THE VOICE FROM THE BACK
Dont tell it like it is
Freedom of the press is regularly made a mockery of in Turkey, with the
connivance of the authorities, states the journalists' defence organisation, Reporters
Sans Frontières (RSF), in a report made public Thursday October 22. "Between January
and August 1998 two journalists have been killed as a result of police operations, five
have been tortured, fifty-eight attacked, menaced or harassed, and forty-five others have
been interrogated" states the report, which adds: "At least six journalists were
in prison for press offences at the end of September 1998." Le Monde, 24
October.
Onward Christian brokers
Christian workers have always felt out of step reconciling their
beliefs with the "hard sell" and "bonus envy" culture of the City. But
now, according to the Centre for Marketplace Theology, an independent Christian initiative
to bring the principles of God to the Square Mile, more Christian and non-Christian
traders, bankers accountants and lawyers are looking for an alternative to the City's
prevailing ethos of greed . . . Malcolm Matson, an entrepreneur . . . says, "It only
takes a couple of institutions to fail for people to start to take stock . . ." But
Matson is well aware of the City's resistance to a Christian message. In 1993 he was
elected as a City alderman on a platform of Christian reform but was
"blackballed" by the Corporation of London. "I ended up in the courts where
I won a judgement to show they were acting illegally." Independent on Sunday,
1 November.
Give that man a prize
"If food were distributed equally, the aggregate food availability
would indeed determine how much food each person could get. But obviously this does not
happen in any actual society. To decide whether a person will in fact be able to acquire
enough food, we have to see what he owns, what he can produce with what he owns, what he
can get in exchange, and so on. Starvation will result if a person is not able to
establish ownership through these means. Starvation is a social outcome reflecting an
entitlement failure. Availability of food is only one influence among many affecting that
outcome." So stated Amartya Sen in a BBC Radio 3 broadcast on 21 March 1989,
expressing a view that famines are not caused by a collapse in food production but by a
collapse in (some) people's legal access to food, whether through money to buy it or
through direct access to land to grow it, which he had already expressed in his 1982 book Poverty
and Deprivation: An Essay in Economic Entitlement and Deprivation. Sen has just
been awarded this year's Nobel Prize for Economics. So, for once, the prize has gone to
someone who has had something relevantandtrueto say.
EU-phemism
It's official! We no longer have any unemployed people in the EU. This,
at least, appeared to be the conclusion of a commission report on employment rates
published last week. According to the document, the Union's 18 million jobless are not out
of work, unemployed or even on the dole. They are merely "Unused labour stock".
So now you know. European Voice, 22-28 October 1998. Marx had a more expressive
phrase: "industrial reserve army".
Body snatchers
Kidnap is the big concern for large companies, says Paul Slaughter,
managing director of London-based Task International, which provides bodyguards for big
businesses. "Ransom demands worth millions of pounds go through Lloyd's insurance
market every year," he says, "but it is not common knowledge because companies
and insurers do not want to admit there is kidnap and extortion." During the last two
years there have been more than 12,500 known kidnaps. The average ransom demand is about
$1 million (£600,000). Financial Mail on Sunday, 1 November 1998.
What a gas!
The controversial police use of CS gas spray has come under fresh
attack after a detective had a heart attack in training . . . The detective constable, who
is in his early forties and has not been named was last night in a critical but stable
condition in hospital after the incident on Thursday. He had voluntarily walked through a
cloud of CS gas to experience its effects as part of a one-day training programme which
all police are require to take. Mail on Sunday, 25 October 1998.
Fin de capitalisme?
Pre-millennial tension is not, as is commonly thought, a fear of the
unknown. Instead, it's a fear of the knownthe dreadful, sinking suspicion that the
alien invasion won't come. This ideathat nothing will changeis as potent and
horrendous as any fin de siècle fantasy of cultural implosion. It means we'll be
marooned in the nineties. Imagine that! An eternity of pointless, non-committal cultural
air-kissing . . . We long for something to happen so badly that we dont care what it
is. Guardian, 19 November 1998.
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