|
Letters
|
|
|
Extreme
views
Dear
Editors
I
was not impressed with your card handed to me on the march in
Edinburgh last month [July].
Your
connection Make Poverty History with Capitalism was in very bad taste
and I consider it a disgrace. I am aware of the shortcomings of the
present trading system and will continue to campaign for the aims of
the Trade Justice Movement of which I am a member locally. However I
do not want to be associated with your extreme views or the way you
carry out your activities.
PHIL
BARLOW, NOTTINGHAM
|
|
World
problems
Dear
Editors,
Many
problems are faced today most especially in economical and political
spheres of life. For instance, wars, workers’ strikes, corruption,
riots, and many others. These most happen in developing countries and
some few developed countries and the influence comes direct from
world powers.
The
selfish ideas of the world powers, being hidden by these powers, are
the root cause of the world atrocities in pretext that they are
fighting terrorism, ending colonialism, fighting dictatorship among
other decisive, political and economic selfish ideas.
It
is a great challenge for all socialists to pronounce and advocate for
socialist principles without fear or frustration from selfish
politicians so that we come to save the world from the ongoing
atrocities escalating from selfishness of those who only look for
ways of getting richer and richer at the expense of the majority.
JOSEPH
BALIKUDDEMBE, KAMPALA, Uganda.
|
|
|
Canned
laughter
Dear
Editors,
Some
people, including some socialists, used to get quite irritated about
the way that recorded laughter was inserted into, first radio, then
television, shows that went under the generic heading of comedy. But
we have slowly got used to this feature of modern life in capitalist
society. It is almost universal now. It is applied to quality comedy
and poor comedy; those with real audiences and those with no
possibility of an audience at all in the location of the action. Like
antidepressant drugs, canned laughter is prescribed for nearly
everybody. Because, let’s face it, much of the time, if you didn’t
laugh, you’d cry.
Many
aspects of living in this increasingly dysfunctional world society
are moving in the same direction. In Japan, as well as North America
and Europe shopping has become the diversionary avenue of seeking
feel-good factors. Clothes, to make us feel good about our
appearance; various types of car, to make us comfortable about our
status among our neighbours; health foods, to make us feel healthy;
exotic foods to make us feel opulent; gyms, to make us feel confident
or even superior about our physical fitness and sexual
attractiveness. Houses, gardens, kitchens, etc., etc. Our electronic
gadgetry, from mobile phones and digital cameras to MP3 recorders and
players, offer us more power to do things we hadn’t even thought of
and probably will never try.
The
planet is being pillaged, plundered and polluted to make commodities
for us to buy, partly because we need them and capital must have the
flow of profit, but increasingly in the effort to obliterate our
basic hunger for freedom, the one thing we cannot have. Like canned
laughter, the temporary lift we get from commodity gratification is
artificial, false. It hides a bad joke.
RON
COOK, WEST BROMWICH
|
|
|
Dear
Editors
Since January the Pathfinders page has been a valuable
addition to the
Socialist Standard. In discussing socialism
it recognises that we need to
be consciously working for
something, not simply against something.
In July I argued
against the idea that voting and democracy would be
significantly
advanced by means of new technology. After reading the
August
Pathfinders I realise that my questioning of new technology
developed within
capitalism goes deeper than that. It is a
matter of some interpretations of
scientific socialism focusing on
things and humanistic socialism (as I see
it) focusing on people.
Don't get me wrong - I'm not against scientific
socialism. I
just think that Pathfinders puts too much emphasis on things
and
not enough on people.
"If capitalism fed, clothed and
looked after its people in peace and without
coercion, socialism
would not be disproved but it would be unnecessary."
There is
no evidence that capitalism can be changed to adequately feed
and
clothe all the world's population without coercion.
So the idea that it
can do these things remains a doubtful
hypothesis. But even if capitalism
could change its spots in
the ways outlined, would that be the end of the
socialist campaign
for system change? I think not. Socialism is not
about
changes to capitalism - it is about replacing capitalism
with another
system. It is about a world society based on
giving and taking, not on
buying and selling.
". . .
the ability to micro-produce with minimal waste and distribution
costs
remains one of the most exciting innovations socialist
society could
possibly inherit." Pathfinders' fire is
obviously lit by socialist methods
of producing and distributing
things. My fire is lit by the prospect of
socialist
relations between people (which will, of course, lead to changes
in
production, distribution, and much else).
STAN
PARKER, LONDON N3.
|
|
|
|
This
One Will Run and Run
The news
that the 2012 Olympic Games had been awarded to London sent the Stock
Exchange Index up to a three-year high — the biggest gains in share
price were for a company that specialises in wiring sports stadia and
other landmark attractions. Clearly many companies hope for an
economic bonanza, especially those involved in construction and the
hotel industry. Staging the games may be enormously expensive, but
some firms at least will make an awful lot of money out of it. The
Olympics, after all, are only in passing about sport; they are also
about nationalism and, primarily, profits.
Only a
small part of the income will come from ticket sales — the
overwhelming majority is from the sale of broadcasting rights and
corporate sponsorship. So important is this last point that companies
who aren’t official sponsors are likely to be banned from
associating themselves with the games in any way (Evening Standard
7 July). The government will guide an Olympics Bill through
parliament, designed among other things to prevent ‘ambush
advertising’, where companies pass themselves off as somehow linked
to the games, whether as sponsors or not. However ludicrous this
sounds, it’s not unique. The 2003 cricket World Cup in South Africa
was sponsored by Pepsi, and spectators drinking Coca-Cola were
ejected from venues; moreover, this was sanctioned by new marketing
laws introduced by the government. (In No Logo Naomi Klein
mentions an American high school which held an official Coke Day with
lots of promotional activities, but where one student was suspended
for going to school in a T-shirt with a Pepsi logo.) At the 2000
Olympics in Sydney, companies had to pay to use any kind of Olympic
name or logo (including some that had been established for years
under the name of ‘Olympic’).
One of the
principles of capitalism is that ownership of something gives you
exclusive rights over its use, including whether, and how, you allow
others to have access to it. This applies not just to physical things
such as land, oil, rivers and factories but also to ideas and
inventions — hence the development of patents and protection for
‘intellectual property’, and the clamping down on counterfeit and
imitation goods. And, as we can now see, it also holds for particular
names and logos, and for advertising space.
The
International Olympic Committee jealously guards its control over the
Olympic name and advertising at the games venues. Companies who pay
hefty fees for sponsorship buy the ‘right’ to advertise and sell
their products, to the exclusion of any direct competitors. Just as
football stadia are now named after corporations and products such as
Reebok and Walkers’ Crisps, and clubs do their best to stop the
sale of bogus ‘official’ kit, so the Olympic ‘movement’ says
that only companies who stump up the money to them can gain any kudos
from the magic O-word and the five rings.
Naturally
money has long been talking the Olympic language with regard to the
2008 games in Beijing. Three levels of corporate involvement are
envisaged, including partners (cost $40 million), and sponsors (over
$20 million). Budweiser, for instance, is the official international
beer sponsor, giving its owners Anheuser-Busch the right to use the
2008 games logo for promotional purposes in China and many other
countries. And it’s not just a matter of getting money in for 2008.
In the words of one marketing expert, ‘The Beijing Olympics will
not be about sport, it will be about creating a superbrand called
“China”’
(http://www.chinabusinessreview.com/public/0501/ogilvy.html).
So as
China flexes its muscles in terms of currency revaluations and
provides financial support for Mugabe’s thuggish regime in
Zimbabwe, it also competes in staging the Olympic free-for-all and
marketing itself within world capitalism.
PB
|
To
contents Page 6
To
Socialist Party
Page
links
|
Page
1 
|
Page
2  |
Page
3  |
Page
4  |
Page
5  |
Page
6  |
Page
7  |
Page
8  |
Page
9  |
Page
10  |
Page
11  |
Page
12  |
Page
13  |
Page
14  |
Page
15  |
Page
16  |
Page
17  |
Page
18  |
Page
19  |
Page
20 
|
|
|