Economic Aspects of "Love"

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Re: Economic Aspects of "Love"

Postby American Dream » Tue Oct 11, 2011 10:39 am

Published on Truthout
(http://www.truth-out.org)

Happy Genocide Day!

Monday 10 October 2011
by: Thom Hartmann,



"Gold is most excellent; gold constitutes treasure; and he who has it does all he wants in the world, and can even lift souls up to Paradise."

- Christopher Columbus, 1503 letter to the king and queen of Spain.


"Christopher Columbus not only opened the door to a New World, but also set an example for us all by showing what monumental feats can be accomplished through perseverance and faith."

- George H.W. Bush, 1989 speech


If you fly over the country of Haiti on the island of Hispaniola, the island on which Columbus landed, it looks like somebody took a blowtorch and burned away anything green. Even the ocean around the port capital of Port au Prince is choked for miles with the brown of human sewage and eroded topsoil. From the air, it looks like a lava flow spilling out into the sea.

The history of this small island is, in many ways, a microcosm for what's happening in the whole world.

When Columbus first landed on Hispaniola in 1492, virtually the entire island was covered by lush forest. The Taino "Indians" who loved there had an apparently idyllic life prior to Columbus, from the reports left to us by literate members of Columbus's crew such as Miguel Cuneo.

When Columbus and his crew arrived on their second visit to Hispaniola, however, they took captive about two thousand local villagers who had come out to greet them. Cuneo wrote: "When our caravels . . . where to leave for Spain, we gathered . . . one thousand six hundred male and female persons of those Indians, and these we embarked in our caravels on February 17, 1495 . . . For those who remained, we let it be known (to the Spaniards who manned the island's fort) in the vicinity that anyone who wanted to take some of them could do so, to the amount desired, which was done."

Cuneo further notes that he himself took a beautiful teenage Carib girl as his personal slave, a gift from Columbus himself, but that when he attempted to have sex with her, she "resisted with all her strength." So, in his own words, he "thrashed her mercilessly and raped her."

While Columbus once referred to the Taino Indians as cannibals, a story made up by Columbus - which is to this day still taught in some US schools - to help justify his slaughter and enslavement of these people. He wrote to the Spanish monarchs in 1493: "It is possible, with the name of the Holy Trinity, to sell all the slaves which it is possible to sell . . . Here there are so many of these slaves, and also brazilwood, that although they are living things they are as good as gold . . ."

Columbus and his men also used the Taino as sex slaves: it was a common reward for Columbus' men for him to present them with local women to rape. As he began exporting Taino as slaves to other parts of the world, the sex-slave trade became an important part of the business, as Columbus wrote to a friend in 1500: "A hundred castellanoes (a Spanish coin) are as easily obtained for a woman as for a farm, and it is very general and there are plenty of dealers who go about looking for girls; those from nine to ten (years old) are now in demand."

However, the Taino turned out not to be particularly good workers in the plantations that the Spaniards and later the French established on

Hispaniola: they resented their lands and children being taken, and attempted to fight back against the invaders. Since the Taino where obviously standing in the way of Spain's progress, Columbus sought to impose discipline on them. For even a minor offense, an Indian's nose or ear was cut off, se he could go back to his village to impress the people with the brutality the Spanish were capable of. Columbus attacked them with dogs, skewered them with pikes, and shot them.

Eventually, life for the Taino became so unbearable that, as Pedro de Cordoba wrote to King Ferdinand in a 1517 letter, "As a result of the sufferings and hard labor they endured, the Indians choose and have chosen suicide. Occasionally a hundred have committed mass suicide. The women, exhausted by labor, have shunned conception and childbirth . . . Many, when pregnant, have taken something to abort and have aborted. Others after delivery have killed their children with their own hands, so as not to leave them in such oppressive slavery."

Eventually, Columbus and later his brother Bartholomew Columbus who he left in charge of the island, simply resorted to wiping out the Taino altogether. Prior to Columbus' arrival, some scholars place the population of Haiti/Hispaniola (now at 16 million) at around 1.5 to 3 million people. By 1496, it was down to 1.1 million, according to a census done by Bartholomew Columbus. By 1516, the indigenous population was 12,000, and according to Las Casas (who were there) by 1542 fewer than 200 natives were alive. By 1555, every single one was dead.

This wasn't just the story of Hispaniola; the same has been done to indigenous peoples worldwide. Slavery, apartheid, and the entire concept of conservative Darwinian Economics, have been used to justify continued suffering by masses of human beings.

Dr. Jack Forbes, Professor of Native American Studies at the University of California at Davis and author of the brilliant book "Columbus and Other Cannibals," uses the Native American word "wétiko" (pronounced WET-ee-ko) to describe the collection of beliefs that would produce behavior like that of Columbus. "Wétiko" literally means "cannibal," and Forbes uses it quite intentionally to describe these standards of culture: we "eat" (consume) other humans by destroying them, destroying their lands, taking their natural resources, and consuming their life-force by enslaving them either physically or economically. The story of Columbus and the Taino is just one example.

We live in a culture that includes the principle that if somebody else has something we need, and they won't give it to us, and we have the means to kill them to get it, it's not unreasonable to go get it, using whatever force we need to.

In the United States, the first "Indian war" in New England was the "Pequot War of 1636," in which colonists surrounded the largest of the Pequot villages, set it afire as the sun began to rise, and then performed their duty: they shot everybody-men, women, children, and the elderly-who tried to escape. As Puritan colonist William Bradford described the scene: "It was a fearful sight to see them thus frying in the fire and the streams of blood quenching the same, and horrible was the stink and scent thereof; but the victory seemed a sweet sacrifice, and they [the colonists] gave praise therof to God, who had wrought so wonderfully . . ."

The Narragansetts, up to that point "friends" of the colonists, were so shocked by this example of European-style warfare that they refused further alliances with the whites. Captain John Underhill ridiculed the Narragansetts for their unwillingness to engage in genocide, saying Narragansett wars with other tribes were "more for pastime, than to conquer and subdue enemies."

In that, Underhill was correct: the Narragansett form of war, like that of most indigenous Older Culture peoples, and almost all Native American tribes, does not have extermination of the opponent as a goal. After all, neighbors are necessary to trade with, to maintain a strong gene pool through intermarriage, and to insure cultural diversity. Most tribes wouldn't even want the lands of others, because they would have concerns about violating or entering the sacred or spirit-filled areas of the other tribes. Even the killing of "enemies" is not most often the goal of tribal "wars": It's most often to fight to some pre-determined measure of "victory" such as seizing a staff, crossing a particular line, or the first wounding or surrender of the opponent.

This "wétiko" type of theft and warfare is practiced daily by farmers and ranchers worldwide against wolves, coyotes, insects, animals and trees of the rainforest; and against indigenous tribes living in the jungles and rainforests. It is our way of life. It comes out of our foundational cultural notions.

So it should not surprise us that with the doubling of the world's population over the past 37 years has come an explosion of violence and brutality, and as the United States runs low on oil, we are now fighting wars in oil-rich parts of the world. These are dimensions, after all, of our history, which we celebrate on Columbus Day. But if we wake up, and we help the world wake up, it need not be our future.
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Re: Economic Aspects of "Love"

Postby American Dream » Wed Oct 12, 2011 2:36 pm

Occupy Wall Street at the Hub of Global Hypocrisy

October 12, 2011

By Paul Street


The mostly youthful Occupy Wall Street (OWS) activists camped out in Zucotti Park in New York City’s financial district (and in other key locations across the United States) to protest the undue wealth and power of “the top 1 percent” have put their sleeping bags and tarpaulin tents at the heart of American hypocrisy. From one U.S. presidential administration to the next, the American political and intellectual class portrays the United States as noble champion and defender of freedom and democracy. Never mind Uncle Sam’s longstanding and continuing sponsorship of authoritarian regimes and structures across the planet, his arrogant maintenance of more than 1000 military bases in more than 100 “sovereign” nations, and his longstanding promotion and enforcement of a global neoliberal agenda that subordinates the common good of humanity to the interests of multinational corporate and financial elites. And never mind the related control of domestic U.S. politics and policy by “the unelected dictatorship or money,” which “vets the nominees of the Republican and Democratic parties, reducing the options available to U.S. citizens to two candidates, neither of whom can change the foreign or domestic priorities of the imperial U.S. regime” (Edward S. Herman and David Peterson). The hidden senate of concentrated wealth holds a many-sided, top-down grip on daily life, mass culture, politics and policy in the “homeland” of the nation that claims to be the global homeland and headquarters of popular governance. It’s the American version of plutocracy: government for and by the wealthy. The American sociologist William T. Robinson has correctly defined the reality of what passes for democracy in American foreign and domestic policy as polyarchy: “a system in which a small group actually rules and mass participation in decision-making is confined to leadership choice in elections carefully managed by competing elites."

Q1 How concentrated is wealth in the U.S.?

A. It’s quite remarkable. The United States is by far and away the most unequal and wealth-top-heavy nation in the industrialized world. Last August the “Public” Broadcasting System’s “News Hour” reported that the top 20 percent of Americans own 84 percent of the nation’s wealth. Four out of every 5 Americans are left to fight it out for just more than a sixth of the nation’s net worth. The bottom 40 percent of the U.S. has 0.3 percent of the nation’s wealth, basically nothing.

The PBS story understated the problem of wealth mal-distribution in the U.S. As of 2007, the leading wealth and power analyst G. William Domhoff notes, the top 10 percent owned 90 percent of American stocks, bonds, trust funds, and business equity, and more than three fourths of non-home real estate. “Since financial wealth is what counts as far as the control of income-producing assets,” Domhoff observes, “we can say that just 10% of the people own the United States of America.”

The top 1 percent – the top one hundredth – owned more than a third (34 percent) of the all the nation’s privately held wealth, including 43 percent of the nation’s financial net worth, 38.3 percent of all privately held stock, 61 percent of financial securities, and 62 percent of business equity. It possesses more net worth than the bottom 90 percent, which owns just 29 percent of the nation's private wealth.

The really super-rich are found in the top thousandth. In 2007, the top thousandth received 6 percent of all U.S. income. The top five hundredth – the upper 0.2 percent, with incomes of $1 million or more – got 13 percent of all U.S. income. The top 400 “earners” averaged $344.8 million per person.

Last year, by sharp contrast the quantity of Americans found to be living in officially defined poverty was the largest number in the 52 years for which poverty estimates have been published: 46 million. It should be noted that the federal U.S. poverty level (based on an arcane formula: the minimum adequate cost of food multiplied three times) is an open joke amongst serious poverty researchers: try to maintain a family of four at the official poverty threshold of $21,954 in any major U.S. metropolitan area today. Also important to observe is the fact many millions of the officially poor live in what those researchers call “deep poverty” – at less than half that level. A record-setting 19 million Americans were mired in deep poverty in 2009.

This wealth pyramid has become steeper and its poverty base wider since 2007, thanks to the Great Recession that began at the end of that year. The collapse of home values beginning in 2006 and the epidemic of foreclosures since particularly hit the net worth of the middle and working classes, whose wealth possession is far more tied up in home ownership than in financial assets when compared to the rich. From 2005 to 2009, a Pew Research Center study shows, inflation-adjusted median wealth plunged two-thirds among Hispanic households and 53 percent among black households, compared with just 16% for white households, leading to an expansion of the black-white median household wealth gap to 5 black cents on the white dollar – yes, 5 black cents for every white dollar. Millions have been thrown out of work by the epic capitalist slump, fueling destitution across the land.

Q2. So what? Why does this remarkable economic inequality and wealth concentration matter?

It ruins lives and offends basic moral sensibilities. Poverty cripples, wrecks, and shortens human experience, generating incalculable misery and despair. Poverty for many millions (billions on a global scale) alongside grotesque opulence for a comparatively tiny aristocracy that generates and profits from that misery (see below) adds egregious insult to that injury. It is a slap in the face of basic human fairness and decency, which recoils at the notion that one group is somehow entitled to prosper, accumulate, thrive, and luxuriate while another group is cursed to struggle, sicken, and waste away. As the old working-class folk song “The World Turned Upside Down” runs:

‘The sin of property we do disdain
The rich they have no right and sell the Earth for private gain
By theft and murder that’s how they took the land
Now everywhere the walls spring up at their command
They make the laws to chain us well
Their clergy praise us to heaven while they damn us down to Hell
We will not worship the God they serve
Who feeds the rich while poor folks starve
…You poor take courage, You rich take care
The Earth was made a common treasury for all to share’


Morally offensive in and of itself, such extreme inequality undermines the economic health of any nation in which it exists by restricting effective market demand for goods and services. It’s a vicious “Keynesian” circle. Vast swaths of that nation’s population cannot afford to purchase goods and services to the degree required for the investor class to put everyone to work.

Inadequate effective demand is hardly the only or even necessarily the main cause of modern capitalism’s recurrent crises and bouts of mass unemployment, but it is generally a significant contributing factor. Since non-affluent people spend a considerably higher portion of their income than do the rich, the best way to re-spark demand is to put more money and purchasing power in the hands of the ordinary Many, not the wealthy Few.

Equally or more important, inequality on the current savage U.S. scale makes functioning democracy impossible. Economic wealth and political power are dialectically entwined. As Domhoff explains:

“Wealth can be seen as a ‘resource’ that is very useful in exercising power. That's obvious when we think of donations to political parties, payments to lobbyists, and grants to experts who are employed to think up new policies beneficial to the wealthy. Wealth also can be useful in shaping the general social environment to the benefit of the wealthy, whether through hiring public relations firms or donating money for universities, museums, music halls, and art galleries….certain kinds of wealth, such as stock ownership, can be used to control corporations, which of course have a major impact on how the society functions. … [and] just as wealth can lead to power, so too can power lead to wealth. Those who control a government can use their position to feather their own nests, whether that means a favorable land deal for relatives at the local level or a huge federal government contract for a new corporation run by friends who will hire you when you leave government.” (G.W. Domhoff, “WhoRulesAmerica.Net” at http://sociology.ucsc.edu/whorulesamerica/). Domhoff could have more directly highlighted media ownership – a critical, reality-framing, populace-deadening, and mass “consent-manufacturing” asset of the rich.

When these processes of elite domination are seen against the background of extreme wealth concentration in the U.S., the shocking disconnect between majority progressive public opinion on numerous key policy issues and the regressive reality of policy on those and other issues becomes un-mysterious. So what if most Americans believe that job creation should be a bigger government priority than deficit reduction, that social protections should be expanded (not contracted), that the rich are under-taxed, that wealth inequality and poverty are the nation’s leading moral issues, that big business and the wealthy exercise far too much influence over government, that government dollars should be significantly transferred from military to social programs, the corporations exercise too much influence in America, that Social Security and Medicare benefits should be protected and expanded, and that public sector workers deserve and require full collective bargaining rights? None of this sort of longstanding majority progressive opinion ever seems to matter in the U.S., where, as the American philosopher John Dewey noted more than a century ago, “politics is the shadow cast on society by big business.”

Welcome to America’s gaping “democratic deficit,” a significantly greater problem than the nation’s much bemoaned and overplayed financial deficit. As Noam Chomsky recently noted, “Since the 1970s, [Dewey’s] shadow has become a dark cloud enveloping society and the political system. Corporate power, by now largely financial capital, has reached the point that both political organizations, which now barely resemble traditional parties, are far to the right of the population on the major issues under debate.” (N.Chomsky, “American Decline: Causes and Consequences,” Alakhbar English, August 24, 2011).

The recent history of politics and policy in the Age of Obama provides a telling case study. Millions of hopeful liberals and lefties thought that the ascendancy of nominal Democrat Barack Obama and Democratic Party majorities in both houses of Congress would combine with popular anger to create a wave of progressive policies on behalf of the common good and the working majority over and against the aforementioned unelected dictatorship. Consistent with Obama’s longstanding neoliberal and pseudo-progressive “business liberalism” (Kevin Baker) and with the record-setting corporate and Wall Street campaign contributions Obama received in 2007 and 2008, however, the Obama administration has been a great monument to the old French saying plus ca change plus c’est la meme chose (the more things change the more they stay the same). With its stupendous escalation of the bailout of hyper-opulent financial overlords, its refusal to nationalize and cut down the parasitic “too-big [too powerful]-to-fail” financial institutions that paralyzed the economy, its passage of a health reform bill that only the big insurance and drug companies could love (consistent with Rahm Emmanuel’s advice to the president: “ignore the progressives”), its cutting of an auto bailout deal that rewarded capital flight and raided union pension funds, its undermining of serious global carbon emission reduction at Copenhagen, its refusal to advance serious public works programs (green or otherwise), its green-lighting and reckless offshore drilling and numerous other dangerous anti-environmental practices, its cold disregarding of promises to labor and other popular constituencies, and other betrayals of its “progressive base” (the other side of the coin of promises kept to its corporate sponsors), the “change” and “hope” Obama presidency helped give Americans what the liberal left journalist Bill Greider aptly called “a blunt lesson about power, who has it and who doesn’t. They [have] watched Washington run to rescue the very financial interests that caused the catastrophe. They [have] learned that government has plenty of money to spend when the right people want it.” Along the way, arch-plutocratic Republican and hard-right corporate elites like Charles and David Koch and Dick Armey gained the cooperation of the dominant corporate mass media in the creation of a fake-“grassroots” “protest” “movement” called “the Tea Party.” Claiming in full Orwellian absurdity that the deeply conservative state- capitalist Obama was advancing a “socialist” and “radical left” program meant to bring about the downward distribution of wealth, this reactionary Astroturf “movement” wrapped a rancid version of the right wing business agenda in the false rebel’s clothing of the common people and popular insurgency. It helped the Democrats and Republicans tilt yet further right, leading to the surreal debt-ceiling crisis of July and August 2011 – a plutocratic spectacle that disgusted and scared the majority populace.

The ever harsher money-fueled rightward drift of U.S. politics is furthered by Citizens United v. Federal Election Commission, 558 U.S. (2010), a landmark decision in which the United States Supreme Court held that the First Amendment protects unlimited and anonymous corporate funding of independent political broadcasts in candidate elections.

Dewey’s shadow and Chomsky’s dark cloud now threaten the very existence of the human race. That the continued power of the moneyed elite – the “1 percent” that OWS activists target or the top tenth that Domhoff highlights – will lead to the destruction of a natural environment fit for humanity (and other living things) is becoming more and more apparent every day. I will return to this topic all too briefly at the end of this Q and A.


Q3. Do most Americans know about the depth and degree of American inequality?

A. No, they do not. As business professor Michael Norton and psychologist Dan Ariely show in a recent study, most Americans think that ideal distribution would be one in which the top 20 percent owned between 30 and 40 percent of the privately held wealth and the bottom 40 percent had between 25 and 30 percent. That’s the “good news” on mass inequality perceptions (though many of us on the left, me included, see no just basis for any but the smallest disparities in wealth and income). The bad news is that most Americans have no idea what’s really going on when it comes to the actual distribution of wealth in the U.S. When shown three pie charts representing possible wealth distributions, more than 90 percent of 5,522 respondents – regardless of gender, age, income level, or party affiliation – thought U.S. wealth distribution most resembled one in which the top 20 percent possesses 60 percent of the wealth. Most people in the survey guessed that that the bottom 40 percent had between 8 and 10 percent (Norton and Ariely, “Building a Better America One Wealth Quintile at a Time,” Perspectives on Psychological Science, 2010).



Q4. Why are most Americans Uninformed on the Level of U.S. Inequality?

A. Here we confront a viciously circular fact of ruling class power. The top 1 percent owns the major mass media that millions rely on for information about the world they inhabit. The wealthy Few are hardly eager to see the citizenry accurately informed about the distribution of wealth and hence power in the U.S. As a result, the problem of extreme wealth concentration and its negative, even deadly consequences does not receive serious and sustained treatment by the five giant media conglomerates that own more than half the nation’s media print and electronic. (The aforementioned “News Hour” story on wealth inequality was something of an anomaly, crafted for “P”BS’ relatively affluent audience in connection with wild stock market volatility last August). People who seek to substantively expose and resist wealth inequality and the power of the top 1 percent are predictably marginalized, under-reported, deleted, and mocked as frivolous and lacking serious proposals or alternatives in “mainstream” media. (This is largely true of the corporate media’s coverage and commentary of OWS and its offshoots). With relatively few exceptions, moreover, the nation’s intellectual and ideological classes beyond the media – professors, teachers, ministers, academic and school administrators, book publishing executives, chain bookstore purchasers and marketers, public relations managers, personnel managers, non-profit chiefs and the like – are unwilling to help expose or resist the depth of disparity. This reflects their privileged status (generally near or close to the top quintile) [1], the deeply conservative and mind-disciplining nature of the dominant patterns of discourse and conduct in their professions, and their sense of dependence on the good will of the really rich. It also reflects deep cowardice and moral failure. Such cowardice is endemic among major party political candidates and office holders, who (with very rare partial exceptions like U.S. Senator Bernie Sanders – I, VT) are loathe to buck the “hidden primary of wealth” (the moneyed class’s hegemony over electoral outcomes through campaign contributions and many other means) in seeking and keeping elective office.

A great task and potential contribution of the Occupy Wall Street (OWS) and its offshoots is educational – to spread knowledge and appropriate anger over the longstanding and deepening takeover of American society and government by the very rich.



Q5. But Didn’t the Rich “Earn” Their Wealth with Hard Work…and Don’t They Therefore Deserve to Do Whatever They Want With that “Private” Wealth?

A. This is what the Republican presidential candidate (and former Godfathers’ Pizza CEO) Herman Cain wants us to believe when he says the following when asked about OWS: “Don’t blame Wall Street. Don’t blame the banks. If you don’t have a job and you are not rich, blame yourself.” Shame on you, lazy lumpen-proletarian! You didn’t work hard like Cain or like, say, JP Morgan Chase’s CEO Jamie Dimon, who has an estimated net worth of $200 million. So go get a job, work hard…and get rich, like Jamie Dimon.

Mass ignorance aside, plutocrats also rely on powerful myths to lend the pretence of justification to America’s spectacular economic inequality. One especially significant fairy tale in their arsenal of mystification holds that the rich deserve their wealth because they “earned” it on their own and that it is therefore “none of anybody else’s business” what they do with the riches they obtained because of their own special talents and efforts. It is “robbery,” then, to tax the 1 percent’s wealth and “give it someone else.”

This longstanding fable of the elite is so full of holes it is hard to know where to begin in tearing it apart. In terms of the egregious negative and (I would have to now say) deadly (in light of current environmental trends) and fundamentally public consequences that current “private” wealth inequality hold for American “democracy” and social experience more broadly, it really doesn’t matter if the rich worked hard or well for their wealth. It is very much “our business” what they do or don’t do with their fortunes either way. A moneyed class that poisons the air and water, rapes the land, drowns morality and human solidarity in “the icy waters of egotistical calculation,” resolves “personal worth into exchange value” (Marx and Engels, 1848) and ruins livelihoods (and hence lives) is no less toxic and sociopathic if its members had once individually worked their ways from the lower classes into the financial aristocracy like characters in a Horatio Alger novel.[2]

In fact, however, the wealthy classes are loaded with people who are rich independent of any special effort or skill on their part due to the simple fact of inheritance. The passing on of net worth and connections and other benefits (like legacy admissions to elite Ivy League schools) across generations covers up the stupidity, decrepitude, and/or laziness of many rich people. They offer stupendous advantages to more able and/or energetic elites who profit from the fact that success in the contemporary and future market depends significantly on how much accumulated economic, social, and political capital you bring to that market from the past. Bad behavior and poor skills have little negative economic impact on those born into wealth; they stay rich regardless, just as most born into the lower and working classes remain there regardless of how hard, honestly, and skillfully they toil. There is very little downward generational mobility out of the elite and into the middle and lower classes and (contrary to the Horatio Alger narrative) there is extremely little upward mobility into the upper class from the lower and working classes. The nation is now loaded with young, middle-aged, and senior people who complain with good reason that they “done everything [they] were supposed to, played by all the rules, worked hard, got educations, saved what money they could, invested modestly in homes and retirement, and now – thanks to the machinations of the supposedly superior and more hard-working and thrifty rich – have “nothing to show for it.”

But even in cases of remarkable first-generation ascendancy from the working or middle class into the wealthy elite (without the benefit of sizeable inheritance), moreover, the notion that the rich “earn” their fortunes on their own is fundamentally false. As the U.S. ultra-billionaire investor Warren Buffett has acknowledged more than once, people can accumulate large amounts of money only when they live under rare social circumstances that are favorable to such gain. They hardly create those circumstances by themselves like some sort of mythical Robinson Crusoe. Society, Buffett admits, is responsible for his wealth. “If you stick me down in the middle of Bangladesh or Peru,” he once said, “you’ll find out how much my [special talent for smelling market opportunities] is going to produce in the wrong kind of soil.”

The Nobel Prize-winning economist and social scientist Herbert Simon has estimated that “social capital” is responsible for at least 90 percent of the income that people receive in rich nations. By social capital, Simon means not only natural resources but also technology, organizational skills, and “good [wealth-friendly] government.” “On moral grounds,” Simon added, “we could argue for a flat income tax of 90 percent.”



Q6. But isn’t it worse than just the modern social context enabling fortunes for a few? Don’t the rich extract wealth from – exploit – others, society as a whole?

A. Yes! Simon and Buffett unsurprisingly understate the case for confiscatory taxation of the rich. The wealthy do not simply benefit from society; they accumulate fortunes at the expense of it. They profit: from mass unemployment’s depressive impact on wages, which cuts their labor costs; from regressive tax cuts and loopholes, which increase their wealth while shutting down social services for the poor; from the cutting and undermining of environment regulations, which reduce their business costs while spoiling livable ecology; from wars and giant military budgets that feed the bottom lines of high tech “defense” corporations they own, kill and cripple millions and steal money from potential investment in social uplift; from a hyper-commercialized mass consumer culture that despoils the environment while reducing human worth to monetary value and destroying peoples’ capacity for critical thought; from deals with corrupt dictators who provide natural resources at cheap prices while depressing wages and crushing democracy in “developing countries;” from the closing down of livable wage job in the U.S. and the export of employment to repressive and low-wage peripheries; from a health care system that privileges the profits of giant insurance and drug companies over the well being of ordinary people; from exorbitant credit card interests rates that lead to millions of bankruptcies each year; from predatory lending practices that spread and perpetuate poverty and foreclosure; from agricultural and trade practices that destroy sustainable local and region food cultivation and distribution practices at home and abroad; from the imposition of overly long working hours that keep employee compensation levels down while helping maintain a large number of unemployed workers; from exorbitant public business subsidies and taxpayer incentives and bailouts out to the rich that are paid out to the rich at the expense of the rest; and from….well, the list goes on and on. As the left political scientist David McNally notes, profits have been restored in the wake of the 2008 financial crisis “largely because working class people have paid for them, through layoffs, wage cuts, reduced work hours, and the decimation of social services. In the words of a poor rebel in Shakespeare’s Coriolanus,” McNally observes, ‘our misery’ is the source ‘their abundance; our sufferance is a gain to them.’”

The rich, it should be recalled, are capitalists for the most part. And under modern marketplace and corporate capitalism, generator of contemporary fortunes, the wealth of the Few is more than just coincidentally related to the comparative impoverishment of the Many. Indeed, the exploitation of the latter by the former is the essence of what passes for reasonable and normal economic activity under the norms of the capitalist system. . Most of us engage with the market (primarily by renting out our core human capacity for work to more privileged others) to survive, to purchase simple use values that make life possible. Capitalists are very different. They care about nothing but exchange value and profit and engage the market to exploit the world and its people. There would be no point in their investment without exploitation. There would be no point in paying us wages and salaries without surplus value – extra labor value going to them beyond the commodity price of our labor power. When profit and its critical ingredient surplus value are deemed unattainable, they toss us into the gutter where, as members of the reserve army of labor, we help them bid down the commodity value of the labor

Q7. But don’t the rich have to get richer so that the rest of us can prosper, so that growth can “trickle down” to the rest of us?

A. No. Another great fable that serves the rich and powerful holds that making rich people richer makes the rest of us richer. It’s called, yes, “trickle down economics.” It is rich people, the argument runs, who smell out market opportunities and exploit them in ways that create wealth for the rest of us. Like it or not, poor people can become more well off in the long run only my making the already opulent yet filthier rich. When you give the wealthy Few a bigger slice of the pie, the pieces given to others shrink in the short term. In the long run, however, the poor benefit. They get bigger absolute slices because the rich expand the size of the piece through investment of the wealth granted to them by smart policymakers who get it that “populist” taxation of the rich to spread the wealth more equitably is “dysfunctional” – a drag on economic expansion.

As the clever liberal Cambridge (UK) economist Ha Joon Chang notes in his recent bestselling book 23 Things They Don’t Tell You About Capitalism (2010), recent economic history does not support the “trickle down” thesis. “Despite the usual dichotomy of ‘growth-enhancing pro-rich policy’ and ‘growth-reducing pro-poor policy,’” Chang observes, “pro-rich policies have failed to accelerate growth in the last three decades.” Thirty-plus years of “free market” policies that have given the rich an ever larger slice of wealth and income have only generated slow growth (the world economy’s growth rate fell from more than 3 percent in the Keynesian 1960s and 1970s to 1.4 percent in the neoliberal, “free market” years since 1980) and persistent high levels of structural unemployment within and beyond the rich nations.

“Trickle down” leading to increased jobs does not happen without the intervention of public mechanisms and institutions to compel the rich to take their increased wealth and invest in job-creating activities –mechanisms that have been assaulted and undermined by concentrated corporate and financial wealth and its political agents in the neoliberal era. Without such mechanisms there is nothing to prevent the rich from spending on their own luxury “needs” and using their surplus in other ways that do nothing to create jobs. As numerous media reported after Barack Obama agreed to extend George W. Bush’s deficit-fueling tax cuts for the wealthy last January, many leading U.S. companies have been sitting on capital and storing up liquidity like never before in the wake of the financial collapse. Firms who no longer believe they can borrow quickly have decided to keep a lot more cash on hand for precautionary purposes. At the same time, low interest rates produced by the Great Recession created an incentive for many firms to simply “exploit the spread between a zero funds rate and rates on Treasury bonds.” This permits corporations to “mark profits without selling much or hiring anyone.” (Michael Powell, “Profits Are Booming, Why Aren’t Jobs?” NYT, January 8, 2011).

Some big American firms have shown higher profits because their competition has faded. Following the financial collapse of 2008, for example, the financial giants Goldman Sachs and Morgan Chase no longer have to compete with Bear Stearns, Lehman Bros. and Merrill Lynch. Many jobs disappeared with the collapse of the defeated behemoths, of course.

And then there’s the simple fact that a large “reserve army” (Karl Marx) of unemployed workers is a great profits boon to corporate American in its ongoing top down class war on workers’ income and security. As Desmond Lachman, a former managing director at Salomon Smith Barney who serves as a “scholar” at the influential right-wing American Enterprise Institute, told the Times last January, “Corporations,” are taking huge advantage of the slack in the labor market — they are in a very strong position and workers are in a very weak position. They are using that bargaining power to cut benefits and wages, and to shorten hours.” (Powell, “Profits Are Booming”).

Sharing out wealth and income more equitably would do more to create employment. “In an economic downturn,” Chang notes, “the best way to boost the economy is to redistribute wealth downward, as poorer people tend to spend a higher portion of their incomes. The economy-boosting effect of the extra billion dollars given to the lower-income households through increased welfare spending will be bigger than the same amount given to the rich through tax cuts.” Give ordinary folks more money and they quickly buy necessities, stimulating the economy. Extra money for the rich funds numerous activities that have little stimulus effect and some that are quite contrary to the growth and wages promised: mergers and acquisitions that actually cut jobs, storage of surplus wealth in off-shore tax havens, the hiring of management consultants who advise on how to shrink payrolls and eliminate unions; the hiring of lobbyists who push for cutting public sector programs, jobs, and unions; the hording of cash reserves; the purchase of sophisticated financial instruments that cannibalize the economy; numerous other forms of parasitism that “mark profits without hiring anyone;” the purchase of back-stocked luxury items.

A telling daily New York Times was printed at the height of last summer’s elite-manufactured debt-ceiling crisis. One front page story in that issue reported House Republicans’ claim that increasing taxes on the U.S. rich would undermine productive investment in the jobs that American working people required. (The argument held the day when the White House agreed to a deficit-cutting budget deal that was all about reducing government expenditures and not raising taxes) A different front-page story on the same day reported what some of the rich were doing with the plutocratic tax cuts that Obama had agreed to pass on from George W. Bush: resuming their ways of conspicuous and opulent luxury consumption. “Even Marked Up,” the headline ran, “Luxury Goods Fly Off Shelves.” Further:

“Nordstrom has a waiting list for a Chanel sequined tweed coat with a $9,010 price. Neiman Marcus has sold out in almost every size of Christian Louboutin ‘Bianca’ platform pumps, at $775 a pair. Mercedes-Benz said it sold more cars last month in the United States than it had in any July in five years….Even with the economy in a funk and many Americans pulling back on spending, the rich are again buying designer clothing, luxury cars and about anything that catches their fancy. Luxury goods stores, which fared much worse than other retailers in the recession, are more than recovering — they are zooming. Many high-end businesses are even able to mark up, rather than discount, items to attract customers who equate quality with price….The luxury category has posted 10 consecutive months of sales increases compared with the year earlier, even as overall consumer spending on categories like furniture and electronics has been tepid…”

Q8. So we who oppose the power of the 1 percent are all about restoring growth?

A. Not exactly! Chang is empirically correct to note the conflict between policymakers’ declared expansion imperative and excessive inequality, but his critique of trickle-down mythology is far too kind to the rich. As indicted in Chang’s 23 Things, modern “free market” or neoliberal capitalism’s greatest crime is not its role in furthering capitalism’s inherent tendency towards inequality and concentration of wealth but rather its role in slowing growth. But “growth” has long been western capitalism’s false and environmentally (some would add spiritually) lethal “solution” for the inequality that capitalism creates. “A rising tide lifts all boats,” the conventional western growth ideology proclaims, supposedly rendering irrelevant popular anger over the fact that an opulent minority sails in luxurious yachts while millions struggle on rickety dinghies and in leaking rowboats. As the liberal economist Henry Wallich explained in 1972, “Growth is a substitute for equality of income. So long as there is growth there is hope, and that makes large income differentials tolerable.” (As a Federal Reserve governor, Wallich was defending western capitalism against ecological economists who warned about the environmental limits of unchecked growth.) “Governments love growth,” British environmental writer and activist George Monbiot noted in the fall of 2007, “because it excuses them from dealing with inequality…. Growth is a political sedative, snuffing out protest, permitting governments to avoid confrontation with the rich, preventing the construction of a just and sustainable economy.” As Le Monde’s ecological editor Herve Kempf noted four years ago, “the oligarchy” sees “the pursuit of material growth” as “the solution to the social crisis,” the “sole means of fighting poverty and unemployment,” and the “only means of getting societies to accept extreme inequalities without questioning them.” When growth stops, Greider notes, “the political system loses its cover. The safety valve is off. The comforting mythology about growth loses its power to distract the public from anger and to discourage critical inquiry into how the system actually functions.”

The pressure on business and political elites to keep the safety valve on – the secret behind the growth attachment that has snared even a clever economic critic like Chang – comes at an unsustainable price, setting up a devil’s choice between jobs and income for proletarianized masses on one hand and livable ecology for humanity (and other living things) on the other hand. The wealthy Few’s reliance on growth to cloak inequality and keep “populist” sentiments at by is at the heart of “How,” to use the title of Kempf’s most recent book, “The Rich Are Destroying the Earth.” The ruination of livable ecology seems to be nothing less than an “institutional imperative” (Noam Chomsky) for the capitalist elite, which spends billions of dollars on a propaganda war against modern science’s consensus findings and warnings on anthropogenic climate change.


As the current, ever-deepening ecological catastrophe should tell us, humanity is running out of time when it comes to carrying the rich and failing to seriously confront its dominant institutions and ideologies. The rich themselves do not need to be liquidated and distributed across society, but their wealth and power do and their profits system needs to come down if humanity is going to enjoy a decent, democratic, and desirable future on this glorious but far from endlessly forgiving planet we all inhabit.

The protestors in Zucotti Park and across other people-occupied zones in the U.S. and Canada (I have recently received an inspiring report from Halifax in Nova Scotia!) have not simply landed at the hub of global hypocrisy. They have zeroed in on the dark heart of the cancer that menaces worthwhile human existence in coming years. May their movement continue to spread at home and abroad, helping us move from an Arab spring to a European summer through an American autumn to a new global people’s spring that ends the fatal bondage of Earth and humanity to the richer sort. “You poor take courage, you rich take care. The earth was made a common treasury for all too share.”



Paul Street (www.paulstreet.org) is the author of numerous books, including Empire and Inequality: America and the World Since 9/11 (Paradigm, 2004), The Empire’s New Clothes: Barack Obama in the Real World of Power (Paradigm, 2010), and (co-authored with Anthony DiMaggio) Crashing the Tea Party: Mass Media and the Campaign to Remake American Politics (Paradigm, 2011). Street will speak on the last book (and on the OWS movement) at 57th Street Books in Chicago (Wednesday, November 7 at 6pm), the Third Unitarian Church in Chicago (Sunday, November 6 at 9 AM), and Prairie Lights Books in Iowa City (Monday, November 7 at 7pm). Street can be reached at paulstreet99@yahoo.com.

[1] Let me gently add here that a sophisticated class analysis of the American power system has to go beyond a simple dichotomy of the top 1 percent versus the rest of us (the 99 percent). Beneath the elite ownership and investor class and the working and lower class majority there is a significant bastion of elite power that leadingg left anarchist thinker Michael Albert calls “the coordinator class.” For a useful discussion of this category, see Michael Albert and DC Tedrow, “Parecon and Anarcho-Syndicalism: An Interview with Michael Albert,” ZNet (July 4, 2007) at http://www.zcommunications.org/parecon- ... ael-albert

[2] Truth be told, those relatively few number of super-rich who have clawed their way to the top from the working and lower classes are often more reactionary than the much larger number of aristocrats who were born into privilege. The experience of the rich who enjoyed significant upward mobility tends to confirm in their own minds the truth of the Horatio Alger fable that anyone can make it to the top if they just work hard and well.


From: Z Net - The Spirit Of Resistance Lives
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Re: Economic Aspects of "Love"

Postby American Dream » Wed Oct 12, 2011 11:03 pm

Cross-posted to the Tantra-Induced Delusional Syndrome ("TIDS") thread.

Who Wants A One World Government?

by Michael Barker

(Swans - April 6, 2009)
Throughout the past century, liberal elites organizing to build the institutional foundations for a one world government have regularly acted as whipping boys for conservative commentators who accuse them of conspiring to enmesh the global populace within the oppressive chains of communism. In the past, popular promoters of such misconceptions have been derived from far-right groups like the John Birch Society, but more recently the accusations have come from top religious and political leaders like Pat Robertson and Ron Paul. In the eyes of these conservative commentators, liberal elites stand guilty of promoting a one world government, or New World Order, designed to rein in individual freedom and enslave humanity. The most notable ringleader elites of this conspiracy include influential neo-centrics like George Soros (who founded the Open Society Institute), and members of the Rockefeller family -- most notably David Rockefeller and the liberal foundations that receive funding from his family.

Like most widely accepted analyses presented in the mainstream media this conservative interpretation of world events comprises an element of truth. Consequently, this article analyses the conservative interpretation of world events. It reviews the ongoing activities of groups that openly acknowledge their desire to promote a one world government and goes on to critique the left's approach to global government. It will demonstrate how the critical onslaught from the Right has, to date, served to prevent the progressive community from engaging in this critical debate; that is, the debate to shape the future of global politics to enable us to create a new peaceful world order. Finally, it offers a progressive theoretical framework to expose the disturbing ambitions of the liberal elite.

World Federalists, "Socialists," and Gorbachev Power

Elite aspirations for creating more efficient means of managing the world are not new. One of the most significant US-based organizations pushing this global agenda has been the American branch of the World Federalist Movement, a group that was first known as the World Federalists of America. Formed in the aftermath of World War I, the World Federalists of America "call[ed] for the formation of a world government with the power to make and enforce laws which will control pollution of the earth's atmosphere and water, curb the waste of its resources, and dismantle the war machines of all nations." Later, as Joseph Baratta recounts in his book, The Politics of World Federation: From World Federalism to Global Governance (Praeger, 2004), by 1939:

...as the League [of Nations] collapsed, bolder spirits began to call for establishment of a true world federal government, by delegation of sovereign powers at least for the maintenance of peace and security. ... They included Clarence Streit, author of the book that practically conjured up the movement, Union Now. Another was Tom Otto Greissemer, German émigré from Hilter's Reich, who edited World Government News. Gressemer, educator Vernon Nash, and advertising executive Mildred Riorden Blake founded the World Federalists in New York in 1941. The Wall Street lawyer and "statesman incognito" behind the Wilson and Roosevelt administrations, Grenville Clark, had some influence when the times were auspicious, and later he and Harvard international lawyer Louis B. Sohn wrote one of the classics of the movement, World Peace through World Law. (p. 3)

In 1947, this group along with World Federalists of America met in Asheville, North Carolina, with representatives of three other like-minded world-federalist organizations to merge to become the United World Federalists which boasted a roster that "read like a Who's Who of academe, science, politics, the media, the legal community, business, and labor." (1) Although this newly-formed group had substantial support from the elites, Baratta observed that in its early days, "The only substantial money to come into the [World Federalist] movement -- $1 million from McCormick reaper heiress Anita McCormick Blaine -- funded the Foundation for World Government." (2) In later years United World Federalists would undergo a number of name changes before finally settling on their current name Citizens for Global Solutions (in 2004).

Following sustained attacks from radical conservatives like Pat Robertson (author of The New World Order), world federalists have become sensitive to openly declaring ambitions to create a world government. However, the former president of the World Federalist Movement, (1991-2004), the late Sir Peter Ustinov, has openly stated that a "World Government is not only possible, it is inevitable..."; similarly, in 1992, Strobe Talbott, writing for Time magazine famously quipped, "I'll bet that within the next hundred years... nationhood as we know it will be obsolete; all states will recognize a single, global authority." (3) Significantly, David Rockefeller noted in his memoirs, how some quarters considered the Rockefeller family "internationalists" who "conspire[d] with others around the world to build a more integrated global political and economic structure, one world, if you will." His response to this accusation was: "If that's the charge, I stand guilty, and I am proud of it." (4) On this point, Baratta observes how "Federalists want world government, like any government, not as a good in itself but as the necessary instrument to establish peace and justice. Not to talk of government is not to face squarely the issue of willing the means for the end." (p.536)

Since 2004 the work of the World Federalists of America has been presided over by the Very Rev. Lois Wilson. Just prior to becoming the acting president of the World Federalist Movement (in 2004), Rev. Wilson served as Canada's special envoy to the Sudan (1999-2002), (5) but she had also been the first Canadian to be the president of the World Council of Churches (1983-90). Around this time, Rev. Joan Brown Campbell became the first woman to be named executive director of the US office of the World Council of Churches -- a position she held from 1985 until 1991. To date Rev. Campbell is an influential member of the globalist interfaith community and is presently a board member of the World Council of Religious Leaders and The Interfaith Alliance, while she chairs the Global Women's Peace Initiative (a group whose executive director, Marianne Marstrand, is the sister-in-law of the world's leading globalists, Maurice Strong). (6)

In 1983, the World Federalist Movement formed the Institute for Global Policy, which acts as their research arm. In 2003, the Institute launched their Responsibility to Protect-Engaging Civil Society Project (R2PCS) that ostensibly "seeks to promote commitment by the international community to prevent and respond early and effectively to threats of genocide and other mass atrocities." Stephen Gowans recently exposed the selective nature of this project's concerns with human rights violations, highlighting that,

...the plight of the Palestinians is nowhere to be found on the[ir] website..., though R2PCS has much to say about "the crisis in Darfur," "the crisis in Myanmar" and "the crisis in Zimbabwe," as well as the "genocides in Cambodia, Rwanda and Bosnia, (and) crimes against humanity in Kosovo." That the humanitarian catastrophe visited upon the Palestinians is absent from the R2PCS's concerns hardly jibes with its professed mission to "promote concrete policies to better enable governments, regional organizations and the U.N. to protect vulnerable populations."

In late 2007, R2PCS formed a new initiative to build a Right to Protect (R2P) "global civil society coalition," which was supported by groups like "Oxfam International, Human Rights Watch, International Crisis Group, and Refugees International." The last three groups mentioned on the Project's Web site are all tightly connected to "humanitarian" warrior George Soros, (7) and so it is no coincidence that Anthony Fenton writes:

In short, R2P has been defined as a situation wherein "the power of the sovereign state can be legitimately revoked if the international community decides that the state is not protecting its citizens." Importantly, the state's power is not only taken in extreme instances, via military intervention. Sovereignty can also be undermined by policies imposed under the "preventive" and "rebuilding" phases of the R2P spectrum, often in the form of economic sanctions, "coercive diplomacy," "democracy promotion," "good governance," and structural adjustment programs.

Although Fenton's work focuses on the utility of R2P doctrine to imperial interventions in Haiti, he makes the more general observation that "Following the controversial inclusion of the (albeit watered-down) R2P language in the UN's 2005 World Summit Outcome document, a veritable, well-funded 'R2P Lobby' has stealthily emerged to advance and consolidate the doctrine as a 'global norm.'" The proponents of this R2P doctrine fit within an ideological grouping that I refer to as the "Project For A New American Humanitarianism." Given the World Federalist Movement's service to imperial interests, it appears paradoxical that the same group would be amongst the leading promoters of an idea called subsidiarity.

Maurice Strong, "a great believer in the principle of subsidiarity" defines this concept as ensuring that "responsibility for decision making resides at the level closest to the people affected at which it can be exercised effectively." However, Strong and the World Federalist Movement's interpretation of this democratic ideal are vastly at odds with those of groups challenging (not creating) hierarchies, for example anarchists, who strongly support the devolution of power to the people. Consequently, as Aaron deGrassi points out:

[W]hile subsidiarity may seem to portend the desirability of decentralization, the concept also raises crucial questions of who decides what is "practicable" (and hence what are the limits of decentralization), on which criteria, with which evidence, and through which processes? Deciding where to allocate powers and resources thus inherently involves "the politics of the possible," and consequently the principle of subsidiarity can and has been used across the political spectrum equally to justify higher-level intervention or non-intervention -- a tension present in the crowning pinnacle of subsidiarity to date, the Maastricht Treaty. (8)

On this latter point Takis Fotopoulos, writing in 1994, notes how in contrast to following the genuine principle of subsidiarity, the European Economic Community's implementation of the principle works by delegating "all unimportant decisions" to local decision-taking bodies.

Returning to the World Federalist Movement, Rev. Wilson took over the reins of the Movement in 2004 when the former president, actor Sir Peter Ustinov, passed away. Ustinov had served as the president of the Movement since 1991 and was a member of Ervin Laszlo's Club of Budapest -- a group that "appear[s] to be working to attempt to promote a form of spirituality that can overcome all geographic and cultural divides," which seem "well suited to other homogenizing globalizing tendencies." In 2002, Ustinov received the Club of Budapest's Planetary Consciousness Award along with the controversial Shimon Peres (see Khaled Amayreh's recent article "Shimon Peres: Murderer, Liar, and Hypocrite") and the United Nations' Messengers of Peace, Paulo Coelho (who also serves as a board member of the Shimon Peres Institute for Peace). Here it is noteworthy that in 1978 Shimon Peres was elected as vice president of Socialist International, the "worldwide organisation of social democratic, socialist and labour parties," a group that Peres described as "probably the most important nongovernmental political organization in Europe, if not in the world." (9)

During Peres's service at Socialist International, the organization's president was the late Willy Brandt (who served in this position from 1978 until 1992). At present the secretary general of Socialist International is Luis Ayala. Ayala is a patron of One World Action, a group that was cofounded by Glenys Kinnock, the wife of the former UK Labour Party leader Neil Kinnock (who is an honorary president of Socialist International, and the vice president of the pro-European membership organisation, European Movement). (10) It is noteworthy that the vice president of One World Action, Sir Sigmund Sternberg, is a Club of Budapest member, a businessman turned into a powerful interfaith philanthropist who coordinated the religious component of the World Economic Forum. Recently he assisted Tony Blair to establish the Tony Blair Faith Foundation serving as an "informal advisor." (11) Sternberg also acts as the president of the Movement for Reform Judaism, and in 1997 helped co-found the Three Faiths Forum, a group that focuses on "improving understanding between the Muslim, Christian and Jewish communities." From the Forum's founding until his death in 2008, Sidney Shipton acted as the coordinator of the Three Faiths Forum -- a strange choice given that he was a "bastion of the Zionist Establishment" who had formerly headed the UK arm of the Jewish National Fund (a Zionist colonialist agency of ethnic cleansing). In addition, the former Archbishop of Canterbury, Lord Carey of Clifton, who serves as a patron of the Three Faiths Forum, is the cofounder of the World Faiths Development Dialogue -- a group he set up in 1998 with the aid of prominent Zionist James Wolfensohn (the then president of the World Bank) to promote "dialogue on poverty and development". (12) One has to be sceptical of the type of just and equitable outcomes that can be achieved for Muslims by engaging in this type of dialogue with Zionists.

Socialist International and assorted interfaith groups clearly fulfill an important role in World Federalists' global governance agenda. However, coming back to the World Federalists of America (now known as the World Federalist Movement), another critical individual who helped found this group in the 1940s was the late Alan Cranston, who went on to serve as their president from 1949 until 1952. In 1945 Cranston published The Killing of the Peace, which was released in the hope that it would build support for the United Nations. Cranston remained a dedicated promoter of World Federalism until the end of his life, and in 1995 he "teamed with former Soviet Premier Mikhail Gorbachev as the chairman of the Gorbachev Foundation/USA, a San Francisco based think-tank seeking nuclear disarmament." This think tank, which was founded in 1992 by Jim Garrison and John Balbach, "set the stage for the establishment," in 1995, of another San Francisco based non-profit institution, the State of the World Forum, which was formed to "gather together the creative genius on the planet in a search for solutions to critical global challenges." The following provides a brief introduction to this unique global-level forum and the personalities that drive it.

Funding for the State of the World Forum is obtained from the Canadian International Development Agency, a multitude of liberal foundations, (13) and corporate sponsors like Booz Allen Hamilton and McKinsey & Company. John Balbach ("a pioneer of the broadband wireless industry") served as co-founder of the Forum (and also acted as vice president of the Gorbachev Foundation). Balbach presently acts as senior counsel to the Seva Foundation -- a philanthropic effort that was founded by Larry Brilliant (the executive director of Google's philanthropic project Google.org) -- and is the managing partner and founder of the international strategic consultancy Global Alliances. Balbach's consultancy, Global Alliances, "served as the founders of the first State of the World Forum," while some of their other clients include free-market environmental groups (e.g., Environmental Defense Fund, and the Natural Resources Defense Council), and world leaders like Boris Yelstin, Margaret Thatcher, and George Bush. (14)

Another important person connected to both the Gorbachev Foundation and the Forum is James Hickman. He was vice president of the Gorbachev Foundation in 1993, and served as the director of Programs and Business Affairs for the State of the World Forum (2000-04). Hickman currently sits on the latter's board of directors and in addition sits on the board of Wisdom University (see below), and on the executive committee of Citizens Democracy Corps, "a non-profit organization that supports private sector development and economic growth in emerging and transitioning economies throughout the world" -- a group that is intimately enmeshed in the US government's global democracy-manipulating activities.

Jim Garrison is the president of the Forum; the convening chairman is Mikhail Gorbachev, and founding co-chairs of the first forum (held in 1995) included leading liberal elites like Oscar Arias, Maurice Strong, Ted Turner, and Jane Goodall (see "Jane Goodall's Elite Monkey Business"). Given Oscar Arias's connection to Deepak Chopra (see (15)), a leading proponent of "capitalist spirituality," it is critical to draw attention to a significant link between the State of the World Forum and the Wisdom University. This is because in 2005 Jim Garrison became president and chairman of Wisdom University, and both the other two board members of the State of the World Forum (James Hickman and Caroline Myss) happen to be the same three board members for Wisdom University; given this overlap the following section will throw some much needed light on this ostensibly spiritual university.

Capitalist Spirituality for the New World Order

So what type of spiritual education is provided by the Wisdom University? Well, according to their Web site:

The average student enrolled at Wisdom University is a professional, with an established career and one or more advanced degrees. They have come to the conclusion that they need deeper spiritual challenges in order to maintain momentum and meaning in their lives. Our students soon discover that they can continue to grow spiritually and professionally at Wisdom University, thus combining spiritual nourishment with enhanced professional qualifications.

It appears that Wisdom University provides spiritual guidance for corporate and political elites who have lost their way (and inner peace) in the harsh capitalist, individualistic, secular world that they promote as the panacea for the world's problems. This form of globalized corporate spirituality is an important phenomenon. Paul Heelas writes in his landmark book The New Age Movement (Blackwell Publishers, 1996) how: "A significant number of New Agers have in fact moved beyond counter-cultural antagonism to the capitalistic mainstream. Instead, they incorporate the creation of prosperity." (16) This is what Jeremy Carrette and Richard King refer to in their book Selling Spirituality: The Silent Takeover of Religion (Routledge, 2005) as "capitalist spirituality," which they argue is "utilised to 'smooth out' resistance to the growing power of corporate capitalism and consumerism." (17) They write:

The interiorisation of spirituality and its location within the bounds of the modern, individual self emerged with the development of psychology in the late nineteenth century. It became popularised, however, in the 1950s and 1960s with the rise of Humanistic Psychology (particularly the work of [Abraham] Maslow), professional counselling, and psychedelic culture. Having been cast as a private and psychological phenomenon, "spirituality" has gone through a second major shift in the 1980s. This is the point at which the first privatisation -- involving the creation of individual, consumer-oriented spiritualities -- begins to overlap with an increasing emphasis upon a second privatisation of religion -- that is, the tailoring of spiritual teachings to the demands of the economy and of individual self-expression to business success. This is no better illustrated than by the various self-improvement movements of the 1980s... (18)

Michael Parenti draws our attention to the activities of the arch-democracy-manipulator, Vaclav Havel, who "now promotes a sort of New Age spiritualism." Parenti points out how Havel has...

...called for a new breed of political leader, who would rely less on "rational, cognitive thinking," and show "humility in the face of the mysterious order of Being" and "trust in his own subjectivity as his principal link with the subjectivity of the world." We should have a "sense of transcendental responsibility, archetypal wisdom," and the ability "to get to the heart of reality through personal experience." Havel lists the ecological dangers facing the world but denounces the idea of rational, collective social efforts to solve them. He denounces democracy's "traditional mechanisms" for being linked to "the cult of objectivity and statistical average." He thinks he is being visionary when in fact he is putting forth an elitist subjectivism and antidemocratic obscurantism. (19)

As Steve Bruce noted in 2006, "New Age spirituality would seem to be a strong candidate for the future of religion because its individualistic consumeristic ethos fits well with the spirit of the age." (20)

Returning to Wisdom University, in order to provide spiritual comfort to their already well-educated students the University employs fourteen faculty chairs "who teach and conduct research and other programs at Wisdom University." For instance, Caroline Myss, a "pioneer in the field of energy medicine and human consciousness," is chair of Energy Medicine, while other chairs cover subjects as diverse as Sacred Dance and Interspecies Connections. Yet, the one chair that seems particularly relevant to the topic of this essay is Barbara Marx Hubbard's chair in Conscious Evolution. (21)

Marilyn Ferguson recounts some of Hubbard's achievements in the new age classic, The Aquarian Conspiracy: Personal and Social Transformation in the 1980s (Paladin Books, 1982):

In 1967, Barbara Marx Hubbard, a futurist moved by [Pierre] Teilhard's vision of evolving consciousness, invited a thousand people around the world, including [Abraham] Maslow's network, to form a "human front" of those who shared a belief in the possibility of transcendent consciousness. Hundreds responded, including Lewis Mumford and Thomas Merton. Out of this grew a newsletter and later a loose-knit organization, the [pro-space exploration group] Committee for the Future. (p.59)

Hubbard is well qualified to teach Conscious Evolution as she is the president of the Foundation for Conscious Evolution -- a group that has been "supported by major financial gifts from [the late] Laurance S. Rockefeller," amongst others. Furthermore, although not organized by Hubbard, Ferguson notes how in 1970 Lockheed Aircraft underwrote a meeting held at De Anza College in Cupertino, California, "that was the first group of scientists and physicians -- friends -- gathered in a public forum to assert their interest in spiritual realities and alternative approaches to health." She adds that within a few years similar meetings were taking place all over America, and the "Rockefeller, Ford, and Kellogg foundations funded programmes exploring the interface of mind and health." (22)

An important person working alongside Barbara Marx Hubbard at the Foundation for Conscious Evolution during the 1990s was Nancy Carroll, who served as the Foundation's executive director from 1993 to 1999. Like Hubbard, Carroll happens to be a founding board member of a group called Women of Vision and Action -- a group whose advisory board includes people like Maurice Strong's wife, Hanne Strong, and Alison Van Dyk (who is the chairman of the board and interim executive director at the Temple of Understanding at the United Nations).

Here it is interesting to return to the fact that one of Hubbard's most influential supporters at the Foundation for Conscious Evolution was David Rockefeller's brother, Laurance Rockefeller. This is noteworthy as Rockefeller dynasties activities have long provided fertile grounds for one world government conspiracy theorists (for example, in 1952 Emanuel Josephson published his book Rockefeller, 'Internationalist': The Man Who Misrules the World). Ironically Laurance Rockefeller is directly involved in funding research that advocates the legitimacy of some phenomena often categorised as conspiracy theories.

Writing in 2002, Leslie Kean, an investigative reporter and producer with Pacifica Radio, noted that "a study about to be published [on crop circles] by a team of scientists and funded by Laurance Rockefeller concludes 'it is possible that we are observing the effects of a new or as yet undiscovered energy source.'" This funding of what in many circles is considered to be non-academic research is not however an anomaly, as for instance Laurance Rockefeller has also supported the research of the late professor of psychiatry John Mack (formerly based at Harvard Medical School). (23) Indeed, John Mack, shortly before publishing his book, Abduction: Human Encounters with Aliens (Charles Scribner, 1994), with funding provided by Laurance Rockefeller, founded the Program for Extraordinary Experience Research. Thus the very family that is considered to be at the heart of the one world government conspiracies (the Rockefellers) is involved in promoting research that encourages the public to believe in theories that more sceptical people consider to be conspiratorial. (24)

A significant observation is that Hubbard's spiritual work is complemented by her pro-space exploration activities, which saw her provide financial assistance to a group called the L5 Society, a group that was formed in 1975 and later merged (in 1987) with the National Space Institute to form the National Space Society. More recently, Hubbard provided the "inspiration" that (in 2005) helped launch the Council for the Future -- a joint project of three leading space advocacy groups: the Space Frontier Foundation, the National Space Society, and the Mars Society. According to their Web site:

The Council [for the Future] is shaping an Earth/Space/Human Development Agenda. The Council is also shaping a new social meme or world view that is consistent with that Agenda. As part of the meme, there is full agreement as to the imperative of extending human civilization into space, and that logical coherent steps must be taken in the very near term to facilitate that accomplishment.

Hubbard sits on the Council for the Future's board of directors alongside Rick Tumlinson. Tumlinson is linked to Walter Anderson, one of the world's leading capitalists who plans to colonize space and profit from an imperialist space agenda. Tumlinson is the executive director and cofounder of the ominously named Foundation for the International Nongovernmental Development of Space, a group that was launched with $5 million from Anderson. Anderson backed the Roton project that aimed to make space travel "affordable." In 1991 he funded the establishment of the Space Frontier Foundation. This foundation's advisory board includes a representative from the Center for Enterprise in Space, and a variety of popular authors including the late Arthur C. Clarke of 2001: A Space Odyssey fame. Like Hubbard, Clarke happened to be a member of the Club of Budapest, whose efforts to promote a form of spirituality that can overcome all geographic and cultural divides appears to be highly suited to the homogenizing practices of corporate-led globalization and the defeat of democracy.

Hubbard's direct affiliations to other liberal corporate globalizers are strong, and in 1966 she helped cofound the World Future Society -- current board members of this group include amongst others, Maurice Strong, and the former US secretary of defense and subsequent Ford Foundation president, Robert McNamara. In addition, until recently the well-known corporate futurists Alvin Toffler and his wife, Heidi Toffler, sat alongside the late Arthur C. Clarke on the World Future Society's global advisory council. Hubbard's ties to corporate-backed futurists does not bode well for her involvement in teaching any form of emancipatory lessons in higher consciousness at Wisdom University. As Murray Bookchin observed:

The radical thrust of utopian thinking, as exemplified by [Charles] Fourier, has been transmuted by academics, statisticians, and "game theorists" into a thoroughly technocratic, economistic, and aggressive series of futuramas that can be appropriately designated as "futurism." However widely at odds utopias were in their values, institutional conceptions, and visions (whether ascetic or hedonistic, authoritarian or libertarian, privatistic or communistic, utilitarian or ethical), they at least had come to mean a revolutionary change in the status quo and a radical critique of its abuses. Futurism, at its core, holds no such promise at all. In the writings of such people as Herman Kahn, Buckminster Fuller, Alvin Toffler, John O'Neill, and the various seers in Stanford University's "think tanks," futurism is essentially an extrapolation of the present into the century ahead, of "prophecy" denatured to mere projection. It does not challenge existing social relationships and institutions, but seeks to adapt them to seemingly new technological imperatives and possibilities -- thereby redeeming rather than critiquing them. The present does not disappear; it persists and acquires eternality at the expense of the future. Futurism, in effect, does not enlarge the future but annihilates it by absorbing it into the present. What makes this trend so insidious is that it also annihilates the imagination itself by constraining it to the present, thereby reducing our vision -- even our prophetic abilities -- to mere extrapolation.(25)

Like the aims of the Club of Budapest, Hubbard's work appears better geared towards constraining new thought to the stifling confines of capitalist prerogatives. This makes it especially ironic that Hubbard is a member of the Leadership Council of the Association for Global New Thought. The Association's executive director, Barbara Fields Berstein -- who also serves on the board of Hubbard's Foundation for Conscious Evolution -- is the former co-director of Harvard University's Global Negotiation Network's Abraham Path Initiative. This affiliation is significant because, as recounted in the article, "Alternative Dispute Resolution or Revolution," the activities promoted by the Global Negotiation Network's work are indicative of the type of strategies that the corporate and political elites zealously promote to boost global corporate equity, not human equality. Finally, it is interesting to point out that Berstein is a board member of EarthAction, another project that is linked to Harvard University's Alternative Dispute Resolution network through the head of their Global Negotiation Project, William Ury (who serves on the advisory board of EarthAction). Consequently, given its key role in attempting to catalyse the formation of a one world government, the following section will explore the background of this group.

Continues at: http://www.swans.com/library/art15/barker17.html
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Re: Economic Aspects of "Love"

Postby American Dream » Wed Oct 12, 2011 11:14 pm


It is in the domination of an unrestricted market ideology that we find religion increasingly being interpreted in consumerist terms. In highlighting this we are not merely referring to the post-1960s supermarket 'pick and mix' approach to religions that we find within the various New Age movements and literature. As a social phenomenon this shift was consumer-oriented and generally presented itself in terms of de-traditionalisation, the exercise of personal freedom and experimentation. What we are concerned with here is a relatively new development, linked to the deregulation of the markets, the collapse of the Soviet Empire in Eastern Europe and the process of globalisation, namely the corporate-led takeover of the cultural space of 'spirituality' and religion. Our primary concern then is with the reduction of what counts as 'spirituality' to a business ethos, as if something called 'spirituality' unquestionably supports privatisation or consumerist values or derives its significance from the benefits to be gained from maximising worker efficiency and/or production of profits. In drawing attention to this shift, we wish to challenge the way in that corporate business is repackaging religion in terms of 'spirituality' of consumerism (the earlier trend that it feeds upon) and corporate loyalty.

(p 128 of "Selling Spirituality: The Silent Takeover of Religion" by Jeremy Carrette and Richard King)
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Re: Economic Aspects of "Love"

Postby American Dream » Wed Oct 12, 2011 11:33 pm

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Re: Economic Aspects of "Love"

Postby American Dream » Wed Oct 12, 2011 11:41 pm

http://www.groovytroopers.co.za/index.p ... 4&Itemid=1

CHASING THE DRAGON

Written by Delphi Carstens


Drugs shape the laws and write the very rules they break, they scramble all the codes and raise the stakes of desire and necessity, euphoria and pain, normality, perversion, truth and artifice. (Sadie Plant)

Karl Marx, famous for his slogan “religion is the opium of the people”, recognised that the ever-elusive dragon had set the tone for global capitalism. For Marx, opium had presented the British empire with an opportunity to “make gold for nothing” – a lesson that once learnt was never forgotten. Moreover, it established a new religion for the emerging free market – profit at any cost. During the 19th century, the opium trade ruined China and paid half the annual revenues of the British crown. While opium was funding Britain’s colonial empire and its massive push towards becoming an industrialised economy, the drug presented countless numbers of its users with ways of coping with the breakneck speeds, filth and traumas of new-fangled industrialisation. Opium also set new scales for advertising, introducing the notion that desire could be turned into a necessity. Buxom lasses with alluring smiles invited Victorians to sample opium tinctures (Laudanum, being a famous example) that were becoming all the rage in Europe.

Opium, which had enjoyed centuries of serene usage in China, had become a cheap and deadly commodity by the latter half of the 18th century when Portuguese traders started mixing it with tobacco. The British, who desperately wanted tea and silks from China, were keen to seize control of what was becoming an increasingly lucrative market. By the early 19th century the British East India company (BEI), backed by the Royal Navy, had driven out the Portuguese and set up an international opium monopoly fed by large-scale opium cultivation in India. The BEI, effectively the world’s first drug cartel, was now selling opium in China in complete disregard of Chinese law. When Chinese authorities tried to crack down on the opium trade, the British first turned to smuggling and then to outright violence.

”With adequate profit, capital is very bold … 100 percent will make it ready to trample on all human laws … 300 percent, and there is not a crime at which it will scruple, nor a risk it will not run. If turbulence and strife will bring a profit, it will freely encourage both.” (Karl Marx)

In 1839, the British began employing aggressive military intervention in forcing the Chinese government to keep its markets open to the opium dragon. 1856 saw the final chapter of the infamous ‘opium wars’ when China was famously forced to cede Hong-Kong to Britain as a free port. Obscene profits continued to be reaped well into the first decades of the 20th century, by which time the United States of America, seemingly jealous at being left out of the opium profit loop, put her foot down. When the League of Nations (which later became the United Nations) was established in the 1920’s, an attempt to regulate the opium trade was cited as one of the principle reasons.

“The [media] spectacle is a permanent opium war which unleashes a limitless artificiality in the face of which all living desire is disarmed.” (Guy Debord)

The British success in selling ‘junk’ to the Chinese has been rivalled in the 20th and 21st centuries by the success of capitalism in selling all manner of commodified junk to just about everyone on the planet. “Opium”, writes Sadie Plant, “formed the mould of monopoly and possession; a graphic demonstration of the ease with which desires could be turned into necessities and demand manipulated to satisfy supply”. Opium, as William Burroughs said, truly is the ultimate emblem of corporate capitalism – the client will crawl through a sewer and beg to buy.

Today, the so-called ‘war on drugs’ is not about doing away with drugs. Rather, it is about controlling their usage. While the pharmaceutical and psychiatric industries are quite literally imposing their drugs on millions of hapless people, other industries are selling caffeine, sugar, tobacco, fast-food and alcohol to billions. First world governments continue to ply a dirty trade, exporting armaments, chemicals and dicey agendas. Their continued role in the illegal drug trade, which holds a ten percent share of the international commodities trade (larger than that of oil, minerals and lubricants together) is, in any event, not beyond suspicion. The global media, meanwhile, monopolises and manipulates tastes, opinions and desires. While we are told to ‘Just Say No’ to drugs, the real message of the free market is ‘Just Say Yes’ to junk culture, overpopulation and environmental destruction.

”Exhausted by the effort of concentrating on the traffic and holding the cars around us in their lanes, I took my hands off the wheel and let the car press on.” (J.G Ballard, Crash)
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Re: Economic Aspects of "Love"

Postby American Dream » Wed Oct 12, 2011 11:59 pm

http://www.counterpunch.org/2011/10/10/ ... r-payroll/

OCTOBER 10, 2011

Who Do the White Shirt Police Report to at Occupy Wall Street Protests?

Financial Giants Put New York City Cops On Their Payroll

by PAM MARTENS



Videos are springing up across the internet showing uniformed members of the New York Police Department in white shirts (as opposed to the typical NYPD blue uniforms) pepper spraying and brutalizing peaceful, nonthreatening protestors attempting to take part in the Occupy Wall Street marches. Corporate media are reporting that these white shirts are police supervisors as opposed to rank and file. Recently discovered documents suggest something else may be at work.

If you’re a Wall Street behemoth, there are endless opportunities to privatize profits and socialize losses beyond collecting trillions of dollars in bailouts from taxpayers. One of the ingenious methods that has remained below the public’s radar was started by the Rudy Giuliani administration in New York City in 1998. It’s called the Paid Detail Unit and it allows the New York Stock Exchange and Wall Street corporations, including those repeatedly charged with crimes, to order up a flank of New York’s finest with the ease of dialing the deli for a pastrami on rye.

The corporations pay an average of $37 an hour (no medical, no pension benefit, no overtime pay) for a member of the NYPD, with gun, handcuffs and the ability to arrest. The officer is indemnified by the taxpayer, not the corporation.

New York City gets a 10 percent administrative fee on top of the $37 per hour paid to the police. The City’s 2011 budget called for $1,184,000 in Paid Detail fees, meaning private corporations were paying wages of $11.8 million to police participating in the Paid Detail Unit. The program has more than doubled in revenue to the city since 2002.

The taxpayer has paid for the training of the rent-a-cop, his uniform and gun, and will pick up the legal tab for lawsuits stemming from the police personnel following illegal instructions from its corporate master. Lawsuits have already sprung up from the program.

When the program was first rolled out, one insightful member of the NYPD posted the following on a forum: “… regarding the officer working for, and being paid by, some of the richest people and organizations in the City, if not the world, enforcing the mandates of the private employer, and in effect, allowing the officer to become the Praetorian Guard of the elite of the City. And now corruption is no longer a problem. Who are they kidding?”

Just this year, the Department of Justice revealed serious problems with the Paid Detail unit of the New Orleans Police Department. Now corruption probes are snowballing at NOPD, revealing cash payments to police in the Paid Detail and members of the department setting up limited liability corporations to run upwards of $250,000 in Paid Detail work billed to the city.

When the infamously mismanaged Wall Street firm, Lehman Brothers, collapsed on September 15, 2008, its bankruptcy filings in 2009 showed it owed money to 21 members of the NYPD’s Paid Detail Unit. (A phone call and email request to the NYPD for information on which Wall Street firms participate in the program were not responded to. The police unions appear to have only scant information about the program.)

Other Wall Street firms that are known to have used the Paid Detail include Goldman Sachs, the World Financial Center complex which houses financial firms, and the New York Stock Exchange.

The New York Stock Exchange is the building in front of which the Occupy Wall Street protesters have unsuccessfully tried to protest, being herded behind metal barricades, clubbed with night sticks, kicked in the face and carted off to jail rather than permit the last plantation in America to be defiled with citizen chants and posters. (A sample of those politically inconvenient posters and chants: “The corrupt are afraid of us; the honest support us; the heroic join us”; “Tell me what democracy looks like, this is what democracy looks like”; “I’ll believe a corporation is a person when Texas executes one.” The last sign refers to the 2010 U.S. Supreme Court decision, Citizens United v. Federal Election Commission, giving corporations First Amendment personhood, which allows them to spend unlimited amounts of money in elections.)

On September 8, 2004, Robert Britz, then President and Co-Chief Operating Officer of the New York Stock Exchange, testified as follows to the U.S. House Committee on Financial Services:

“…we have implemented new hiring standards requiring former law enforcement or military backgrounds for the security staff…We have established a 24-hour NYPD Paid Detail monitoring the perimeter of the data centers…We have implemented traffic control and vehicle screening at the checkpoints. We have installed fixed protective planters and movable vehicle barriers.”

Military backgrounds; paid NYPD 24-7; checkpoints; vehicle barriers? It might be insightful to recall that the New York Stock Exchange originally traded stocks with a handshake under a Buttonwood tree in the open air on Wall Street.

In his testimony, the NYSE executive Britz states that “we” did this or that while describing functions that clearly belong to the City of New York. The New York Stock Exchange at that time had not yet gone public and was owned by those who had purchased seats on the exchange – primarily, the largest firms on Wall Street. Did the NYSE simply give itself police powers to barricade streets and set up checkpoints with rented cops? How about clubbing protesters on the sidewalk?

Just six months before NYSE executive Britz’ testimony to a congressional committee, his organization was being sued in the Supreme Court of New York County for illegally taking over public streets with no authority to do so. This action had crippled the business of a parking garage, Wall Street Garage Parking Corp., the plaintiff in the case. Judge Walter Tolub said in his opinion that

“…a private entity, the New York Stock Exchange, has assumed responsibility for the patrol and maintenance of truck blockades located at seven intersections surrounding the NYSE…no formal authority appears to have been given to the NYSE to maintain these blockades and/or conduct security searches at these checkpoints…the closure of these intersections by the NYSE is tantamount to a public nuisance…The NYSE has yet to provide this court with any evidence of an agreement giving them the authority to maintain the security perimeter and/or conduct the searches that their private security force conducts daily. As such, the NYSE’s actions are unlawful and may be enjoined as they violate plaintiff’s civil rights as a private citizen.”

The case was appealed, the ruling overturned, and sent back to the same Judge who had no choice but to dismiss the case on the appellate ruling that the plaintiff had suffered no greater harm than the community at large. Does everyone in lower Manhattan own a parking garage that is losing its customer base because the roads are blocked to the garage?

Some believe that Wall Street is given special privileges and protection because New York City’s Mayor Michael Bloomberg owes his $18.1 billion in wealth (yes, he’s that 1 percent the 99 percent are protesting) to Wall Street. The Mayor was previously a trader for Salomon Brothers, the investment bank made famous for attempting to rig the U.S. Treasury market in two-year notes.

The Mayor’s business empire which bears his name, includes the awesome Bloomberg terminal, a computer that houses enormous pricing data for stocks and bonds, research, news, charting functions and much more. There are currently an estimated 290,000 of these terminals on Wall Street trading floors around the globe, generating approximately $1500 in rental fees per terminal per month. That’s a cool $435 million a month or $5.2 billion a year, the cash cow of the Bloomberg businesses.

The Bloomberg businesses are run independently from the Mayor but he certainly knows that his terminal is a core component of his wealth. Nonetheless, the Mayor is not Wall Street’s patsy. Bloomberg Publishing is frequently in the forefront of exposing fraud on Wall Street such as the 2001 tome “The Pied Pipers of Wall Street” by Benjamin Mark Cole, which exposed the practice of releasing fraudulent stock research to the public. Bloomberg News was responsible for court action that forced the Federal Reserve to release the details of what it did with trillions of dollars in taxpayer bailouts to Wall Street firms, hedge funds and foreign banks.

Police Commissioner Ray Kelly may also have a soft spot for Wall Street. He was formerly Senior Managing Director of Global Corporate Security at Bear, Stearns & Co. Inc., the Wall Street firm that collapsed into the arms of JPMorgan in March of 2008.

There has also been a bizarre revolving door between the Wall Street millionaires and the NYPD at times. One of the most puzzling career moves was made by Stephen L. Hammerman. He left a hefty compensation package as Vice Chairman of Merrill Lynch & Co. in 2002 to work as Deputy Commissioner of Legal Matters for the NYPD from 2002 to 2004. That move had everyone on Wall Street scratching their head at the time. Merrill collapsed into the arms of Bank of America on September 15, 2008, the same date that Lehman went under.

Wall Street is not the only sector renting cops in Manhattan. Department stores, parks, commercial banks and landmarks like Rockefeller Center, Jacob Javits Center and St. Patrick’s Cathedral have also participated in the Paid Detail Unit, according to insiders. But Wall Street is the only sector that runs a private justice system where its crimes are herded off to secret arbitration tribunals, has sucked on the public teat to the tune of trillions of dollars, escaped prosecution for the financial collapse, and can put an armed municipal force on the sidewalk to intimidate public protestors seeking a realignment of their democracy.

We may be learning a lot more in the future about the tactics Wall Street and the NYPD have deployed against the Occupy Wall Street protestors. The highly regarded Partnership for Civil Justice Fund has filed a class action lawsuit over the approximately 700 arrests made on the Brooklyn Bridge on October 1. The formal complaint and related information is available at the organization’s web site,www.JusticeOnLine.org.

The organization was founded by Carl Messineo and Mara Verheyden-Hilliard. The Washington Post has called them “the constitutional sheriffs for a new protest generation.”

The suit names Mayor Bloomberg, Police Commissioner Kelly, the City of New York, 30 unnamed members of the NYPD, and, provocatively, 10 unnamed law enforcement officers not employed by the NYPD.

The lawsuit lays out dwhat has been curtailing the constitutional rights of protestors for a very long time in New York City.

“As seen in the movements for social change in the Middle East and Europe, all movements for social justice, jobs, and democracy need room to breathe and grow and it is imperative that there be a halt to law enforcement actions used to shut down mass assembly and free expression of the people seeking to redress grievances…

“After escorting and leading a group of demonstrators and others well out onto the Brooklyn Bridge roadway, the NYPD suddenly and without warning curtailed further forward movement, blocked the ability of persons to leave the Bridge from the rear, and arrested hundreds of protestors in the absence of probable cause. This was a form of entrapment, both illegal and physical.

“That the trap and detain mass arrest was a command-level-driven intentional and calculated police operation is evidenced by the fact that the law enforcement officials who led the demonstration across the bridge were command officials, known as ‘white shirts.’ ”


In April 2001, I was arrested and incarcerated by the NYPD while peacefully handing out flyers on a public sidewalk outside of the Citigroup shareholders meeting – flyers that warned of growing corruption inside the company. (The unlawful merger of Travelers Group and Citibank created Citigroup and resulted in the repeal of the Glass-Steagall Act, the depression era investor protection legislation that barred depositor banks from merging with high-risk Wall Street firms. Many of us from social justice groups in New York City had protested against the repeal but were out maneuvered by Wall Street’s political pawns in Washington.)

Out of a group of about two dozen protestors from the National Organization for Women in New York City, Rain Forest Action Network, and Inner City Press, I was the only person arrested. There was no civil disobedience occurring. Rain Forest Action Network was handing out fortune cookies with prescient warnings about Citigroup and urging pedestrians to cut up their Citibank credit cards. The rest of us were peacefully handing out flyers.

Chained to a metal bar inside the police precinct, I was grilled on any crimes I might know about. I responded that the only crimes I knew about were listed on the flyer and apparently, in New York City, one gets arrested for disclosing crimes by Wall Street firms.

A mysterious, mature, white shirted inspector who ordered my arrest on the sidewalk, and refused to give his first name, disappeared from the police report when it was filed, blaming the arrest instead on a young police officer. Citigroup is only alive today because the Federal government inserted a feeding tube into Citigroup and infused over $2 trillion in loans, direct investment and guarantees as the company veered toward collapse.

The NYPD at the time of my arrest was run by Bernard Kerik – the man President George W. Bush later sent to Iraq to be the interim Interior Minister and train Iraqi police. The President subsequently nominated Kerik to head the Department of Homeland Security for the entire nation. The nation was spared of that eventuality only because of an illegal nanny popping up. Today, Kerik is serving a four year sentence in Federal prison for a variety of criminal acts.

The New York Civil Liberties Union filed a Federal lawsuit on my behalf (Martens v. Giuliani) and we learned that the NYPD had arbitrarily established a policy to arrest and hold for 72 hours any person protesting in a group of 20 or more. The case was settled for a modest monetary award and the repeal by the NYPD of this unconstitutional and despicable practice.



Pam Martens worked on Wall Street for 21 years. She spent the last decade of her career advocating against Wall Street’s private justice system, which keeps its crimes shielded from public courtrooms. She has been writing on public interest issues for CounterPunch since retiring in 2006. She has no security position, long or short, in any company mentioned in this article.
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Re: Economic Aspects of "Love"

Postby American Dream » Thu Oct 13, 2011 12:10 am

http://www.groovytroopers.co.za/index.p ... 9&Itemid=1

SYNTHETIC REALITY

Written by Delphi


Welcome to the postmodern present where reality is remixed ‘live’ to CNN theme-muzak. In a world where the real is no longer hip enough, there can be no talk of a future or a past; just an endless procession of simulacra (copies of copies of copies). Postmodern reality is a ghost event, a confused accident victim hooked on TV. Since the silver-screens first began to flicker, contemporary ‘reality’ has become an increasingly manufactured item. Instead of searching for the truth or learning from the past, we now learn from the ultimate fake - Las Vegas. Banality is our crowning glory; a capstone for a global culture so drunk on environmental destruction and impending catastrophe that it’s retreated into plagiarising its own worst commodity forms.

Washed up on psycho-social beach of pop-culture, postmodern reality is as abject and plastic as Barbie and Ken. One of the most striking examples of its brand of deadpan apocalyptic skepticism is to be found in the works of its French theorists, particularly that of Jean Baudrillard. In his book Simulacra and Simulation (1981), Baudrilard paints the ultimate postmodern picture: a social ‘reality’ that no longer exists in the conventional sense, but which has been supplanted by simulacra. Intensified commodification, social alienation and the continued abstractions of capitalist moneygrabbing has, according to Baudrillard, succeeded in creating a synthetic plastic-hassle of fakery. The mass media and other forms of mass cultural production are constantly re-appropriating and re-contextualising familiar cultural symbols and images, serving them up in an endless remix. This ‘simulation’ fundamentally shifts our experience away from ‘reality’ to what Baudrillard terms ‘hyperreality’. In this scenario the new ‘real’ is simply a third-order copy – a fake ‘reality’ that seems more preferable than the gritty nature of the physical world.

Beginning with the fake fairytale-pastiche of Disneyland in the 1950’s, Baudrillard has mapped the spreading of hyperreality like a black smog across the western world, and increasingly across the rest of the globe. In the hands of Disney and co., the subversive and initiatory world of original folktales have been stripmined and geared for lite consumption. But that’s only one example amongst many … Under the aegis of MacDonald’s golden arches, the merchants of hyperreality have cut-and-pasted a swathe across the imagination of millions.

For Baudrillard and other post-modernists there can no longer be any form of valid protest. They argue that any form of sub-cultural resistance is immediately colonised, appropriated and remixed by the mass-media. Hip-hop and rap stand as a case in point. Starting as ghettoised forms of resistance, they soon ended up selling ‘bling’ lifestyles far-removed from the backstreets. Similarly, punk – the ultimate ‘fuck-off’ underclass statement – has become an item for fashion ramps and bored gliterati.

Behind hypereality and consumer fetishishm lies the ever-burgeoning world of technological innovation. The rate at which gadgets are taking over daily tasks has led some to speculate that technology is no longer an extension, but something that we’ve internalised completely. Entire economies, work forces, cultural institutions and definitions of self-hood have been displaced by the speed-culture of the information age, birthing a new world-view of ‘artificial immanence’. According to this position, everything (including our deepest values) is capable of being artificially replicated or simulated. “If truth is what is verifiable, then the truth of contemporary science is not so much the extent of progress achieved as the scale of technical catastrophes occasioned,” writes Paul Virilio. The synthetic reality we inhabit is anything but passive, he speculates; it is disaster personified: a pure and total war happening under a constant state of electronic surveillance. In this war, the self is nothing more than a marketable gimmick - “a matter of digital information … an algorithmic hallucination … a purely mathematical equation dominated by a technological ‘will to nothingness’”. For some, the abject nature of postmodernity is simply an excuse to stick their heads in the sand and wait for a fabled second coming. Short of cancelling our TV licences and dropping out of the technological mainframe, however, we need to acknowledge the fact that our hyperrealities are tricksters who can no longer be switched-off at will. Erik Davis concludes: “technological constructs have their own increasingly alien and synthetic agendas … Human concerns will only survive and prosper once we have learnt to treat them not as extensions of ourselves (or disposable throwaways) but as unknown constructs with whom we need to make weary pacts.”

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Re: Economic Aspects of "Love"

Postby American Dream » Thu Oct 13, 2011 12:51 am

The Commodity Fetish

June 23, 2009


Image


Capitalism has not died as the theorists predicted, but its saturation into every facet of society would shock and appall even the most casual Marxist. If Baudrillard was right and consumption has become the basis of society rather than production, commodity fetishism has seeped into individual selfhood itself. Not only can people be commodified but, aided by the ubiquities of the Information Age, so can experience. Steven Soderbergh’s The Girlfriend Experience explores this new relationship between the quantifiable dollar and human ontology. Real-life porn star Sasha Grey plays an escort whose clients don’t just pay for sex, but the simulacrum of intimacy. Baudrillard seems like an obvious influence here, writing about the supersession of signs in a late capitalist society and the value relationship of communication. Grey provides the illusion of intimacy, listening to yuppies bark about Obama and the economy and the banalities of their self-validated opinions, a gynoid who validates her customers not simply by servicing their bodies, but by cultivating their self-esteems. Grey’s ersatz boyfriend is a personal trainer, fulfilling the same role by helping said yuppies hone their body image; their time, if not their lives, entail quantifying aspects of the human experience. The film is set a day before the 2008 election – Grey’s clients are galvanized by political punditry and the ensuing economic crisis. They rail Grey with financial advice, apparently unaware that the very wealth which has empowered their material lives has transformed the traits they might’ve considered sacrosanct (love, empathy) into the purchaseable.


http://fundamagargle.wordpress.com/2009 ... ityfetish/
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Re: Economic Aspects of "Love"

Postby American Dream » Thu Oct 13, 2011 9:57 am


We live in a slave culture. Our present economy is based on the domestication and exploitation of animals and nature. We perceive all animals, as well as land and water, in terms of usefulness to us, as slaves or potential slaves -- property to be owned. Our money comes to us as stolen wealth from the lives of the animals we buy and sell and from the natural resources we are exhausting. Without so much as a thank you we have come to feel entitled to use the earth and all living beings as if they had no purpose other than to be used by us. We are quickly removing all traces of wildness from the planet as we gun down mustangs from helicopters and dam "wild" rivers. If our culture had a mission statement, it might very well read, "The Earth Belongs to Us."

We operate from a self-centered, hierarchal, dominionist worldview, which places human beings above all other life forms -- above the world of nature. With this placement we assume ownership of the earth; in fact, those of us who have enough money to buy a piece of what is real-real estate -- actually take legal ownership of a piece of the earth.. Ownership implies complete authority, allowing the owners to do whatever they want with whomever or whatever they own. In other words, we are operating from a master/slave mentality. Our whole way of life, and certainly our economy, which supports that way of life, would collapse if we didn't have slaves to lord over. Wealth yields power, and power is essential to the maintenance of an exploitable relationship with others. Power that is derived from force is insatiable as well as unstable and must be constantly maintained through aggression, and that means war.

We have been at war with nature for the past ten thousand years, ever since we began to move from living with nature to conquering and exploiting her, and this war has been escalating -- all other wars stem from this one. The first wars in our culture's history were fought over disputes about animal ownership and the land needed to confine, graze, and provide food for those animals. The word for war used by the ancient Aryans, gavya, literally means "the desire to fight for more cattle," and gavisthi means "to be desirous of a fight." Both words come from the root gav or go, which means "cow." The domestication (enslaving) of cattle led to war. It may be interesting to note that today in the Middle East we are fighting a war for oil, and the second biggest consumers of oil in the world, second only to the military, are the meat and dairy industries.

When human beings started to move away from the natural orderliness of wildness and toward the imposed order of civilization, we became herders of animals, enslaving them and exploiting them primarily for the four "m's they could provide: meat, milk, manure and of course money. Animals also provide a continued source of renewable income, because they can produce offspring -- born to be used.

To exploit is to steal. In war it is expected that the losers lose what was once considered their own: their lives, their dignity, their freedom, their home, their children, etc. The word exploitation means "to treat with little regard for the welfare, benefit or happiness of the other." To be able to successfully exploit another, it is essential that you don't see the other as part of yourself. Nature becomes your enemy in the quest for control and commodification of the things of the world.

So we have separated ourselves from the natural world by first separating ourselves from the other animals, and with this separation came a denial that we are also animals and that we are also part of the natural world. To exploit a person you must see them as a thing, devoid of the same kinds of feelings and yearnings as you know yourself to have, so we don't relate to cows and pigs as people, because then it would be difficult to enslave, slaughter, and exploit them for monetary gain. In a similar way we have had to deny that trees and other forms of life are people, because if we saw them as persons it would be more difficult to clear cut a whole forest in order to plant crops or build a shopping mall.

History shows us that the enslavement of animals served as the model for the exploitation of the natural world as well as for human slavery. Domesticated animals were the first form of money, of measurable wealth exchange, which continues today in the form of our stock market or stock exchange -- a reference to livestock market or livestock exchange. The word live has been dropped, because most of the money is made in dealing dead animals. The Latin root word for capital is capita, which means the head of a cow, goat, or sheep-the first animals to be domesticated. In ancient times, the head count of the animals that a man owned determined his wealth. The roots of modern capitalism are in those ancient enslavers, herders, and exploiters of animals. Today, no matter how far away from the open range or from farm life we may feel ourselves to be, we are still part of this system that was put into place thousands of years ago




Excerpted from: Yoga and Money by Sharon Gannon
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Re: Economic Aspects of "Love"

Postby American Dream » Fri Oct 14, 2011 2:09 am

http://prospect.org/cs/articles?article=the_nanny_chain

The Nanny Chain

ARLIE HOCHSCHILD | November 30, 2002

Vicky Diaz, a 34-year-old mother of five, was a college-educated schoolteacher and travel agent in the Philippines before migrating to the United States to work as a housekeeper for a wealthy Beverly Hills family and as a nanny for their two-year-old son. Her children, Vicky explained to Rhacel Parrenas,

were saddened by my departure. Even until now my children are trying to convince me to go home. The children were not angry when I left because they were still very young when I left them. My husband could not get angry either because he knew that was the only way I could seriously help him raise our children, so that our children could be sent to school. I send them money every month.

In her forthcoming book Servants of Globalization, Parrenas, an affiliate of the Center for Working Families at the University of California, Berkeley, tells an important and disquieting story of what she calls the "globalization of mothering." The Beverly Hills family pays "Vicky" (which is the pseudonym Parrenas gave her) $400 a week, and Vicky, in turn, pays her own family's live-in domestic worker back in the Philippines $40 a week. Living like this is not easy on Vicky and her family. "Even though it's paid well, you are sinking in the amount of your work. Even while you are ironing the clothes, they can still call you to the kitchen to wash the plates. It ... [is] also very depressing. The only thing you can do is give all your love to [the two-year-old American child]. In my absence from my children, the most I could do with my situation is give all my love to that child."

Vicky is part of what we could call a global care chain: a series of personal links between people across the globe based on the paid or unpaid work of caring. A typical global care chain might work something like this: An older daughter from a poor family in a third world country cares for her siblings (the first link in the chain) while her mother works as a nanny caring for the children of a nanny migrating to a first world country (the second link) who, in turn, cares for the child of a family in a rich country (the final link). Each kind of chain expresses an invisible human ecology of care, one care worker depending on another and so on. A global care chain might start in a poor country and end in a rich one, or it might link rural and urban areas within the same poor country. More complex versions start in one poor country and extend to another slightly less poor country and then link to a rich country.

Global care chains may be proliferating. According to 1994 estimates by the International Organization for Migration, 120 million people migrated—legally or illegally—from one country to another. That's 2 percent of the world's population. How many migrants leave loved ones behind to care for other people's children or elderly parents, we don't know. But we do know that more than half of legal migrants to the United States are women, mostly between ages 25 and 34. And migration experts tell us that the proportion of women among migrants is likely to rise. All of this suggests that the trend toward global care chains will continue.

How are we to understand the impact of globalization on care? If, as globalization continues, more global care chains form, will they be "good" care chains or "bad" ones? Given the entrenched problem of third world poverty—which is one of the starting points for care chains—this is by no means a simple question. But we have yet to fully address it, I believe, because the world is globalizing faster than our minds or hearts are. We live global but still think and feel local.

Freud in a Global Economy

Most writing on globalization focuses on money, markets, and labor flows, while giving scant attention to women, chil-dren, and the care of one for the other. Most research on women and development, meanwhile, draws a connection between, say, World Bank loan conditions and the scarcity of food for women and children in the third world, without saying much about resources expended on caregiving. Much of the research on women in the United States and Europe focuses on a chainless, two-person picture of "work-family balance" without considering the child care worker and the emotional ecology of which he or she is a part. Fortunately, in recent years, scholars such as Ernestine Avila, Evelyn Nakano Glenn, Pierette Hondagneu-Sotelo, Mary Romero, and Rhacel Parrenas have produced some fascinating research on domestic workers. Building on this work, we can begin to focus on the first world end of the care chain and begin spelling out some of the implications of the globalization of love.

One difficulty in understanding these implications is that the language of economics does not translate easily into the language of psychology. How are we to understand a "transfer" of feeling from one link in a chain to another? Feeling is not a "resource" that can be crassly taken from one person and given to another. And surely one person can love quite a few people; love is not a resource limited the same way oil or currency supply is. Or is it?

Consider Sigmund Freud's theory of displacement, the idea that emotion can be redirected from one person or object to another. Freud believed that if, for example, Jane loves Dick but Dick is emotionally or literally unavailable, Jane will find a new object (say, John, Dick and Jane's son) onto which to project her original feeling for Dick. While Freud applied the idea of displacement mainly to relations within the nuclear family, the concept can also be applied to relations extending far outside it. For example, immigrant nannies and au pairs often divert feelings originally directed toward their own children toward their young charges in this country. As Sau-ling C. Wong, a researcher at the University of California, Berkeley, has put it, "Time and energy available for mothers are diverted from those who, by kinship or communal ties, are their more rightful recipients."

If it is true that attention, solicitude, and love itself can be "displaced" from one child (let's say Vicky Diaz's son Alfredo, back in the Philippines) onto another child (let's say Tommy, the son of her employers in Beverly Hills), then the important observation to make here is that this displacement is often upward in wealth and power. This, in turn, raises the question of the equitable distribution of care. It makes us wonder, is there—in the realm of love—an analogue to what Marx calls "surplus value," something skimmed off from the poor for the benefit of the rich?

Seen as a thing in itself, Vicky's love for the Beverly Hills toddler is unique, individual, private. But might there not be elements in this love that are borrowed, so to speak, from somewhere and someone else? Is time spent with the first world child in some sense "taken" from a child further down the care chain? Is the Beverly Hills child getting "surplus" love, the way immigrant farm workers give us surplus labor? Are first world countries such as the United States importing maternal love as they have imported copper, zinc, gold, and other ores from third world countries in the past?

This is a startling idea and an unwelcome one, both for Vicky Diaz, who needs the money from a first world job, and for her well-meaning employers, who want someone to give loving care to their child. Each link in the chain feels she is doing the right thing for good reasons—and who is to say she is not?

But there are clearly hidden costs here, costs that tend to get passed down along the chain. One nanny reported such a cost when she described (to Rhacel Parrenas) a return visit to the Philippines: "When I saw my children, I thought, 'Oh children do grow up even without their mother.' I left my youngest when she was only five years old. She was already nine when I saw her again but she still wanted for me to carry her [weeps]. That hurt me because it showed me that my children missed out on a lot."

Sometimes the toll it takes on the domestic worker is overwhelming and suggests that the nanny has not displaced her love onto an employer's child but rather has continued to long intensely for her own child. As one woman told Parrenas, "The first two years I felt like I was going crazy... . I would catch myself gazing at nothing, thinking about my child. Every moment, every second of the day, I felt like I was thinking about my baby. My youngest, you have to understand, I left when he was only two months old... . You know, whenever I receive a letter from my children, I cannot sleep. I cry. It's good that my job is more demanding at night."

Despite the anguish these separations clearly cause, Filipina women continue to leave for jobs abroad. Since the early 1990s, 55 percent of migrants out of the Philippines have been women; next to electronic manufacturing, their remittances make up the major source of foreign currency in the Philippines. The rate of female emigration has continued to increase and includes college-educated teachers, businesswomen, and secretaries. In Parrenas's study, more than half of the nannies she interviewed had college degrees and most were married mothers in their 30s.

here are men in this picture? For the most part, men—especially men at the top of the class ladder—leave child-rearing to women. Many of the husbands and fathers of Parrenas's domestic workers had migrated to the Arabian peninsula and other places in search of better wages, relieving other men of "male work" as construction workers and tradesmen, while being replaced themselves at home. Others remained at home, responsible fathers caring or helping to care for their children. But some of the men tyrannized their wives. Indeed, many of the women migrants Parrenas interviewed didn't just leave; they fled. As one migrant maid explained:

You have to understand that my problems were very heavy before I left the Philippines. My husband was abusive. I couldn't even think about my children, the only thing I could think about was the opportunity to escape my situation. If my husband was not going to kill me, I was probably going to kill him... . He always beat me up and my parents wanted me to leave him for a long time. I left my children with my sister... . In the plane ... I felt like a bird whose cage had been locked for many years... . I felt free... . Deep inside, I felt homesick for my children but I also felt free for being able to escape the most dire problem that was slowly killing me.

Other men abandoned their wives. A former public school teacher back in the Philippines confided to Parrenas: "After three years of marriage, my husband left me for another woman. My husband supported us for just a little over a year. Then the support was stopped... . The letters stopped. I have not seen him since." In the absence of government aid, then, migration becomes a way of coping with abandonment.

Sometimes the husband of a female migrant worker is himself a migrant worker who takes turns with his wife migrating. One Filipino man worked in Saudi Arabia for 10 years, coming home for a month each year. When he finally returned home for good, his wife set off to work as a maid in America while he took care of the children. As she explained to Parrenas, "My children were very sad when I left them. My husband told me that when they came back home from the airport, my children could not touch their food and they wanted to cry. My son, whenever he writes me, always draws the head of Fido the dog with tears on the eyes. Whenever he goes to Mass on Sundays, he tells me that he misses me more because he sees his friends with their mothers. Then he comes home and cries."

The End of the Chain

Just as global capitalism helps create a third world supply of mothering, it creates a first world demand for it. The past half-century has witnessed a huge rise in the number of women in paid work—from 15 percent of mothers of children aged 6 and under in 1950 to 65 percent today. Indeed, American women now make up 45 percent of the American labor force. Three-quarters of mothers of children 18 and under now work, as do 65 percent of mothers of children 6 and under. In addition, a recent report by the International Labor Organization reveals that the average number of hours of work per week has been rising in this country.

Earlier generations of American working women would rely on grandmothers and other female kin to help look after their children; now the grandmothers and aunts are themselves busy doing paid work outside the home. Statistics show that over the past 30 years a decreasing number of families have relied on relatives to care for their children—and hence are compelled to look for nonfamily care. At the first world end of care chains, working parents are grateful to find a good nanny or child care provider, and they are generally able to pay far more than the nanny could earn in her native country. This is not just a child care problem. Many American families are now relying on immigrant or out-of-home care for their elderly relatives. As a Los Angeles elder-care worker, an immigrant, told Parrenas, "Domestics here are able to make a living from the elderly that families abandon." But this often means that nannies cannot take care of their own ailing parents and therefore produce an elder-care version of a child care chain—caring for first world elderly persons while a paid worker cares for their aged mother back in the Philippines.

My own research for two books, The Second Shift and The Time Bind, sheds some light on the first world end of the chain. Many women have joined the law, academia, medicine, business—but such professions are still organized for men who are free of family responsibilities. The successful career, at least for those who are broadly middle class or above, is still largely built on some key traditional components: doing professional work, competing with fellow professionals, getting credit for work, building a reputation while you're young, hoarding scarce time, and minimizing family obligations by finding someone else to deal with domestic chores. In the past, the professional was a man and the "someone else to deal with [chores]" was a wife. The wife oversaw the family, which—in pre-industrial times, anyway—was supposed to absorb the human vicissitudes of birth, sickness, and death that the workplace discarded. Today, men take on much more of the child care and housework at home, but they still base their identity on demanding careers in the context of which children are beloved impediments; hence, men resist sharing care equally at home. So when parents don't have enough "caring time" between them, they feel forced to look for that care further down the global chain.

The ultimate beneficiaries of these various care changes might actually be large multinational companies, usually based in the United States. In my research on a Fortune 500 manufacturing company I call Amerco, I discovered a disproportionate number of women employed in the human side of the company: public relations, marketing, human resources. In all sectors of the company, women often helped others sort out problems—both personal and professional—at work. It was often the welcoming voice and "soft touch" of women workers that made Amerco seem like a family to other workers. In other words, it appears that these working mothers displace some of their emotional labor from their children to their employer, which holds itself out to the worker as a "family." So, the care in the chain may begin with that which a rural third world mother gives (as a nanny) the urban child she cares for, and it may end with the care a working mother gives her employees as the vice president of publicity at your company.

How Much Is Care Worth?

How are we to respond to the growing number of global care chains? Through what perspective should we view them?

I can think of three vantage points from which to see care chains: that of the primordialist, the sunshine modernist, and (my own) the critical modernist. The primordialist believes that our primary responsibility is to our own family, our own community, our own country. According to this view, if we all tend our own primordial plots, everybody will be fine. There is some logic to this point of view. After all, Freud's concept of displacement rests on the premise that some original first object of love has a primary "right" to that love, and second and third comers don't fully share that right. (For the primordialist—as for most all of us—those first objects are members of one's most immediate family. ) But the primordialist is an isolationist, an antiglobalist. To such a person, care chains seem wrong—not because they're unfair to the least-cared-for children at the bottom of the chain, but because they are global. Also, because family care has historically been provided by women, primordialists often believe that women should stay home to provide this care.

The sunshine modernist, on the other hand, believes care chains are just fine, an inevitable part of globalization, which is itself uncritically accepted as good. The idea of displacement is hard for the sunshine modernists to grasp because in their equation—seen mainly in economic terms—the global market will sort out who has proper claims on a nanny's love. As long as the global supply of labor meets the global demand for it, the sunshine modernist believes, everything will be okay. If the primordialist thinks care chains are bad because they're global, the sunshine modernist thinks they're good for the very same reason. In either case, the issue of inequality of access to care disappears.

The critical modernist embraces modernity but with a global sense of ethics. When the critical modernist goes out to buy a pair of Nike shoes, she is concerned to learn how low the wage was and how long the hours were for the third world factory worker making the shoes. The critical modernist applies the same moral concern to care chains: The welfare of the Filipino child back home must be seen as some part, however small, of the total picture. The critical modernist sees globalization as a very mixed blessing, bringing with it new opportunities—such as the nanny's access to good wages—but also new problems, including emotional and psychological costs we have hardly begun to understand.

From the critical modernist perspective, globalization may be increasing inequities not simply in access to money—and those inequities are important enough—but in access to care. The poor maid's child may be getting less motherly care than the first world child. (And for that matter, because of longer hours of work, the first world child may not be getting the ideal quantity of parenting attention for healthy development because too much of it is now displaced onto the employees of Fortune 500 companies.) We needn't lapse into primordialism to sense that something may be amiss in this.

I see no easy solutions to the human costs of global care chains. But here are some initial thoughts. We might, for example, reduce the incentive to migrate by addressing the causes of the migrant's economic desperation and fostering economic growth in the third world. Thus one obvious goal would be to develop the Filipino economy.

But it's not so simple. Immigration scholars have demonstrated that development itself can encourage migration because development gives rise to new economic uncertainties that families try to mitigate by seeking employment in the first world. If members of a family are laid off at home, a migrant's monthly remittance can see them through, often by making a capital outlay in a small business or paying for a child's education.

Other solutions might focus on individual links in the care chain. Because some women migrate to flee abusive husbands, a partial solution would be to create local refuges from such husbands. Another would be to alter immigration policy so as to encourage nannies to bring their children with them. Alternatively, employers or even government subsidies could help nannies make regular visits home.

The most fundamental approach to the problem is to raise the value of caring work and to ensure that whoever does it gets more credit and money for it. Otherwise, caring work will be what's left over, the work that's continually passed on down the chain. Sadly, the value ascribed to the labor of raising a child has always been low relative to the value of other kinds of labor, and under the impact of globalization, it has sunk lower still. The low value placed on caring work is due neither to an absence of demand for it (which is always high) nor to the simplicity of the work (successful caregiving is not easy) but rather to the cultural politics underlying this global exchange.

The declining value of child care anywhere in the world can be compared to the declining value of basic food crops relative to manufactured goods on the international market. Though clearly more essential to life, crops such as wheat, rice, or cocoa fetch low and declining prices while the prices of manufactured goods (relative to primary goods) continue to soar in the world market. And just as the low market price of primary produce keeps the third world low in the community of nations, the low market value of care keeps low the status of the women who do it.

One way to solve this problem is to get fathers to contribute more child care. If fathers worldwide shared child care labor more equitably, care would spread laterally instead of being passed down a social-class ladder, diminishing in value along the way. Culturally, Americans have begun to embrace this idea—but they've yet to put it into practice on a truly large scale [see Richard Weissbourd, "Redefining Dad," TAP, December 6, 1999]. This is where norms and policies established in the first world can have perhaps the greatest influence on reducing costs along global care chains.

According to the International Labor Organization, half of the world's women between ages 15 and 64 are working in paid jobs. Between 1960 and 1980, 69 out of 88 countries for which data are available showed a growing proportion of women in paid work (and the rate of increase has skyrocketed since the 1950s in the United States, Scandinavia, and the United Kingdom). If we want developed societies with women doctors, political leaders, teachers, bus drivers, and computer programmers, we will need qualified people to help care for children. And there is no reason why every society cannot enjoy such loving paid child care. It may even remain the case that Vicky Diaz is the best person to provide it. But we would be wise to adopt the perspective of the critical modernist and extend our concern to the potential hidden losers in the care chain. These days, the personal is global.

Special Thanks to:

Rhacel Parrenas for permission to draw from her dissertation "The Global Servants: (Im)Migrant Filipina Domestic Workers in Rome and Los Angeles," Department of Ethnic Studies, University of California, Berkeley.
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Re: Economic Aspects of "Love"

Postby American Dream » Fri Oct 14, 2011 6:32 pm

http://www.havenscenter.org/audio/arlie ... onal-labor

Arlie Hochschild: "Global Traffic in Female Service: Nannies, Surrogates, and Emotional Labor"



Artist: Arlie Hochschild
Title: Global Traffic in Female Service: Nannies, Surrogates, and Emotional Labor
Album: The Market Frontier
Year: 2010
Length: 90:01 minutes (41.21 MB)
Format: Stereo 44kHz 64Kbps (CBR)


A U.C. Berkeley sociologist, Arlie Hochschild is the author of The
Managed Heart, The Second Shift, The Time Bind, The Commercialization
of Intimate Life
and the co-edited Global Woman: Nannies, Maids and Sex
Workers in the New Economy
. She is the winner of the A.S.A. Jessie
Bernard Award, and the 2000 Public Understanding of Sociology Award.
Three of her books have been selected as “notable books of the year”
by the New York Times Book Review, plays have been based on two and her
work has been translated into 14 languages. She’s finishing a book on
the Commodity Frontier. According to Professor Hochschild, we live on a
commodity frontier. On one side of it, we find unpaid intimate life and
on the other side, we find goods and activities we pay for. This
frontier pushes forward into (and sometimes draws back from) many
realms of modern life – the realms of the economy, sports, prisons,
arts, education. In this series of talks, Professor Hochschild focuses
on those paid services which deal with the intimate realm of life at
each stage of the life cycle. Here she draws on interviews with
clients and their love coaches, wedding planners, sometimes gestational
surrogates, potty-trainers, parenting consultants, nannies, elder care
managers, and burial ash distributors. As the commodity frontier moves,
it alters what we do, how we think and how we feel. It is a frontier
in mentality. When we hire service providers, we set up an
“avatar-like” relationship between ourselves, she argues, and events of
symbolic importance to us. We become as managers of our private
lives. This creates a new challenge to the deepest paradigm underlying
all emotional life. Commodification threatens to detach us from our
personal symbols. Through what she calls “market mechanisms of defense”
we intuitively re-attach ourselves to those symbols. Indeed she
theorizes there is a meta-emotion-work of ‘attachment and detachment’
required in the world of an advancing commodity frontier. She
illustrates various mechanisms of defense and re-attachment. These,
she argues, we need to live modern lives, and also need to see
“through” in order to understand the larger forces that require us need
them.

» Download audio file
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Re: Economic Aspects of "Love"

Postby American Dream » Sat Oct 15, 2011 6:29 pm

http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2011-10-1 ... renas.html

What I Learned by Being a Migrant Sex Worker (Part 1): Parrenas
By Rhacel Salazar Parrenas Oct 12, 2011


A decade ago, the U.S. government determined that apart from terrorism, the gravest threat to democracy in the world was human trafficking. It vowed to wage war on this scourge as well as on terrorism.

A series of congressional hearings focused attention on what was said to be the forced labor, debt bondage and coerced migration of 800,000 individuals, 80 percent of whom supposedly were women and children, throughout the world. Emphasis was placed on trafficking in the sex industry. The hearings culminated in passage of the Victims of Trafficking and Violence Protection Act of 2000.

The act requires the U.S. Department of State to submit to Congress an annual report -- the Trafficking in Persons (TIP) Report -- describing the efforts of foreign governments to eliminate human trafficking. A country that fails to take significant actions receives a “Tier 3” assessment, which can trigger the withholding of non-humanitarian, non-trade-related assistance from the U.S.

According to the 2004 report, Filipinas who work as hostesses in clubs in Japan constituted the world’s largest group of sex-trafficked persons, making up more than 10 percent of those 800,000 victims. They were identified as trafficked under the assumption of their “sexual exploitation.” These women and male-to-female transgendered individuals generally enter Japan on visas that allow them to work as artists or entertainers, a vehicle the U.S. claimed traffickers exploited to bring them into the country.

Visa Changes

After being placed on the Tier 2 Watch List, a deeply embarrassed Japan imposed new visa requirements and a more rigorous screening process for migrant entertainers from the Philippines. No longer can the Philippine government evaluate the artistic ability of entertainers seeking visas for Japan. Instead, to qualify for a visa, an individual must have had two years of training or an internship as a performing artist, and work experience in Japan does not count.

Afterward, the number of Filipina hostesses employed as contract workers in Japan fell 90 percent, from 82,741 in 2004 to 8,607 in 2006.

This might seem to suggest a victory in the global anti- trafficking campaign, but I argue it poses a setback to the emancipation of women. It has stripped thousands of migrant women of their livelihood, forcing them to stay at home, often in impoverished conditions. I challenge the identification of migrant Filipina hostesses as sex-trafficked persons. In fact, prostitutes are a small minority of all Filipinas in Japan, just 2.8 percent.

How do I know?

In a nine-month study in Tokyo in 2005 and 2006, I interviewed 56 Filipina hostesses and worked as a hostess myself. None of the hostesses I encountered wanted to be rescued from their employment. Most found that migration had made them breadwinners in their families, a position that granted them decision-making power and earned them the respect of their kin. In some instances, participating in commercial flirtation allowed them to challenge conservative norms that limited the acceptable sexual activities of women.

Here’s something else I found, an observation supported by other studies: Filipina hostesses in Japan sell drinks, not sex, in hostess clubs. While they perform sex work in that they titillate customers via commercial flirtation, “sex work” is not “prostitution.” It encompasses a wide array of services including flirtation and stripping -- in addition to prostitution. For hostesses, acts of commercial flirtation include playful bantering, seductive dance and song performances, and, in rare instances, sex acts such as groping and discreet masturbation of customers beneath the table.

No Coercion Seen

For the most part, no one coerced my fellow hostesses to work in Japan. They were not drugged, taken on planes and trapped in clubs. No one lied to them or explicitly told them they would only be singing and dancing onstage.

This is not to say that migrant Filipina hostesses do not face serious problems. First, middleman brokers who arrange for visas, transit and job placement charge high rates upfront, subjecting hostesses to what amounts to indentured servitude. Once in Japan, hostesses cannot legally change clubs. Because being undocumented is a crime, those who are fired and remain in Japan become dependent on their next employer and on other Filipinos who may exploit their vulnerability by withholding wages or overcharging them for housing.

Still, migrant Filipina entertainers see servitude abroad as a much better option than their other choice of immobility in the Philippines. The current solution to their problems ignores their preference to be left with the option to work in Japan, ideally under improved conditions. What those conditions were like, at least as I experienced them, will be the subject of the next installment...

http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2011-10-1 ... renas.html

What I Learned by Being a Migrant Sex Worker (Part 2): Parrenas

By Rhacel Salazar Parrenas Oct 13, 2011


I spent nine months in Tokyo working as a hostess in a working-class club in one of the city’s many red-light districts, frequented by members of the yakuza, the Japanese crime syndicates. This type of place, in a seedy location, owned by a proprietor with a questionable background, was often assumed to be a site of forced prostitution.

In 2005 and 2006, I resorted to this work as a way of gaining access to the world of Filipina hostesses in Japan. During my first three months in Tokyo, I had struggled to meet hostesses willing to participate in my study of their conditions. My visits to clubs as a customer had not provided any solid leads. Attending church with fellow Filipinas had not gained their trust. Even hostesses whom I befriended had always declined my request for an interview. I had assumed that they had experienced emotional distress from the stigma associated with their occupation. I had come to Japan believing claims by other academics that “hostess work” was a euphemism for “prostitution.”

Unfamiliar World

After I began working as a hostess, every person I approached agreed to talk to me. By the end of my study, I had completed interviews with 56 Filipina hostesses: 45 females and 11 male-to-female transgendered individuals. After working just one week in a hostess bar, I realized I had entered an unfamiliar sexual world, where people are more open about their sexuality, where both customers and hostesses seem to be ready for extramarital affairs, and where men can sexually harass women with no punishment.

This world has been condemned not only for its debauchery and criminal elements but also for “crimes against humanity.” Japanese hostess clubs -- specifically those that employ Filipinas, Eastern Europeans, Colombians and Korean women -- have been labeled by the U.S. Department of State as hotbeds of sexual trafficking. In these places, women are not just endlessly harassed, but supposedly also held against their will, forced into prostitution and made victims of sexual violence by lecherous Japanese men.

What I discovered, in fact, was that these women come to Japan voluntarily and gratefully, knowing what their jobs will be. Very few engage in prostitution, and if they do, they do so willingly. Instead, workers in hostess clubs are expected to flirt with customers. Flirtation could occur up close at the table or from a distance via the seductive performance of a song or dance onstage. In explaining their profession, hostesses view themselves as modern-day geisha.

Like Geisha

The hostesses I met catered to much-lower-earning men than those who would typically engage with geisha. A middle-range Philippine club in Tokyo charges no more than 5,000 yen ($65) per hour. Still, like geisha, Filipina hostesses entertain customers. While they might not play the stringed samisen or any other musical instrument, they do sing and dance. More significantly, like geisha, the hostesses would not engage in the direct exchange of sex for money and tarnish their reputation by making themselves easily available on a nightly basis.

In Japan’s nightlife industry, hostess clubs occupy a particular niche; men go there to flirt. In contrast, men go to image clubs for sexual stimulation through role-playing; pink salons for fellatio or masturbation; soap lands for a full- service bath with the option of sex; and lingerie clubs or no- panty bars for sexual excitement.

Objectifying Hostesses

In the clubs, men bond over their ability to objectify hostesses with no admonishment. In the place where I worked, customers usually commented on the appearance of the hostess assigned to their table immediately after being introduced to her, expressing either approval or disapproval, and in some cases rejecting her, telling the club manager to replace her with someone more attractive. Sometimes customers would request a hostess with a specific physical feature, notably large breasts.

I often heard customers describe me as “futote,” meaning fat, and “kuroi,” meaning dark. I could not retort because customers patronize hostess clubs not only to avoid rejection but to experience male superiority. Hostesses can express only positive comments about clients. As one of my co-workers observed of our clients, “No one wants to listen to them. No one tells them they are good-looking. No one admires them. That is why they go to the club.” Hostesses try to generate sales by bolstering the masculinity of their customers.

Precarious Status

Generally, sales determine a hostess’s treatment at the club. Proprietors do not hesitate to fire those with lackluster numbers. Entertainers who are fired are not necessarily sent back to the Philippines; they are likely to be placed at another club, which leaves them in a precarious, illegal immigration status. Clubs have no qualms about berating hostesses for poor sales performance.

Hostesses generate sales by securing a “shimei,” a customer’s request for their company inside the club, and a “dohan,” a paid date outside the establishment. Influenced by conservative moral strictures of feminine respectability, most shun paid sex. Yet even if hostesses hold no moral qualms against prostitution, sex for money would not necessarily guarantee them more sales, because sex could repel as much as attract customers. Giving in would eliminate the thrill of the chase.

Challenging Requirement

Hostesses consider the “dohan” one of the most challenging job requirements. It technically requires that a hostess spend some time with a customer outside the club, whether it is a few hours or no more than five seconds for those who literally do nothing but escort the client into the club. The purchase of a “dohan” guarantees at least one hour with the hostess inside the establishment. In female hostess clubs, a “dohan” costs anywhere from 7,000 yen to 15,000 yen, plus a minimum purchase of 10,000 yen of food inside the club.

Most hostesses do not think a “dohan” harms them; they told me it was unlikely to mean coercive sex, though it might involve voluntary prostitution. One woman said she once played tug of war with a customer trying to get her inside a love hotel. At the same time, hostesses on a “dohan” are sometimes envied, because they are often taken to a Filipino restaurant.

False Assumptions

Yet the U.S. State Department cites the “dohan” as an indication that Filipina hostesses are sexually trafficked in Japan. Such false assumptions led to a U.S. policy that prompted Japan, in 2006, to reduce the number of visas for Filipina hostesses by 90 percent. Anti-trafficking and anti-prostitution crusaders counted this a triumph. But no trafficking and very little prostitution was stopped, and 81,000 Filipinas lost their livelihoods.

Unsubstantiated claims of the forced prostitution of Filipina hostesses are morally charged, and divert attention from the need for regulation and protection of sex workers.

For Filipina hostesses, the goal should be job improvement, not job elimination. What’s needed are laws to prevent abusive behavior by middleman brokers. Club owners should be required to pay hostesses directly, rather than brokers. And labor standards should be enacted to ensure that the hostesses have regular days off and an eight-hour-per-evening work limit.

Hostesses don’t need to be rescued. They need the empowerment that comes from being independent labor migrants. Only then can they remain gainfully employed, free of migrant brokers, and have full control of their own lives.

(Rhacel Salazar Parrenas is a professor of sociology at the University of Southern California. This is the second in a two- part excerpt from her new book “Illicit Flirtations: Labor, Migration, and Sex Trafficking in Tokyo” to be published Oct. 15 by Stanford University Press)
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