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WHAT
IMMIGRATION PROBLEM?
The
US government has recently had a crack down on illegal immigration
and the French and British press have been full of the
problems of
immigration in those countries, but for one group there seems to be
no problem in settling in another country. “Seven of the wealthiest
billionaires living in Britain come from overseas, according to this
year’s Sunday
Times Rich List. Indian steel magnate Lakshmi Mittal comes
out on top with a fortune estimated by the newspaper at £14.8
bn. Roman Abramovich drops to second place, but the Russian oil
tycoon and Chelsea football club owner is reckoned to be worth
£7.5
bn.” (BBC NEWS,
3 April). So far none of the seven billionaires seem to be having any
trouble with housing, schools or social security and no one has
suggested passes or tagging for any of them.
NOT
SO BRIGHT
When
socialists attack the inequalities of capitalism we are often told by
its defenders that the owning class deserve their wealth because of
their hard work or superior intellect. No one could ever accuse Paris
Hilton of hard work, she recently celebrated her 21st birthday by
having 5 birthday parties in 5 different countries, attended by
thousands of friends. The rich tend to have more friends than the
poor. If she couldn’t be accused of hard work she certainly could
not be accused of possessing a grasp of world affairs. “The word
‘mother’ confused her, a friend of Paris Hilton explains the
hotel heiress’s request to meet Mother Teresa’s children in
preparation for playing the nun in a new film” (Observer,16
April).
PRIMITIVE
ACCUMULATION
In
recent months we have highlighted the process of the capitalist class
grabbing land and throwing off the previous occupants in India and
China. Now from Botswana comes another example of this “primitive
accumulation of capital” so well described by Karl Marx in Capital
in the 19th century. “Since 1997, more than 1,500 Gana and Gwi
Bushmen have been evicted from their homes in the Kalahari”
(Observer,
16 April). They have been found to be “primitive and a barrier to
progress” ever since De Beers took an interest in the area’s
diamonds. .
A
FISHY STORY
Russia,
Kazakhstan, Azerbaijan and Turkmenistan are in dispute with Iran in a
bitter controversy. What is it all about? Civil rights, nuclear
armament? No way. This is about caviar! “Iran may be increasingly
out of favour with the UK Security Council, but the UN Secretarial
for International Trade in Endangered Species gave the country the
thumbs up last week, when it gave Iran’s quota to export 44,000
kilos of caviar this year. Exports from the other countries have been
banned by the UN since January” (Times,
27 April). The price of caviar is currently £6,000 a kilo, so
the furore is easily understood. After all Russia alone caught 650
tonnes in 2001. Millions of thousands of hard currencies is more
important than war, poverty or civil rights to capitalist
governments.
DO-GOODERS
DO BADLY
“The
world is failing children by not ensuring they have enough to eat,
says the UN Children’s Fund (Unicef). It says the number of
children under five who are underweight has remained virtually
unchanged since 1990, despite a target to reduce the number affected.
Half of all the under-nourished children in the world live in South
Asia, Unicef reported. And it said poor nutrition contributes to
about 5.6 million child deaths per year, more than half the total”
(BBC NEWS, 1 May). Despite the efforts of Unicef and countless
well-meaning charities capitalism is still starving millions of
children to death every year.
A
DEPRESSING TALE
“Depression
is the biggest social problem in the UK, says Richard Lanyard, a
health economist who advises the Government on mental health. He
claims that 15 per cent of the population suffers from depression or
anxiety, and that the cost in lost productivity is about £17
billion” (Times, 2
May). It is typical of
capitalism
that not only does it drive us screwy, it can only see mental
ill-health as a productivity problem.
THE
AMERICAN NIGHTMARE
The
journalist Heather Stewart in her Letter
from Washington describes the contrast between the rich
and poor in what is described as the most affluent country in the
world. “Men in chinos and women with neat hair and brilliant white
teeth sip giant cappuccinos or chat animatedly into their cellphones.
...Look closer, though, and there are signs of another DC. Tired
looking black men stand on street corners holding out the same giant
coffee cups to collect coins. The
Washington Post details a horrific crime wave of
car-jacking and gunpoint robberies. Less than a mile from the
grandeur of the White House are neighbourhoods with all the
deprivation and social issues of the poorest inner cities”
(Observer,
23 April).
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