Observer,19
October)
THE
SAME DIFFERENCE
Amidst the
misguided euphoria about the election of a Democratic Party president
it is a sobering thought that whether there is a Republican or
Democratic legislation capitalism carries on as usual. "Although
there is a widespread belief that Wall Street prefers Republican
presidents, most studies show that the market has actually done
better under Democrats. Since 1901, the Standard & Poor's 500
index rose 7.2 percent a year on average under Democratic presidents
and 3.2 percent under Republicans, according to Ned Davis Research.
Looking at a more recent time period - 1944 through mid-2008 - the
S&P was up 10.7 percent a year on average with a Democrat in the
White House versus 8 percent with a Republican, according to
International Strategy & Investment." (San
Francisco Chronicle, 4
November) Changing the ruling party doesn't change the exploitation
system that is capitalism.
ANOTHER
MARKET GURU
Mr Brown blames the
unregulated stock dealers, Mr Cameron blames Mr Brown and socialists
blame the slump/boom cycle of capitalism, but here is someone with
yet another explanation. "From his base in India's financial
capital Mumbai, Raj Kumar Sharma has been tracking the turbulence in
the world stock markets and has come to one firm conclusion -- it was
written in the stars. As an astro-finance specialist, he has made a
career on predicting whether the Bombay Stock Exchange, Nasdaq, Dow
Jones or FTSE-100 will go up or down by studying favourable or
unfavourable planetary alignments. Where many blame banks
overstretching themselves or inadequate financial controls and
policy, Sharma sees a clash between fiery Saturn and its arch enemy
Leo as a key factor in the recent financial turmoil. ‘Leo is the
sign of the sun and the sun is the father in Indian astrology,’ he
told AFP. ‘But the son (Saturn) and his father (the sun) don't get
along, so whenever they are sitting in the same house together, they
always fight and create ill-will and danger in the market,’ he
said." (TIME.com,
16 October)
VATICAN
BONUSES
"The Vatican has
reintroduced a system of clocking in, nearly 50 years after it was
last phased out. Senior clerics will have to swipe plastic cards when
entering and leaving, all in a drive to improve time-keeping and
efficiency. ... Lay and ecclesiastical staff working in the tiny city
state, are now using the swipe cards. The cards have been issued to
everyone from the lowest office staff to the heads of departments,
even if they are priests and archbishops, though there has been no
mention if Pope Benedict XVI carries one. ...It is all part of a
drive to increase efficiency and to make the Vatican more
meritocratic. Next year there are plans to introduce
performance-related pay." (BBC
News, 3 November)
Capitalism is a social system that needs concepts like
"performance-related pay", but we wonder how it will
operate in the Vatican. One miracle equals how many euros? Two
visions equal more or less than one miracle? We foresee some
difficulties when disputes go to arbitration.

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