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A
SOCIETY OF CONTRASTS
Everywhere
you look today the contradictions of capitalism become more and more
obvious. Great wealth alongside great poverty, starvation amidst
plenty and a technology that makes space travel possible yet is
unable to stop the destruction of war. Two recent examples of the
obscenity of capitalism leapt from the pages of the media recently.
"Caviar House & Prunier, on Piccadilly, has taken delivery
of the Almas, a rare golden caviar once reserved for the Tsars of
Russia. Despite the price - £920 for limited edition 50g tins -
the shop claims a four-year waiting list." (Times, 19
August) "The price of rat meat has quadrupled in Cambodia this
year as inflation has put other meat beyond the reach of poor people,
officials said on Wednesday. With consumer price inflation at 37
percent according to the latest central bank estimate, demand has
pushed a kilogram of rat meat up to around 5,000 riel (69 pence) from
1,200 riel last year." (Yahoo News, 27 August) Does this
system not disgust you? We must abolish it.
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MARX
AND MODERNITY
Away
back in 1867 Karl Marx in Das Capital explained how the
so-called primitive accumulation of capital was based on robbery and
murder. In Peru today a similar process is taking place. In Britain
we had the highland clearances and the enclosure acts, in Peru it is
the expulsion of the indigenous population. "Peru is considering
sending in the army to break up protests by Amazonian Indians who
claim the government is preparing a massive land grab in the
country's remote jungles. ... The government has responded to an
appeal for talks by declaring a state of emergency in three states
and threatening protesters with military action. "Indigenous
people are defending themselves against government aggression,"
said an Amazon Indian rights campaigner, Alberto Pizango. "This
is not an ordinary or everyday demonstration. The Indians have told
us they are not afraid. If the government declares a state of
emergency they prefer to die there and show that this government
violates human rights." Relations between indigenous groups and
the President Alan Garcia have become increasingly hostile as the
government has sought to exploit what are thought to be rich oil and
gas deposits in lands owned by Amazon Indians. Energy companies have
pushed deep into supposedly protected areas in the past year, leading
to clashes with some of the most remote tribal peoples left in the
world." (Independent, 21 August)
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US
GAP WIDENS
Socialists
often meet with the argument that while capitalism may have been a
terrible system in the past, with the awful gap between rich and
poor, today we are gradually improving things and such inequalities
no longer exists. So what do the anti-socialists make of these recent
statistics? "The rich-poor gap also widened with the nation's
top one percent now collecting 23 percent of total income, the
biggest disparity since 1928, according to the Economic Policy
Institute. One side statistic supplied by the IRS: there are now
47,000 Americans worth $20 million or more, an all-time high."
(San Francisco Chronicle, 2 September) Eighty years of reform
and now the gap is even wider.
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BEHIND
THE RHETORIC
Capitalist
statesmen often speak of high ideals like freedom and democracy but
behind the high-sounding rhetoric there is usually a harsh reality. A
recent example was the US vice-president's speech in Georgia.
“Speaking in Georgia on Thursday, Cheney slammed Russia's
"illegitimate, unilateral attempt" to redraw the country's
borders and promised ongoing support for Georgia's efforts to join
NATO. The Vice President's trip was accompanied by a $1 billion aid
package announced in Washington Wednesday, for the purpose of
rebuilding Georgia's shattered economy and infrastructure. Upon
arriving in Azerbaijan on Wednesday, Cheney told the people of that
country and their neighbors in Georgia and Ukraine that "the
United States has a deep and abiding interest in your well-being and
security”.” Fine words indeed, but behind them was a more sordid
reason than concern for the well-being of the Georgian citizens.
"Vice President Dick Cheney, on a tour of former Soviet
Republics, was working to shore up U.S. alliances in the wake of
Russia's military humiliation of Georgia - a mission whose outcome
could have profound consequences for Washington's efforts to maintain
and expand the flow of oil and natural gas to the West while
bypassing Russia. " (Time, 4 September)
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THE
INDIAN RUPEE TRICK
Many
Asian countries are depicted as "third-world" where an
undeveloped economy leaves millions starving, but here is an example
of an Indian capitalist who has learned the trick of exploiting
workers to make a fortune.” Vijay Mallya, the founder and chairman
of fast-growing Kingfisher Airlines, launched his first international
route yesterday linking Heathrow with India's IT capital Bangalore -
a daily service that puts the carrier in head-to-head competition
with BA. ...The father-of-three, ranked 476th in Fortune's list of
the world's wealthiest people, has 26 homes around the world and 260
vintage cars. He made his fortune as chairman of Indian drinks group
United Breweries, the Kingfisher-beer owner that last year acquired
Scotch whisky maker Whyte & Mackay for £595m." (Daily
Telegraph, 5 September)
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