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PATENTS
AND PROFITS
"Poor
people are needlessly dying because drug companies and the
governments of rich countries are blocking the developing world from
obtaining affordable medicines, a report says today. Five years to
the day after the Doha declaration - a groundbreaking deal to give
poor countries access to cheap drugs - was signed at the World Trade
Organisation, Oxfam says things are worse. ... The US has pursued its
own free trade agreements with developing countries, tying them into
much tighter observance of patent rights than anticipated at Doha
‘The USA has also pressured countries for greater patent protection
through threats of trade sanctions’, the report says."
(Guardian, 14 November) The message is clear -
patents and
profits mean more than people inside capitalism.
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HOUSING
MADNESS
The
journalist Nick Cohen recently quoted a couple of property experts
about house prices in London. "Lulu Egerton of the Lane Fox
agency tells about putting a house in Chelsea on the market last week
for £4.5m. She assures me it wasn't a mansion, just a roomy
town house .... Within hours, she had an offer of £5.25 m. ...
I ask Mira Bar-Hillel, the property editor of London's Evening
Standard, if she has a favourite example of irrational
exuberance; an anecdote or statistic people will recall if a crash
comes ... She sighs and says : ‘Take your pick. I'm coming up with
them every week. Russian oligarchs who don't even ask the price of
the homes they view, the average price of a flat in central London
reaching £1m, garages selling for £150,000 and parking
spaces selling for £100,000.’" (Observer, 19
November) The prospects of a bus driver, clerk or railway worker
getting their feet on the so-called housing ladder at these prices is
extremely remote, but perhaps if they saved up they might be able to
unroll their sleeping bag in a highly desirable parking space.
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HOLLYWOOD
AND REALITY
We
are all aware of the Hollywood fantasy where happy families sit round
the dining table at Thanksgiving or Christmas time. It is all part of
the Hollywood "feel good" factor, but unfortunately it is a
complete fiction for many US families. "As America gets ready
for Thanksgiving dinner, a new report says hunger is on the rise in
New York City. One in six New Yorkers - roughly 1.256 million people
- could not afford to buy enough food, the New York City Coalition
Against Hunger reported yesterday, citing US Department of
Agriculture data from 2003 to 2005. The hungry population jumped
112,000 people in that period compared to 2000 - 2003." (New
York Metro, 22 November) If any Hollywood mogul is thinking of a
new treatment for the "feel good" element, how about Honey,
I Starved the Kids!
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LAND
OF THE FREE?
Home
of the brave and land of the free sing the proud American patriots,
but the reality is somewhat different. "A record 7 million
people - one in every 32 American adults - were in jail, on probation
or on parole by the end of last year, according to figures released
by US Justice Department yesterday. US prisons held 2.2 million
inmates, an increase of 2.6 per cent over the previous year. More
than 4.9 million adult men and women were on parole or probation, an
increase of 27,000 over the previous year." (Times, 1
December) Home of the brave we can understand but land of the free?
Difficult concept.
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GROWING
OLD DISGRACEFULLY
In
pre-property societies the old were valued as experienced hunters and
food gatherers. In such societies to be old was considered honourable
and they were respected and indeed venerated. The opposite applies in
modern capitalism. "The Help the Aged survey conducted by GfK
NOP, showed that 5 per cent, or 500,000 of those over 65 said that
they had to cut back on basic food to pay council tax bills. Eight
per cent, or 800,000, turned down their heating. More than a third of
people over 65 living on the lowest household incomes spent 10 per
cent on meeting the payments, the study showed." (Times,
2 December) Our grannies and grandads are suffering, what are you
going to do about it?
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ANOTHER
ASPECT OF GLOBALISATION
A
great deal of prominence has been given by the media to the amazing
development of capitalism in
India and much publicity to the growth
of industry and commerce within that country. There is one aspect of
this development that has received little attention and that is the
strains and problems that this development has meant to members of
the working class. "An estimated 4,000 students commit suicide
in India each year because of exam failure or fear of failure in a
society where there is intense pressure to succeed academically."
(Times, 2 December) Kids are killing themselves for
capitalism, it makes us feel sick, how about you?
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AND
ANOTHER
A
global study by the World Institute for Development Economic Research
of the United Nations has recently revealed how unequal a society
capitalism is today. "The richest 1% of adults in the world own
40% of the planet's wealth. ... The report found the richest 10% of
adults accounted for 85% of the world total of global assets. Half
the world's adult population, however, owned barely 10% of global
wealth." (Guardian, 6 December)
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