Socialist Standard (est 1904)
Official journal of the Socialist Party a companion party of the World Socialist Movement
www.worldsocialism.org/spgb  100 years for socialism-> -> Standard Online->->Connecting with->-> socialists->-> worldwide       February 2005
Contents

Editorial

COVER STORY

Aftermath of the Tsunami:Querying "American Values in Action".
$350m for tsunami aid,.$150b for war in Iraq,just what aer the Whte House priorities?John Bissett examines US values in the global arena

Here 

FEATURES

Floods of Tears
 Here

A 'Free'Press
Is it really possible to have a free press in capitalism,or will the' independant' media always and inevitably dance to the tune of vested interests?Steve Trott investigates   Here

Reform ,Revolution and the Left
 
Most people can think of aspects of  capitalism that they'd like to change.Individual changes can theoreticallly be made,but does reformism work as an overall strategy for real change? Here

Should the Left consider Socialism?
Everybody's a socialist these days but only becaus the meaning has been taken out.Richard Montague looks at what's Left.  Here

A 'Socialist' Leader
Bertie Aherne calls himself the last 'socialist' in Irish politics,but the media don't take him seriously and neither argues,Kevin Cronin,should we.
Here
REGULARS
Editorial

Pathfinders Here

Red Snapper  Here
+ Newsflash

Cooking The Books 1...+
Cooking The Books 2...

Both on... ...Here

Reviews   
    Books Review  tv review 

Meetings...Here

50 Years Ago...Here

Greasy Pole...Here
Voice From The Back...Here
with Free Lunch

Editorial:
A Giant Wave

If there is one thing you can always rely on when major disasters strike, it
is that people will spontaneously respond with whatever they can afford to
give towards the relief of the survivors, irrespective of nationality, creed
or politics. That the efforts of governments so obviously followed the lead
of private individuals in this case tells you everything you need to know
about their political priorities. And even when governments publicly pledge
money, as Kofi Annan, the UN Secretary General, recently complained, there's
no guarantee they'll actually hand over the cash. Much of their 'generosity'
in any case simply involves waiving some of the crushing debt which their
control of international trade imposed on these countries in the first
place. While states eye each other warily to see what the others are going
to do, private individuals start collections without a second thought. While
public relations departments sit up at night figuring out how they can help
politicians milk the situation, some workers are on the plane at their own
expense to go where volunteers are needed. While governments are always
looking for the angle or the pitch, the lowly masses pitch in regardless.

How different are the attitudes of the rich from those of 'ordinary people'.
People who have never known wealth and never had money are always the first
to put their hands in their pockets when a cruel catastrophe slaughters
complete strangers. They are the only ones who put their interests to one
side and act instinctively, without once thinking of themselves, how they
'appear' and what they might get out of it. At times like this, common
humanity shows its true nature in a giant wave of decency, sympathy and
solidarity. How unlike our 'important people'. Politicians are furiously
striking the right self-conscious poses and taking the right media-savvy
positions, religious leaders wring their hands and try for the umpteenth
time to defend the indefensible, to square the impossible circle of disaster
and divine will, and rich celebs fall over each other to toss in a million
or so but never fail to do it in a blaze of publicity. When disaster is in
the public eye, these people can always be found eyeing the public. To us, a
wall of water is a terrible image. To them, it is merely a backdrop image
against which they maneuver to be viewed.

Now the giant wave of publicity has started to ebb and recede. 150,000 more
people in the region are severely threatened with water-borne diseases
including cholera and typhoid, but the world's media will have gone home
before that happens and the forgetfulness will set in. Meanwhile, elsewhere,
in the first two weeks since the tsunami struck, approximately 200,000
people have died, quietly and away from the cameras, of simple malnutrition
and water-related illnesses. And in the next two weeks, 200,000 more. And
again and again. It's the simple background noise of capitalism which passes
unnoticed and unremarked, the lapping of a vast ocean of misery on our
hardened consciousness. While the savagery of nature can wring our hearts
and empty our purses, the savagery of our social system barely raises an
eyebrow. Yet if there is anything positive that can be said about this
catastrophe it is that human beings are at heart a caring lot and that if
capitalism survives it is because of a lack of people's conviction in their
own abilities, and not a lack of depth in their compassion for others.