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Recruiting
Sergeant
"Bored with life on his family's South Carolina horse farm, Willard
McCormick decided that military service was the right plan for his
future. And when the Army dangled its new, $20,000 recruiting bonus in
front of him, the decision got a lot easier. ‘I wasn't going to go
right away, but I heard about the bonus and decided to jump on it,’
McCormick, 19, said a couple of days after signing up. ... Since the
bonus was unveiled in July, more than 6,200 recruits have signed up to
begin basic training before Oct. 1, a move that boosts end-of-fiscal
year recruiting numbers, Army officials said. ‘People are calling here
saying $20,000 is more than they've made in the past two years,’ said
Staff Sgt. Brent Feltner, 27, commander of a strip-mall recruiting
station in this central South Carolina town . . .The Army's offer
stands out to many in a state where the unemployment level is fourth
highest in the country, at 5.9 percent in July, up from 5.5 percent in
June. It was 6.2 percent in July a year ago." (Yahoo News, 1 September)
Poverty is still capitalism's most successful recruiting agent.
Ain't
Science Wonderful?

"Benefit claimants and job seekers could be
forced to take lie detector
tests as early as next year after an early review of a pilot scheme
exposed 126 benefit cheats in just three months, saving one local
authority £110,000 . . . The technology is being tested on
people claiming housing or council tax benefit but will be extended at
Harrow Jobcentre for other benefits this year . . . Experts in America,
where the most comprehensive scrutiny of the technology has taken
place, warn that the technology is far from failsafe. David Ashe, chief
deputy of the Virginia Board for Professional and Occupational
Regulation, said, 'The experience of being tested, or of claiming a
benefit and being told that your voice is being checked for lies, is
inherently stressful. Lie detector tests have a tendency to pass people
for whom deception is a way of life and fail those who are scrupulously
honest.’” (Observer, 2 September) We wonder if it would be possible to
ask members of the capitalist class if they think they deserve their
immense wealth while others starve, but what would be the point as the
expert said there is a tendency to pass those "for whom deception is a
way of life".
Bitter
Medicine
A recent review of the business world and ethics was somewhat critical
of the pharmaceutical industry. "There has been a number of scandals
including the disastrous ‘Elephant Men’ trial for new drug TGN 1412,
which caused massive immune reactions in six healthy volunteers.
TeGenero, the firm that developed the drug, went bust after the
catastrophe. GlaxoSmithKline has been embroiled in a scandal over
anti-depressant Seroxat: it has been accused of hiding critical data
showing the drug is linked to suicide in teenagers. GSK has also seen
millions of sales wiped out after its Avandia diabetes treatment was
linked to increased risk of heart attack and strokes." (Observer, 2
September) The truth is of course that capitalist business practice has
nothing to do with ethics and everything to do with profits.
Class
Divided Britain
Anyone with any doubts about the class division in Britain today should
look at the following. "Britain may appear to be a richer country than
a decade ago but the gap between the rich and poor has reached levels
not seen for more than 40 years. The highest earners are being dubbed
‘the new Victorians’ as they take an ever-greater slice of the wealth
pie, leaving mere employees and white-collar workers sharing the
crumbs. Government statistics show that the richest 10 per cent of the
population control more than half the wealth (53 per cent) of the
country, with the 1 per cent jet-set elite controlling no less than 21
per cent." (Independent, 2 September)
Expert
Wants Revolution
"A revolution of society on a scale never witnessed in peacetime is
needed if climate change is to be tackled successfully, the head of a
major business grouping has warned. Bjorn Stigson, the head of the
Geneva-based World Business Council for Sustainable Development
(WBCSD), predicted governments would be unable to reach agreement on a
framework for reducing carbon emissions at either a US-sponsored
meeting in Washington later this month or at a United Nations climate
summit in Indonesia in December.” (Financial Times, 7 September) Mr
Stigson may be on to something important here. Because capitalism
pollutes and destroys the planet maybe we need a revolution - a
complete transformation of society.
Debt-Laden
Workers
Behind all the advertiser's glib spiels about the consumer satisfaction
of buy, buy, buy lurks the nasty reality that many workers find
themselves in a nightmare of debt. "Record numbers are visiting the
Citizens Advice Bureau because their finances have spiralled out of
control. Debt is the most common reason for attending a CAB, overtaking
benefit problems. The charity said it had seen a 20 per cent rise in
those struggling with borrowing, handling 1.7 million cases last year.
Debt accounts for one in three of inquiries at the CAB, with advisers
in England and Wales dealing with more than 6,6000 such problems every
working day." (Daily Telegraph, 12 September)
Loads
Of Money
Millions of workers survive on less than $5 a day. What a contrast with
these parasites: "What price exclusivity? If you ask Lamborghini, one
million euros ($1.4 million) should do it — before tax, of course. In a
bid to add more prestige to what it already has, the Italian maker of
super luxury sports car unveiled the Reventon at Frankfurt's
international autoshow, a very limited edition car that looks more like
an arrow than anything on four wheels. With the six-figure price tag,
it is the most expensive car that it has ever built. Needless to say,
Lamborghini has already sold the 20 cars that it plans to build. ‘As
soon as the word got out, we sold out in four days,’ Chief Executive
Stephan Winkelmann told Reuters, adding that they could have easily
sold another 20." (Yahoo News, 12 September)

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