THE
OBSCENITY OF CAPITALISM
The
columnist Richard Morrison, in an article mocking the ridiculous
prices paid for modern art, refers to Don Thompson's book The $12
Million Stuffed Shark and brings to notice the obscene wealth
enjoyed by a handful of billionaires. Remember we are dealing with
the social system of capitalism where many exist on a $1 a day. "He
looks at the buyers for ‘trophy’ art; billionaires such as the
American asset manager Steve Cohen, who bought the shark with what,
for him, was loose change (it would have taken him five days,
Thompson estimates, to have earned the $12 million price tag).”
(Times, 16 January) Overlooking the term "earned",
we are talking about someone whose income is over 2 million times
that of another. Doesn't capitalism make you sick?
|
|
NOT
SO PRIMITIVE
Daniel
Everett once was a missionary in Brazil dealing with so-called
primitive tribes, but his experience of the Piraha people made him
give up that calling to become a linguist. When asked how he had
changed his views he replied: "They lived so well without
religion and they were so happy. Also they did not believe what I was
saying because I did not have any evidence for it, and that made me
think. They would try so hard to understand what I was saying, but it
was utterly irrelevant to them. I began to think: what am I doing
here, giving them these 2000-year old concepts when everything of
value I can think of to communicate to them they already have?..."
(New Scientist, 19 January)
|
|
TOOTHLESS
WATCHDOG
The
sole purpose of capitalist society is to make profits, so we can
imagine the following report will come as no surprise to anyone who
knows anything about how it operates. "The government will be
publicly castigated this week over its failure to help poor people –
by the watchdog that ministers set up to monitor fuel poverty. Ofgem,
the energy regulator, will also be criticised for not stopping energy
companies from making excessive profits at the expense of consumers.
Peter Lehmann, chairman of the Fuel Poverty Advisory Group, will
criticise the government over its record on fuel poverty, which he
labelled 'incomprehensible, unjustifiable and shocking'. Consumers
now pay more than 50 per cent more on utility bills compared with
five years ago, yet energy companies' costs have risen by only a
fraction of this. In the past month, four of the biggest suppliers
have announced substantial rises in the price of gas and
electricity." (Observer, 3 February)
|
|
LOADED
BUT STUPID
We
are constantly being told by supporters of capitalism that the
extremely rich got that way because of their superior intellect. That
seems invalid thinking when we see how much the extremely rich will
pay for a stupid pointless motor car licence plate. "But nowhere
is the craze for a unique plate more intense than in the United Arab
Emirates, the oil-rich Persian Gulf nation that holds the world
record for the six most expensive plates. Here, it's all about how
low you can go -- with people battling it out at auctions to win the
chance to show off license plates with the lowest digit. The numbers
"5" and "7" have already been snapped up,
|
TRANSCENDENTAL
MATERIALISM
The
death of Maharishi Mahesh Yogi led to many newspapers rehashing the
stories about the Beatles contact with his Transcendental Meditation,
but it has transpired that his TM could have more properly stood for
Transcendental Materialism. It seemed the great man had sited his HQ
in a Dutch village for tax reasons. "As ever, the business-savvy
guru was ahead of the game: the big draw is a financial regime that
has made the Netherlands the EU's top tax shelter. Among those who
have set up holding companies there are Ikea, Nike, Coca-Cola and
Gucci." (Guardian, 7 February) Like many religious
leaders before him this guru told his followers not to be concerned
with the material things of life, but in practice was very shrewd
about the way capitalism operated.
|

|
ISSN 0037 8259
|
Produced and
published by the Socialist Party of Great Britain, 52 Clapham High
Street London SW4 7UN
|