I am not fond of 'labels', particularly political labels, they
tend to be far to generalized and invariably lump a wide range of
views under one label that is often cannot clearly define all the
views encompassed by the generality. After all does 'Liberal' define
all liberals or 'Conservative' cover all the various shades of grey
surrounding that 'label'? One label that has seen a massive (doubled
in the last year according to google) increase is ' neoliberalism', a
simpler description would seem to me to be 'greed' or more
specifically Corporate Greed with its closely associated Greed for
Power.
Graeme Decarie in The Decarie Report put it all in perspective
for me this week in that he says this is nothing new but simply a new
label for an old affliction.
Recently, they (the corporate aristocracy) have introduced a
new term to justify their vileness. It's called neo-liberalism.
It's a belief that the wealthy need to be free from any government
regulation or restraint, that humans are by nature competitive, and
that by giving complete freedom to that competitiveness we will all
become rich.
That is pure nonsense. There's nothing new about
neo-liberalism. It was neo-liberalism that was used by the old
aristocracy to plunder the world. Neo-liberalism made possible the
slaughter of native peoples in the U.S. and Latin America - and in
Canada. The only people it ever made rich were the neo-liberals. Even
now, as neoliberalism gathers speed in the west, the very wealthy are
getting richer while the rest of us get poorer. It can end only in a
general crash. But our new aristocrats are too stupid with greed to
think that far ahead.
As if that weren't a big enough crisis, we
have an added one. Those who tried to deal with the great depression
of the 1930s used the theories of Keynes who advised government
spending when private spending slowed down.
But that may not work
this time. It may not work because we're already making demands on
our resources - like oil, mines, food - that cannot be sustained.
Somehow, we need less growth, not more - but we still have to
meet human needs.
But, with the present power of the corporation
world there is no chance of concentrating on human needs. The
starvation of millions means nothing to them. The evidence of climate
change means nothing to them. Like the old aristocrats, these believe
themselves to be born superior beings to the rest of us. And, like
the old aristocrats, they are self-absorbed - and not very bright.
That last bit highlighted says it all for me, just like the
pyramid schemes designed to make the instigator rich at the expense
of those being sucked in later such things must by their very
definition collapse under their own weight and lack of new building
material (suckers). The whole idea that our economy can only survive
if it is ever expanding is no less a scheme that must eventually run
out of support from the bottom be it 'investors' or raw materials or
simply those who would (or could) purchase the goods and services
that keep the guys at the top happy in their corporate towers.
Call it neoliberalism if you like, I just call it greed and
unfortunately it is not limited to the corporate world, for those of
us the bottom of the heap many of the 'middle class' particularly the
unionized worker be it white or blue collar, but particularly the
public service crowd appear to be equally greedy. Everybody wants
more, more, more and in a world of finite resources seem to forget
that if they get more someone somewhere must pay for it and will have
less. less, less. Until we all decide we can do without all the
latest gadget, car, tool or toy (and the money to pay for them) and
are satisfied to just live with what we have then we are ALL part of
the problem IMHO.
Now, how much did YOU spend on non essentials over the last 30 days supporting that
ivory tower?
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Contact us at democracyunderfire@gmail.com
Contact us at democracyunderfire@gmail.com
Sunday, January 1, 2017
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3 comments:
Decarie is right, Rural. It's an old disease. The name may change, but what ails us is as old as Cain and Abel. Happy New Year to you and yours.
It really has all become a zero-sum game, hasn't it, Rural? Happy New Year!
Thanks guys, and a happy New Year to yourselves and all my readers.
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