The History and Nature of Capitalism – Revised Version

January 27th, 2012

Exploring the Nature of Capitalism

A revised version of the book The History and Nature of Capitalism, dated 27th January 2012 has now been posted here and can be accessed below.

It is said that the aphorism ‘Know Yourself’ was inscribed in the forecourt of the Temple of Apollo at Delphi. Finding out who we are can be an unsettling experience.

Not only do human beings gild memories of experiences in their own lifetimes, they are extremely adept at reinventing those of their historical past. It can be an educative experience to strip away what the French philosopher Voltaire called the ‘fable upon which we are all agreed’.

It’s time we, living in capitalist countries, got ourselves into perspective.

Over the past three centuries, people living in Western (capitalist) countries have increasingly imposed their understanding of reality on others. Now, they are becoming aware of a growing antipathy toward ‘The West’ around the world.

The late Henry Hyde’s view of the problems facing Western countries is not isolated,

Let us begin by accepting there is no single enemy to be defeated, no one network to be eliminated. Al-Qa’eda is but our most prominent opponent, but its outlook is shared by many others who are equally committed to our destruction…

We know now that we have permanent, mortal enemies who will seize upon our vulnerabilities to bloody us, to murder our citizens, to commit horror for the purpose of forcing horror upon us…
(US House of Representatives Committee on International Relations October 3 2001)

For the past decade the West has confronted what it perceives as a growing ‘climate of terror’ around the world.

While estimates vary, it is reasonable to say that thousands of lives have been lost and billions of dollars have been spent in pursuing, capturing and killing those deemed a threat to the security of Western nations.

It is time to take stock. Before continuing to pursue phantoms and shoot at shadows (and, in the process, alienate thousands caught in the crossfire) we need to understand what is producing this apparently burgeoning antipathy toward Western capitalist countries.

Western capitalist nations, over the past several centuries, have attempted to re-organize the world to reflect their understanding of reality. Although we often fail to recognize it, this requires a far-reaching reorganization of people’s lives in non-Western countries. It would be surprising if there was not, sooner or later, a reaction against such activity.

So,

What is capitalism?

What gives people living by capitalist understandings of the world such a determination to reorganize the rest of the world to their understanding?

And, what impact does this attempt to reorganize the world have on people living in non-Western regions?

People living by capitalist understandings of the world have, over the past four centuries, felt driven to compel those who do not think and live as they do, to change. They have committed their lives to a refashioned world, to a capitalist world.

So, what is it that has produced in Western people such a deep need to dominate and change the world?

 

… Read the book
Minor revisions/additions will occur regularly as new relevant studies appear and are integrated into the text – often as footnotes. All versions are regularly updated to reflect these changes.
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Capitalism: global restructuring, sovereign debt, benign bloc politics, safety nets and New Year’s resolutions

January 17th, 2012

Exploring the Nature of Capitalism

It’s a brand new year, the wrapping is only half off and it’s more than a little scary!

It’s time for New Year’s resolutions.

Let’s face it, we’ve lost control. Unregulated internationalized capitalism is in the driving seat, and it is demanding that countries, communities and individuals subordinate themselves to its needs and interests .

As countries find themselves with unmanageable sovereign debt , they are being subjected to ‘structural adjustment’ to make them more accountable – and vulnerable – to an internationalized capitalism which has gained the whip hand.

It now demands that we accept our lot; that we reduce our lives and our vision to its horizons; that we accept that we are nothing more than a malleable, expendable ‘workforce’ for its activities and a ‘consumer base’ for its products.

As this happens, you and I are similarly being ‘adjusted’ to the requirements of an unregulated capitalist world .

It’s time to take back control of our communities and our individual lives.

It’s time to make capitalism the servant and not the master of countries, communities and individuals.

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Capitalism, the Spirit of Christmas, a Bleak New Year and a hollow feeling in the pit of the stomach

December 17th, 2011

Exploring the Nature of Capitalism

‘Tis the week before Christmas!

Apparently we’re not buying enough, not eating enough, not traveling enough, not decorating enough, not getting into the Xmas Spirit!

How on earth are we going to be able to afford Christmas this year? The credit cards are already ‘maxed out’. It’s going to be a tough new year!

And this was supposed to be a time when people stepped back from crass materialism, re-examined their lives, re-ordered their priorities, and shared their loaves and fishes.

Did you know that, in the US  and, yes, if you live in a Western country, almost certainly in your neck of the woods as well!:

While the top 1 percent have seen their incomes rise 18 percent over the past decade, those in the middle have actually seen their incomes fall.

For men with only high-school degrees, the decline has been precipitous—12 percent in the last quarter-century alone. All the growth in recent decades—and more—has gone to those at the top.

In terms of income equality, America lags behind any country in the old, ossified Europe that President George W. Bush used to deride. Among our closest counterparts are Russia with its oligarchs and Iran.
(Joseph Stiglitz, Of the 1%, by the 1%, for the 1% Vanity Fair, May 2011)

and

Income and wealth disparities become even more absurd if we look at the top 0.1% of the nation’s earners — rather than the more common 1%. The top 0.1% — about 315,000 individuals out of 315 million [in the US] — are making about half of all capital gains on the sale of shares or property after 1 year; and these capital gains make up 60% of the income made by the Forbes 400.
(Robert Lenzner ‘The Top 0.1% Of The Nation Earn Half Of All Capital Gains’ Forbes, Nov 21, 2011)

and

The vast majority of subprime mortgages — the loans at the heart of the global crisis — were underwritten by unregulated private firms.

These firms had business models that could be called “Lend-in-order-to-sell-to-Wall-Street-securitizers.”
(Barry Ritholtz ‘Examining the big lie: How the facts of the economic crisis stack up’ Washington Post November 20, 2011)

But, spare a thought, and, yes, a little sentiment too, for the millions of homeless, jobless, stressed people who have no idea where the next meal is coming from.

Thomas Jefferson was right, and I’m certain that there would be sadness in his voice as he contemplated 2011:

…they have divided their nations into two classes, wolves and sheep. I do not exaggerate. This is a true picture of [the Western World]. …man is the only animal which devours his own kind; for I can apply no milder term to the governments of [The West], and to the general prey of the rich on the poor.
(Thomas Jefferson, 1787)

No! this is not a call to become a wolf, and No! this is not a call to mob violence and ‘Western Spring’ revolution – that’s been tried before – unless you’re as old as I am you probably don’t remember the 1960s.

As the saying goes “The more things change, the more they stay the same”!

Let’s be genuinely revolutionary! Let’s start with ourselves.

We don’t have to consume to be happy (or if we do then we are really messed up!)

We don’t have to give large, expensive presents to show that we are ‘successful’.

We don’t have to travel to the ends of the earth to assuage our boredom.

We don’t have to respect and admire those who have turned wolf – even those who dress up in sheep’s clothing!

Let’s see them for what they are. People who, with no apparent empathy, readily strip the assets and well-being from fellow human beings. Who take their ‘earnings’, ‘invest’ them in large mansions, absurdly swollen bank accounts, stocks and shares and safety deposit boxes, and, all-too-often ostentatiously display their wealth – often through ‘philanthropic activity’.

Let’s learn to despise them for what they really are!

What? This is not the ‘Spirit of Christmas’?

Then what is the ‘Spirit of Christmas’ for you?

See:

The Sweat Shop is the Destination – unless you’re protected!;

Economic Activity as Non-Social Activity and

Conglomerates and the progressive modernization of poverty

for discussion of what it means, and will increasingly mean, to live in a truly deregulated,  internationalized capitalist world.

 

Rage, rage against the dying of the light!

 

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Capitalism, Renewable Energy, Ennui and the Fabled Ostrich: this is as good as it gets!

November 12th, 2011

Exploring the Nature of Capitalism

We have reached the high water mark in our responses to climate change in Western countries.

Bold initiatives, contemplated over the past several years, such as:

  • subsidies to encourage the deployment of solar panels on house roof tops;
  • schemes aimed at making green house gas emissions costly, or at least of building the cost of emissions into production costings;
  • a range of re-forestation, biochar and similar programs to sequester carbon;
  • A range of CO2 ‘Capture and Storage’ projects

are now in retreat.

In Western countries, politicians who clearly disbelieve and dismiss the reality of climate change; who assume that claims of environmental damage resulting from capitalist activity are ‘socialist’ conspiracies, are winning political office. As they do, the first tentative advances made by their predecessors are being dismantled.

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9/11 and the nature of capitalism: “The once-distant prospect of terrorism has become an inescapable reality”

September 9th, 2011

Exploring the Nature of Capitalism

It is now 10 years since the events of 9/11, but the date and the events remain fresh in the minds of Western people everywhere.

Another year has passed and, once again, we have remembered the tragedy of September 11th 2001. But, this should not just be a time to remember the dead, it should also be a time of serious reflection.

The late Henry Hyde, then chairman of the U. S. Committee on International Relations, explained its consequences clearly:
With the September 11 attacks on the United States, the once-distant prospect of terrorism has become an inescapable reality for all Americans. The impact of this assault is greater than the tally of physical destruction, greater even than the tragic loss of life. The images forced into our lives are permanent ones.
The realization that human beings are capable of performing such deeds forces us to accept that evil still exists among us, especially in our modern era when many had hoped it might be abolished altogether…

But what does this mean?

  • Are we now to live in permanent fear in our own country and adopt a defensive crouch as part of our national character?
  • Do we remake our country and communities into fortresses?
  • Must we sacrifice our entire foreign policy agenda in order to address this suddenly urgent problem?

Events, since that day, demonstrate the truth of Henry Hyde’s observation:

The realization that human beings are capable of performing such deeds forces us to accept that evil still exists among us…

Our response to the tragedy compels us to ask those questions once again:

  • Do we now live in permanent fear in our own countries?
  • Have we adopted a defensive crouch as part of our national character?
  • Have we remade our countries and communities into fortresses?
  • Have we sacrificed our foreign policy agenda in order to address what has become a perennially urgent problem?
  • Have we, in responding to the perceived terrorist threats of the past ten years,
    • forfeited our freedoms,
    • and created hidden, poorly regulated institutions to root out both real and imagined threats in our own countries and communities?
  • Have we trampled on the rights and freedoms of other countries and communities in our determination to protect ourselves from new assaults (whether real or imagined), not only to intercept and frustrate them, but to eliminate new threats at their source?

If the answer to any or all of these is ‘Yes’ then we have headed down a dangerous path.

Henry Hyde’s vision of the future might well be mild compared to that which we will bequeath our children and their descendants.

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Capitalism and parables: It’s all about gardening!

July 17th, 2011

Exploring the Nature of Capitalism
(Access book of the previous category: The History and Nature of Capitalism)

Look around you – wherever you live – and you will see the result of uncontrolled capitalism. It is rampant. It has out-competed all other forms of material need and want provision and, in the process, has choked communities and fouled environments.

Thoroughly regulated and subordinated to the requirements of communities, it can be a positive, very effective means of material need and want provision. Unregulated and internationalized, it rapidly grows into a rampant ecological and social disaster.

The problem is not capitalism, it is us!!

Read more.…

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Global Capitalism and the Torrent of Garbage

April 21st, 2011

Exploring the Nature of Capitalism
(Access book of the previous category: The History and Nature of Capitalism)

Everywhere, human beings are generating more and more waste.

We might talk about recycling. We might even indulge in a limited attempt at it (I have a special roadside bin provided by the local council in which various kinds of ‘recyclable’ materials are placed), but the amount of waste dumped into landfills grows each year.

No matter how much recycling we indulge in, the simple fact is that corporations extracting resources to feed the industries we demand, are entering a boom period. The future, for them, is record profits and rapid expansion! Recycling is barely a blip on their rose-tinted horizons.

In this post we examine some of the solid waste difficulties being experienced around the world.  We all understand what is causing the problem:

Capitalism requires us to continue to consume at an ever-expanding rate:

If we don’t:

  • our economies will falter,
  • people will lose their jobs,
  • our futures will be bleak.

If we do:

  • our economies will be ‘healthy’
  • we will have full employment,
  • and our futures …

And, Garbage is the least of our problems!

In the early 21st century forested, pastoral, agricultural and horticultural regions of the world are facing serious:

  • agricultural chemical pollution,
  • water-logging,
  • salinity,
  • over-grazing,
  • deforestation,
  • land erosion,
  • desertification,
  • increasingly erratic climatic conditions,

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Exploring Capitalism – Revised version of Book

March 23rd, 2011

Exploring the Nature of Capitalism

A revised version of the book The History and Nature of Capitalism, dated 23rd March 2011 has now been posted here and can be accessed below.

This revision includes an addendum examining the nature of exchange and reciprocity and the importance of these in understanding the nature of capitalism.

If there is a single defining feature of Western capitalism, it might well be the peculiar definition of exchange which lies at its core. If we can get that definition of exchange into perspective, it will help us to get capitalism into comparative perspective.

… Read the book
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The History and Nature of Capitalism: The Book

January 11th, 2011

Revised Version has been posted for this book:

… Read the book

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It is time to draw the threads together and present the articles in this blog series on capitalism as an integrated whole. The result is a book entitled The History and Nature of Capitalism which includes rewritten versions of 9 of the Capitalism blog entries, linked through a wide range of clickable footnotes (obviously this is all designed as an ebook (a hard copy version would make for a very unwieldy book)).

I have reworked each of the articles to take into account ideas developed in later entries and, also, to address issues which have emerged in the course of this rewriting. I reserve the right, as I return to the text from time to time, to alter anything I decide needs further reworking.

I think this is one of the real virtues of the ebook format – nothing needs to be set in stone (or paper) and so mistakes, careless language, loose thinking, and material which is being misunderstood or misinterpreted can be addressed over time. If major changes are made I’ll signal this by posting a new version showing the revision date.

The book, like the earlier blog entries, has been written using the Complete Home Library application’s HTML editor. This application is available for download (sorry, I have only written a Windows version of it).

A library of the blog entries is also available for download, for use in the application. To access it, select ‘Download demonstration libraries’ from the Help menu in the main Complete Home Library screen. From the HTML page which is accessed, select the library ‘Anthropology and the Western World (updated 8th October 2010)’ and download it to your computer desktop. Leave it on your desktop, the application will unpack it if it is already running or will unpack the downloaded file when you next run it.

The download versions of the book below, present the complete set of writings in a form which will allow you to follow footnoting to other sections of the book without having to be connected to the internet. If you move to other sections, and want to return to your place in the book, right-click and select the option ‘back’, this will return you to your previous location.

I have left the ‘Comments’ option for each of the chapters so that, should something occur to you while reading, or should you have suggestions for improving the content, you can provide feedback for each section. To comment on the whole book, please use the Comments option below. I assure you that I do take into account the ideas of others in developing mine.

Spring has arrived in my neck of the woods, the lawns are growing so fast you can almost see the grass getting longer, and there is much to do in the garden so I’ll concentrate on that for the next couple of months (and, yes, I will find time to take the boat out once in a while (life is hell!)). But, I will be back.

The next series will focus on the present impact of capitalism, both on people and on our environments. I look forward to sharing ideas with you then.

… Read the book

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Capitalism and a Commoditised World

September 7th, 2010

Exploring the Nature of Capitalism

The posts to this blog category have been reorganised as a book entitled The History and Nature of Capitalism which includes rewritten versions of 9 of the Capitalism blog entries, linked through a wide range of clickable footnotes (obviously this is all designed as an ebook (a hard copy version would make for a very unwieldy book)).

The book can be accessed from here: The History and Nature of Capitalism: The Book


We, in Western communities, live in a commoditised world. In a manner never before seen in human society, Western peoples convert anything and everything into money-making commodities – objects which can be exploited for profit – and believe that it is ‘natural’ to do so. Vast financial and promotional industries have grown over the past three hundred years, driven by and dedicated to the commoditisation of the world.

The Western need to accumulate money inevitably results in more and more of the forms of activity, interaction and organisation which people perceive as important to themselves, being exploited for profit. The consequence is the commoditisation of society.

To understand the nature and consequences of this burgeoning commoditisation of everything around us, we need to ask why we feel such a deep need to accumulate material wealth; to make everything around us a source of material profit.

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Global Capitalism: Some are more equal than others

August 7th, 2010

Exploring the Nature of Capitalism
Entries (RSS) ; Comments (RSS)

The posts to this blog category have been reorganised as a book entitled The History and Nature of Capitalism which includes rewritten versions of 9 of the Capitalism blog entries, linked through a wide range of clickable footnotes (obviously this is all designed as an ebook (a hard copy version would make for a very unwieldy book)).

The book can be accessed from here: The History and Nature of Capitalism: The Book


Over the past nine months we have covered a range of topics in our exploration of the nature of capitalism. A topic which has been presumed in those discussions, but never directly addressed, is the nature of reciprocity and exchange.

Capitalism presumes market exchange as the normal form of exchange between human beings. This form of exchange is, however, only one in a wide range of possible focuses of exchange.

In this post, we will examine the nature of reciprocity and exchange and the ways in which the forms of relationship which exist between people determine the nature of the exchanges in which they engage.

In many communities around the world, market exchange is only acceptable between people who do not share a close relationship. Those involved in market exchange focus on the items they are attempting to obtain or sell. The other person in the exchange is only recognised as a seller or customer. Most people find it very difficult to engage in market exchange with people with whom they already share another kind of relationship.

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Global Capitalism: Is The Sweat-Shop the Destination?

July 7th, 2010

Exploring the Nature of Capitalism
Entries (RSS) ; Comments (RSS)

The posts to this blog category have been reorganised as a book entitled The History and Nature of Capitalism which includes rewritten versions of 9 of the Capitalism blog entries, linked through a wide range of clickable footnotes (obviously this is all designed as an ebook (a hard copy version would make for a very unwieldy book)).

The book can be accessed from here: The History and Nature of Capitalism: The Book


In 2001, 924 million people, or 31.6 per cent of the world’s urban population, lived in slums. The majority of them were in the developing regions, accounting for 43 per cent of the urban population… In many cities, there are more poor people outside slum areas than within them.
(UN Agency for Human Settlements, The Challenge of Slums: Global Report on Human Settlements 2003 p. xxv,xxvi)

Is the sweat-shop the destination of human beings involved in deregulated, globalised capitalism, or is it a first step in a ‘take-off into self-sustained economic growth’?

Are we really headed for a world in which the number of  slum dwellers doubles in the next thirty years, with “unprecedented urban growth in the face of increasing poverty and social inequality”?

Unless something remarkable, and unlikely given present economic conditions, happens, the trends described in the UN-Habitat report will bring enormous problems in the next few decades:

The locus of poverty is moving from the countryside to cities, in a process now recognized as the “urbanization of poverty.” The absolute number of poor and undernourished in urban areas is increasing, as are the numbers of urban poor who suffer from malnutrition…

In some cities, slums are so pervasive that rather than designate residential areas for the poor, it is the rich who segregate themselves behind gated enclaves.
(2003 p. xxvi)

In this discussion we will examine the experiences of Third World nations as they became “unhinged” and attempted to “emerge into self-sustained growth” (to use Rostow’s (1961) colourful, optimistic phraseology); as they attempted to ‘develop’ into capitalist success stories over the past 60 years.

In the 1st decade of the 21st century, most Third World communities are transient. Most of them are in various stages of change. They are slowly, but inevitably, metamorphosing into communities which exhibit similarities with the pre-colonial communities from which they came.

Western peoples are faced with a difficult decision:

  • ignore the changes and continue to assert with Rostow and his many followers that Third World communities are still in the process of metamorphosing into capitalist nations — it’s just taking longer than we expected!
  • attempt to prevent the changes;
  • accept the changes and live with the consequences.

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Global Capitalism, Western Realities: From Protectionism to Free Markets

June 7th, 2010

Exploring the Nature of Capitalism
Entries (RSS) ; Comments (RSS)

The posts to this blog category have been reorganised as a book entitled The History and Nature of Capitalism which includes rewritten versions of 9 of the Capitalism blog entries, linked through a wide range of clickable footnotes (obviously this is all designed as an ebook (a hard copy version would make for a very unwieldy book)).

The book can be accessed from here: The History and Nature of Capitalism: The Book


The problem of 2010 is ‘sovereign debt’ (well – one of them anyway!).

Western nations have profligately continued to fund social welfare measures — such as aged pensions, free health care, free education, unemployment benefits, child and family support, poverty alleviation … — as though they still lived in a regulated and protected world.

But the world has been deregulated, protection has been traded for globalisation. “Public debt sustainability has exploded as a serious issue in advanced economies”.

The social welfare component built into production and financial sector costs in Western nations is disappearing. Like the Cheshire cat, we are left with little but the grin! Deregulation has shifted the costs from ‘the economy’ to sovereign debt.

Western nation-states, once firmly in control of economic activity within their borders are, in the deregulated, privatised world of the 21st century, decreasingly able to shield their populations from the exploitative consequences of unregulated and internationalised financial manipulation.

Now, there is no international forum capable of limiting and directing the bargaining advantages of finance houses whose international financial dealings eclipse those of the countries in which they do business.

No longer is the economy the means by which communities meet their needs and wants. Now communities service an international network of independent financial corporations which need accept no reciprocal responsibilities for their welfare.

Nations which, prior to 2008, were largely coping with the costs of scaled down versions of earlier public social welfare costs, now find themselves with unsustainable debt. Another crisis similar to that of 2008 would introduce many of them to structural adjustment programs similar to that currently being implemented in Greece.

Western nations are beginning to understand what ‘structural adjustment’ really means in a globalised neoliberal world. They just did not take the problems seriously when Third World countries complained about the effects of such programs over the past thirty years.

How is it that over the past three years, nations could be held to ransom by international financial corporations?

Why weren’t both nations and international financial corporations alerted by the financial woes experienced in the so-called ‘Tiger’ economies of the 1990s and so prepared for the problems of the last three years?

How did we get ourselves into this mess?

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Capitalism and its Colonies: Nation-States, Third World Nations

May 7th, 2010

Exploring the Nature of Capitalism
Entries (RSS) ; Comments (RSS)

The posts to this blog category have been reorganised as a book entitled The History and Nature of Capitalism which includes rewritten versions of 9 of the Capitalism blog entries, linked through a wide range of clickable footnotes (obviously this is all designed as an ebook (a hard copy version would make for a very unwieldy book)).

The book can be accessed from here: The History and Nature of Capitalism: The Book


We are at the start of a new century. A century which promised so much.

 Yet it is threatened by forces greater than we, inhabitants of a capitalist world, have ever seen. And, largely, they have been invoked by us.

But for capitalism, they would not threaten.

What will happen in the next fifty years?

Will we see an ice free Arctic? acidified oceans? rising sea levels?

And then, there’s ‘global warming’, desertification and massive species loss!

All these seem very likely, even in my lifetime.

And there is another set of problems looming in this 21st century. They threaten the world as surely as increasing levels of greenhouse gasses. And they, also, are a consequence of capitalism.

As the empires of Western Europe have crumbled, the institutions in their post-colonial territories, established by them to ensure continuity with the colonial past, have become decreasingly effective.

Post-colonial territories are suffering turmoil and chaos as they metamorphose into communities which exhibit similarities with the pre-colonial communities from which they came.

And we will not, willingly, let them do so!

We still know that the world needs ‘developing’ and we know that wherever countries and communities are disintegrating, we have a deep responsibility to step in and save them from themselves.

Perhaps that’s because, as the Director of the US Defense Intelligence Agency, in testimony to the US Senate Select Intelligence Committee on 10 January 1995, claimed:

it’s important to remember that the world is already awash in weapon systems. These range from the relatively simple small arms and mines, to more advanced hand held surface to air missiles, to increasingly advanced anti-ship cruise missiles.

Any country with hard currency can and will get these systems.

And:

 In the last six years, Washington has stepped up its sales and transfers of high-technology weapons, military training, and other military assistance to governments regardless of their respect for human rights, democratic principles, or nonproliferation. All that matters is that they have pledged their assistance in the global war on terrorism.
(Rachel Stohl (2008))

Perhaps our continued concern is, as Obafemi Awolowo claimed in 1947,  “the result of a later compunction of conscience which usually dawns on any evil-doer who is not hardened beyond redemption”.

  • We invaded their territories;
  • forcibly included them in European empires;
  • created poorly established ‘post-colonial’ nations;
  • co-opted them into our ‘Cold War’;
  • supplied them with both weapons and military training;
  • fomented insurrection within their territories;
  • and blame them for the ensuing chaos.

Now,  they are killing each other, and the weapons have been (and are being) supplied by us!

Is it any wonder that so many post-colonial nation-states have become dysfunctional?

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Capitalism and Work: The White Man’s Burden

April 7th, 2010

Exploring the Nature of Capitalism
Entries (RSS) ; Comments (RSS)

The posts to this blog category have been reorganised as a book entitled The History and Nature of Capitalism which includes rewritten versions of 9 of the Capitalism blog entries, linked through a wide range of clickable footnotes (obviously this is all designed as an ebook (a hard copy version would make for a very unwieldy book)).

The book can be accessed from here: The History and Nature of Capitalism: The Book


It is said that the aphorism ‘Know Yourself’ was inscribed in the forecourt of the Temple of Apollo at Delphi — Finding out who we are can be an unsettling experience.

Not only do human beings gild memories of experiences in their own lifetimes, they are extremely adept at reinventing those of their historical past.
It can be an educative experience to strip away what the French philosopher Voltaire called the ‘fable upon which we are all agreed’. 

To understand the nature of capitalism, we need to examine the actual practices of Western European colonisation during the 19th and early 20th centuries.

Unless we do, not knowing our history, we might well, as Edmund Burke suggested, unwittingly repeat it.

The 19th century was the century in which unregulated capitalism lay at the heart of most Western European public and private policy and practice. It was the century in which ‘The Poor’, long a vexing problem for responsible people — and, of course, a source of cheap labour and profit for capitalist enterprise — were taught to work.

By the end of the century, life was slowly improving for Western Europe’s poor. But, for the responsible middle classes of Western Europe, the job was far from complete!
A new ‘Poor’ had been found, indigent and slothful, in need of discipline and direction, in the extensive colonies for which they had accepted responsibility.

The next century would be the one in which Western working poor slowly gained legal rights and entitlements, enshrined in labour awards. The wealth flowing into Western countries from the rest of the world would bring increasing material prosperity, improved living conditions, healthier diets, and even, for a period, the chance to pursue ‘leisure’ activities. This would not be true for the inhabitants of Europe’s colonial empires.

The 19th was not only the century when The Poor learned to work. It was also the century of Western European colonial expansion. Populations around the world found themselves designated ‘natives’ (the Western European name for ‘The Poor’ of their colonies) and included, whether they liked it or not, in Western European empires. They, like Europe’s Poor before them, would be taught to work!
The consequences for indigenous populations would all-too-often be catastrophic.

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