
“Socialism is Illogical and Irrational”
...Continued from previous page 14
“The idea is that the
rich countries should take the position, led by the World Bank, that
the problem of pollution is that the poor countries, the Third World,
don’t follow rational policies. ‘Rational’ means market policies. Many
of them are resource and raw material producers, energy producers, and
they sometimes try to use their own resources for their own
development. That’s irrational. That means that they are using
resources for themselves, often at below market rates, when there are
more efficient producers in the West who would use those resources more
efficiently. That’s interference with the market. Also, these Third
World countries often introduce some measures to protect their own
population from total devastation and starvation, and that’s an
interference with the market. It’s an interference with rational market
policies. The effect of this Third World irrationality is to increase
production in places where it shouldn’t be taking place, to increase
development where it shouldn’t be going on, and that causes pollution.
So if we could only convince those Third World countries to behave
rationally, that is, to give up all their resources to us and stop
protecting their own populations, that would reduce the pollution
problem. This document was produced with a straight face” (author’s
emphasis).
The same day on the same page of the New York Times there was another
unrelated article, reproduced from Economist magazine, about a World
Bank internal memo, written by the same Lawrence Summers, which had
leaked. The NYT included an interview with Summers in which he claimed
that the article was meant to be sarcastic. Chomsky commented:
“The World Bank memo added to what had been said in the article about
Third World irrationality. It said that any kind of production was
going to involve pollution. So what you have to do is do it as
rationally as possible, meaning with minimal cost. So suppose you have
a chemical factory producing carcinogenic gases that are going into the
environment. If we put the factory in Los Angeles, we can calculate the
number of people who will die of cancer in the next forty years. We can
even calculate the value of their lives in terms of income or whatever.
Suppose we put the factory in Sao Paulo or some even poorer area. Many
fewer people will die of cancer because they’ll die anyway of something
else, and besides, their lives aren’t worth as much by any rational
measure. So it makes sense to move all the polluting industries to
places where poor people die, not where rich people die. That’s on
simple economic grounds.”
Summers did point out in his memo that there might be some
counterarguments based on human rights and the right to a certain
quality of life. But he further points out that if we allow these
arguments to enter into our calculations, then just about everything
the World Bank does would be undermined.
In the fifteen years since that report there is plenty of
evidence of
its principle thrust, the export of hazardous production processes to
poorer areas of the world, in action. The same principle works in all
areas of production. Capital is international, it goes where the profit
is and in the process it undermines the position of the workers in the
areas it leaves behind opening them up to greater exploitation as wage
and benefit costs are driven down ready for whatever menial service
jobs may be introduced for some in the next stage of the capitalist
merry-go-round. Capital has no conscience and neither do those who
function at the higher levels of the system who benefit from it.
So, there you have it, on the one hand the rationality and logic of
free-market capitalism, a world devoid of humanity in every sense.
Corrupt, polluting and choking to death on the consequences of its own
greed and immorality. On the other hand you have the rationality and
logic of socialism, a world where humanity can thrive, where the
challenges of meeting the needs of every human being on the planet are
balanced against
the needs of the
planet. Where everyone, including
Mother Nature, has a voice and a place at the table, where there are no
weak and poor, where there are no needy, where there are no outsiders .
. . and no money. The choice is ours; we have to want change enough to
bring it about. We have to build socialist thinking one brick at a
time, spread the message one person at a time. Last November pundits
were predicting the “Perfect Storm” economic collapse scenario due to
the convergence of high oil prices and the credit crisis. Both of these
events were triggered by the logic and rationality of capitalist greed
and corruption; the first through an illegal attempted grab of
resources and the second through greed for the easy money to be made
out of sub-prime mortgages and the subsequent selling on of re-packaged
and concealed risk to other greedy “suckers”. In both instances the
capitalists are making vast fortunes or are being bailed out from the
“public purse”, screened from the consequences of their greed and
crimes. Some might feel that this “event” will provide a window of
opportunity where the masses will suddenly get the socialist message by
osmosis. Don’t hold your breath! Socialism is about spreading the
truth, about making socialists and only socialists can do that.
Socialism is logical, rational, pro-people, pro-environment, and above
all + pro-active.
Alan Fenn
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