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HOW
THE OTHER TENTH LIVE
The
trial for fraud and tax avoidance of Lord Black threw up this insight
into the parasitical nature of the owning
class. "If only his
wife hadn't boasted about her extravagant lifestyle in an interview,
Lord Black's empire might still span three continents. It was to
readers of Vogue in 2002 that Barbara Ameil showed off the
size of her wardrobe, the racks of designer clothes inside, and
talked of how ‘her extravagance knows no bounds’. She confided:
‘It is always best to have two planes, because however well one
plans ahead, one always finds one in the wrong continent’”
(Times,10 March
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PRIMITIVE
ACCUMULATION OF CAPITAL
"At
least 11 people were killed and 39 injured yesterday when farmers in
eastern India, angered over government plans to build an industrial
park on their land, fought police with rocks, machetes and pickaxes.
The clashes broke out when police tried to enter villages in
Nandigram, West Bengal, where the government wants to build a
petrochemical plant and a shipyard. All those killed in the clashes
were farmers." (Times, 15 March) Away back in 1867 Karl
Marx was describing in Capital this capitalist process that he
called "the so-called primitive accumulation" in Europe
from the 16th century onwards. "The expropriation of the
agricultural producer, of the peasant, from the soil, is the basis of
the whole process."
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MIND
THE GAP
The
gulf between rich and poor under this Labour government has become so
great that even the capitalist class are
warning the government about
it. "Gordon Brown's closest ally in the City has warned that the
gap between rich and poor in Britain is now so deep that it threatens
to provoke 'violent reactions' in society. Sir Ronald Cohen, a
venture capitalist, also warned on the eve of Brown's last Budget
that the boom in the City was in danger of grinding to a halt. Asked
whether the huge wealth flooding to an elite group of City
professionals was disfiguring society, he agreed, adding: ‘I think
we're at the top of the cycle. I think the pendulum has swung too
far’”
(Observer, 18 March)
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ESCAPE(1)
The
Observer has a supplement each
week called "Escape", containing articles about various
holiday destinations, and, of course, many advertisements for
holidays. Why do they call it "Escape"? It is targeted at
all the people whose jobs are so boring or so stressful that they
feel they can stand it only
if they can get away for a short break in
the summer. And the enormous size of the holiday industry shows that
there are very many such people. But how can such a holiday be called
an "escape" when it is of strictly limited duration, and
all the holidaymakers know they will have to go back afterwards to
the very same conditions which made them long to "escape"
in the first place? "Escape" is clearly the wrong word.
Whoever heard of a daring escape from prison or a prisoner-of-war
camp, when the successful escapee celebrated his release by going
back in two weeks' time to the main gate and asking to be
re-admitted?
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ESCAPE(2)
The
previous item brings to mind the story that an old Glasgow speaker
was fond of telling from the outdoor platform. An Eastern potentate
was visiting a Glasgow factory when the lunch-time hooter sounded and
all the workers made a bee-line for the canteen. "Look out, sir.
Your slaves are escaping." "Don't worry, Omar. Wait 40
minutes." Sure enough 40 minutes later the hooter sounded and
the wage slaves streamed back into the factory. "Amazing",
cried the eastern visitor. "I must buy some of these magic
hooters."
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GETTING
THINGS DONE
Supporters
of the Labour Party are always telling socialists that while Labour
may not be socialists "at least they get things done". Here
is a recent example. "The number of children living in poverty
jumped by 100,000 last year, the Institute for Fiscal Studies said,
showing that the government is not on course to meet its target of
halving child poverty by 2010-11. In 2005-06, 2.8 million children
lived in poverty." (Times, 3 April) It would seem that
what is "getting done" is the working class in Britain.
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Socialist Party
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