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Keep
It In The Family
The
Make Poverty History movement has been taken seriously by at least
one member of the African capitalist class.
"Most
of his country's citizens survive on less than 60p a day, but that
has not stopped the son of the President of
Equatorial
Guinea spending nearly £1 million on three luxury cars during a
massive shopping spree in South Africa.
Teodorin
Nguema Obiang, the Minister of Forestry, Environment and Housing in
his Father's Government, bought a black
Bentley
Arnage and a cream Bentley Mulliner worth £600,000 last
weekend.
He
then added a white six-litre Lamborghini worth £275,000 to his
new fleet, according to The Star newspaper." The Times (21 July). Mr
Obiang's
family have made poverty history - for their family at any rate. But
what about the working class in that country - 60p a day? We might
earn
about
£60 a day but the capitalist class in Britain enjoy the same
class differences. How many of you spend a million poundson a
shopping spree?
An
Honest Ambassador
President
Bush took the unprecedented step of appointing the US Ambassador to
the UN John Bolton during a recess of the US Senate. He deemed this
necessary
because
of an opposition easy to understand when you consider Bolton's
contempt for the UN. "In 1994, during a convention in New York,
Mr Bolton declared:
‘There
is no such thing as the United Nations. There is an international
community that occasionally can be led by the only real power left in
the world, and that's the United States, when it suits our interests
and who can get others to go along.’" He also said: "The
only question for the United States is what's in our interest. And if
you don't like
that,
I'm sorry, but that is a fact." The Times (2 August) There is
nothing remarkable about
this. It
correctly sums up the US position in world politics, but what the
Senate
object to is the honesty with which they are expressed. Politicians
are never fond of honesty, it sets a dangerous precedent!
Wage
Slaves
A
common objection to socialism is that people are too lazy and
wouldn't work thus making socialism impossible. This "lazy man"
objection to a new society doesn't seem to square with the findings
of a report prepared by the office supplier Esselte. "Nearly a
third of British wage slaves work more than 50 hours a week; 4 per
cent more than 70
hours;
and more than a third take work home according to a survey of 2,611
people." The Times (4
August)
Good
News From Uganda
Amidst
all the despair about world poverty we have managed to discover from
the letter page of an African newspaper some good news. "About
two thirds of the
world's
population are hungry, while millions die from starvation every year.
Why in a world of potential plenty, is so elementary a human need as
food neglected? ... The law that governs everywhere is "no
profit, no
production".
Uganda Observer (4
August) Yes, even in so-called backward Africa, workers are learning
that capitalism causes poverty.
A
Bleak Future
Despite
the well-meaning activities of the Make Poverty History campaign and
various promises from G8 the future looks grim for the poor in
Africa. "The proportion of malnourished people in sub-Sahara
Africa has remained at about 35% since 1970, the International Food
Policy Research Institute said. But population growth means the
number affected rose to 200 million by 2001. ... It warns that the
number of malnourished children could grow from 38.6 million now to
41.9 million by 2025." BBC
News (12 August) Well meaning charities are not the answer
to this horrendous social problem. As the socialist letter writer to
the Uganda Observer noted
"the law that governs
everywhere
is no profit no production".
What
is your view?
We
are socialists and obviously we detest a society where people are
forced to lie and cheat in order to survive, but what about
successful liars and cheaters who have done well inside capitalism?
Here is the PR Guru Max Clifford who has made millions lying and
cheating. "Do I say, No, my client isn't gay when I know that he
is? Of course. Does telling the truth matter? If it's
showbiz...rock'n'roll ... then absolutely not." The Times (16 August) It isn't
just show business though,
here is
Sir Harvey Jones a former chief executive of ICI commenting on modern
capitalism - "Business is getting more corrupt. It is less a
calling, less a profession. The stock market ... has purely become a
gambling den. The Times (15
August) These people have benefited from capitalism and yet can see
how corrupt it is. You haven't benefited at all, so why do you
support it?
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