MORE
PROFIT MEANS MORE HUNGER
"This
year global production of biofuels will consume almost 100 million
tons of grain – grain that could have been used to feed the
starving. According to the UN, it takes 232kg of corn to fill a
50-litre car tank with ethanol – enough to feed a child for a year.
The UN last week predicted ‘massacres’ unless the biofuel policy
is halted. Jean Ziegler, the UN's special rapporteur on the right to
food, said biofuels were ‘a crime against humanity’, and called
for a five-year moratorium." (Independent, 16 April) The
UN can issue all sorts of pious resolutions, but if is more
profitable to produce bio-fuels than food, then that is what
capitalism will do.
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THE
NAME IS BOND - CAPITALIST BOND
Capitalism
pervades everything in modern society. If you buy a football shirt it
will advertise a beer or a soft drink. Formula 1 car racing would be
impossible if advertising logos didn't cover every space on the cars
and the drivers. It is in the entertainment business though that this
pervasive influence is growing at an astonishing speed. "The
name is Bond, James Bond. And he likes his Martinis shaken, not
stirred. That is, as long as they are Smirnoff. Product placement is
playing an increasingly important role in Hollywood blockbusters. The
last Bond film bore a string of high-end sponsors, such as Omega,
Sony, Ford and Sony Ericsson. Television shows have also lured
advertisers, often preferring product placement or sponsorship over
traditional advertising. .. The expectation is that television
advertising will become more about the 30-minute sponsored
advertisement than the 30-second shot." (Times, 21 April)
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DIGNITY?
NO WAY
"Eight
out of 10 nurses say they have left work distressed because they have
been unable to treat patients with the dignity they deserve, a poll
suggests. The Royal College of Nursing (RCN) poll of more than 2,000
UK nurses cited washing and privacy as key issues." (BBC
News, 27 April) The NHS is provided for members of the working
class. They are the class that produce all the wealth of the world
but being poor can ill afford the best of housing, food or even
medical care. Dignity for the only worthwhile class in capitalist
society is an impossibility.
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THE
KILLER SYSTEM
Supporters
of capitalism claim that it is the most efficient way to run society,
but that is a claim that rings hollow to millions of hungry people
today, as even one of capitalism's stoutest supporters is forced to
admit. "Giant agribusinesses are enjoying soaring earnings and
profits out of the world food crisis which is driving millions of
people towards starvation, The Independent on Sunday can
reveal. And speculation is helping to drive the prices of basic
foodstuffs out of the reach of the hungry." (4 May)
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PRIMITIVE
ACCUMULATION
"In
the semi-arid forests of the Chaco region of Paraguay, where summer
temperatures top 40C (104F), the continent's last uncontacted Indians
outside of the Amazon basin are on the run, their traditional forest
home increasingly encroached upon by ranchers. ... These formerly
nomadic tribes people struggle to maintain a semblance of their
traditional way of life in camps on the edge of the agricultural
colonies that invaded their territory." (Times, 6 May)
This process called by Karl Marx the so-called primitive accumulation
of capital was dealt with him in his Das Kapital (1867)
mirrors what had happened in Europe at the beginning of capitalism.
"In actual history it is notorious that conquest, murder,
briefly force, play the great part ...As a matter of fact, the
methods of primitive accumulation are anything but idyllic." A
view echoed by one of the Indians in the Times: - "The
whites are violent. They just want land. We are afraid of them, they
are very aggressive."
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BUSINESS
AS USUAL
"Burma
is still exporting rice even as it tries to curb the influx of
international donations of food bound for the starving survivors of
the cyclone that killed up to 116,000 people. Sacks of rice destined
for Bangladesh were being loaded on to a ship at the Thilawa
container port at the mouth of the Yangon River at the end of last
week, even though Burma's ‘rice bowl’ region was devastated by
the deadly storm a week ago. The Burmese regime, which has a monopoly
on the country's rice exports, said it planned to meet all its
contractual commitments" (Observer, 11 May). Inside
capitalism business is business, and the fact that millions of
Burmese risk death by starvation is of no concern. That is how
capitalism operates. During the Irish potato famines foodstuffs were
still being exported from Ireland.
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