Nobody is born nonviolent

World without Wars and without Violence aims to develop a worldwide commitment to nonviolence as a methodology of action, as a social system and as a lifestyle. Its objective is to achieve a world free of wars as well as physical, economic, racial, religious, sexual, psychological, ecological and moral violence. “Human beings are historical beings whose mode of social action changes their own nature” (Silo). This is the root of both our responsibility and our freedom. And it opens our future.

Nobody is born violent... Or nonviolent for that matter. So Gandhi's "Be the change you want to see in the world" is a great invitation to get rid of the rubbish this violent system has fed us and transform ourselves into the intentional beings that can create the world we all want. See the
Active Nonviolence Training (ANVT) exercises. World without Wars and without Violence international site is on www.worldwithoutwars.org/

Wednesday, 12 September 2012

Myths & Surprises in the so-called Recession. Towards a Mixed Economy

Re Economic Violence and its alternatives. Pressenza IPA
http://www.pressenza.com/2012/09/myths-and-surprises-in-the-so-called-recession-towards-a-mixed-economy/


The Credit Rating Agencies, the OECD and the World Bank continue to forecast ­– and perhaps also induce – worse to come in the World Economy, prompting further austerity measures, cuts, privatisations and rounds of QE (not Queen Elizabeth but Quantitative Easing: Printing Money without printing it but electronically making it available to banks). The EU demands that high unemployment stricken Greeks work a longer week (!?) and rescue packages to banks disappear into the black holes of Tax Havens. Climate Change forecasts disasters but the Chinese are blamed for “dumping” cheap solar panels on Europe – and for increasing their carbon footprint as we outsource them industrial production, whilst expecting they should save the global economy. The – many and varied – sane economic alternatives are dismissed outright. Not everything is what it seems.

The culture of today’s global financial ethos is one of consumerism (“I shop therefore I am”), mass production and economic growth followed by periods of “recession” during which the most successful companies buy out or force the weaker ones to close in a process of progressive concentration never seen before in the history of humanity. Rapid speculative profit rather than long term investment creates a sense of uncertainty and instability where only having lots of money (never enough, in fact) can protect a member of this system’s image of the future. In this way only money, a meaningless convention, rather than the creative process of production, acquires any weight in the scale of society’s values. Human relationships are marked by relentlessly stressing the advantages of individualism, competition and success. Existential emptiness is filled by the progressive development of the entertainment industry. The senses are caressed by visual images, music, and the opportunity to live vicariously the life of heroes and heroines, celebrities and victims of atrocities, princesses and murderers, all from the comfort of our own living room, whilst the values of the pervading system are absorbed uncritically.

But sometimes something does not make sense, and it makes us wonder: “Woman plunges to her death from top restaurant that has become suicide spot for City (London’s Financial District) workers.” How many? Three, between 2007 and 2012; all successful members of the Financial Sector workforce, with different stories but immediately bringing up memories of stockbrokers’ mass suicides in the 1930’s crash. According to Macleans there were 6 stock market related deaths in Wall Street during 2008. Different sources put the 1930 death tall at around 23,000. It’s one of the most deeply ingrained images of Wall Street during the crash: the distraught stockbroker out on the window ledge. During the bank bailouts in September, protesters outside the New York Stock Exchange carried “Jump you f***ers” placards.

Interestingly enough the American Economist John Kenneth Galbraith (1) reports in his book The Great Crash, that statistically the suicide rate didn’t increase at all in New York during the months of the 1930 crash. Nor were there many actual cases of Wall Street types jumping. Instead, the “suicide myth” grew out of the popular belief that broken speculators are predisposed to self-destruction. “News coverage of bankers jumping to their deaths was so intense that sidewalks began to be seen as unsafe”, according to historian Charles Geisst’s Wall Street: A History. “But for all the attention the deaths received, the phenomenon was limited”. In fact, considering that at the time 12,000 workers were being laid off every day the suicide rate may well have been increased by unemployment. (BBC)

Enter QE, inject money into the economy, save the banks, try to control de inevitable inflation that will ensue and fail again to kick-start the economy. The reason? The collective wealth of the Britain’s’ 1,000 richest people rose by 30% in 2010 in the wake of the economic crisis. In New Zealand the richest 150 increased their wealth by 20%. Very simply, a system designed to concentrate wealth will continue doing so unless the rules are changed. More importantly, “growth” is not synonymous with “well being” and unless human markers rather than monetary ones take centre stage we will not be able to address the real suffering created by this system. Suicide is always difficult to understand, more so if people are not listened to. Aggression? Riots? Domestic violence? Racism? Substance abuse? Blame the individual, nothing to do with society.

Crisis? What Crisis?
Big Money, Big Oil, Big Pharma and Big Arms Trade, are all enjoying record profits. But they are not the only ones navigating through the crisis without too much trouble. In fact, it is not necessary to sell your soul to the devil to remain economically viable. There are many examples of companies and towns that sticking to high human centred moral principles organise themselves for stability and growth.

Many people are surprised when told that John Lewis, the swish high street department store and its subsidiaries, is owned by its workers; a cooperative, or partnership, where the employees are the shareholders as profits are distributed amongst all, as bonuses. It was of course affected by the downturn but the reduction in bonuses (on average 18% of the salary) was just of 3.5%, (for the first time in 3 years) with no layoffs and the creation of 4.400 new jobs.

The Mondragon Corporation is a federation of worker cooperatives based in the Basque region of Spain. Founded in the town of Mondragón in 1956, currently it is the seventh largest Spanish company in terms of asset turnover and the leading business group in the Basque Country. At the end of 2011 it was providing employment for 83,869 people working in 256 companies in four areas of activity: Finance, Industry, Retail and Knowledge. Scholars such as Richard D. Wolff, American professor of economics, have hailed the Mondragon set of enterprises, including the good wages it provides for employees, the empowerment of ordinary workers in decision making, and the measure of equality for female workers, as a major success and have cited it as a working model of an alternative to the capitalist mode of production. Whilst Spain’s unemployment level is around 22 per cent, the Mondragon co-operatives have shown impressive resilience that has enabled them to take their share of economic hits and emerge largely unscathed.

Juan Manuel Sánchez Gordillo, mayor of Marinaleda in Andalusia, Spain, has become famous for staging robberies at supermarkets and giving stolen groceries to the poor. During his 30 years as mayor he has introduced a cooperative farming system in Marinaleda and has repeatedly tried to take over land for farming, the latest target being 1,200 hectares of land owned by the Ministry of Defence. Cooperativism and Commoning in action, in Marinelada nobody goes hungry.
We have already published in Pressenza UN General Secretary Ban Ki-Moon’s report/celebration of Cooperative Banks for their resilience in the crisis.

Towards a Cooperatives-Only Monolithic System?
The Argentinean Economist Guillermo Sulling, in his essay “Mixed Economy: Beyond Capitalism” points out the importance of establishing a verity of formats in the context of participatory democracy, the State being a Coordinator rather than an Administrator dissociated from social needs. Here are some extracts from his work:

“A Mixed Economy System would resolve the root of inequality in the distribution of wealth, through employee participation in profits, ownership and management of companies… Implementing agricultural reforms where rational and necessary and inheritance rights would limit the excesses of economic power that have caused so much damage to humanity. A Mixed Economy System would end the monopolistic control of strategic resources and basic services… with commitment to human rights, among them health care and free public education within set standards of excellence…ending the irrational exploitation of environmental resources…A Mixed Economy System, will not depend solely on markets initiatives for productive investment and employment generation, but active policies for development, guiding the private sector or intervening to generate investment… A Mixed Economy System, would do away with usury/speculation of private banking by creating a state zero interest bank …as it is necessary to merge social interests and economic interests in a new system where the state remains in control of providing for the needs of the people and the direction of the economy, while the people take over the operation and direction of the state.”

1. Amongst Galbraith’s famous phrases: “Under capitalism, man exploits man. Under communism, it’s just the opposite.” “The modern conservative is engaged in one of man’s oldest exercises in moral philosophy; that is, the search for a superior moral justification for selfishness.” He was a Keynesian and his BBC series The Age of Uncertainty so incensed the then leader of the British Conservative Party, Margaret Thatcher the ultra-neoliberal Milton Friedman was brought over from Chicago to lecture against Galbraith’s economic viewpoints.

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