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sexta-feira, 26 de setembro de 2008

Economic Fascism Coming

to America
By Robert Scheer, Truthdig. Posted September 25, 2008.

Smell a rat if Congress approves the Paulson plan without major modifications that might help Main Street as well as Wall Street.

Does it really matter which party is in charge when it comes to bailing out the Wall Street hustlers whose shenanigans have bankrupted so many ordinary folks? Not if the Democrats roll over and cede power to the former head of Goldman Sachs, the investment bank at the center of our economic meltdown.

What arrogance for Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson -- who the year before President Bush appointed him Treasury secretary was paid $16.4 million for heading the company that did as much as any to engineer this financial travesty -- to now insist we must blindly trust him to solve the problem. Paulson is demanding the power to act with "absolute impunity," said Sen. Christopher Dodd, D-Conn., who admonished the Treasury chief: "After reading this proposal, it is not only our economy that is at risk, Mr. Secretary, but our Constitution as well."

Clearly, it's a vast improvement to have Dodd in the chairman's seat of the Senate Banking Committee, asking the right questions, rather than his predecessor, Texas Republican Phil Gramm, who presided over the committee in the years when the American economy, long the envy of the world, was viciously sabotaged by radical deregulation legislation.

Gramm, whom Sen. John McCain backed for president in 1996, pushed through the financial market deregulation that has brought the U.S. economy to its knees. Maybe this time Congress won't give the financial moguls everything they want, including a bailout for foreign-owned banks like Swiss-based UBS, where Gramm now hangs out as a very well-paid executive when he's not advising the presidential campaign of McCain, his old buddy and partner in crime. Oops, sorry, no crimes were committed because the deregulation laws Gramm pursued and McCain faithfully supported decriminalized the financial scams that have proved so costly.

Just check out the language of Gramm's pet projects, the Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act of 1999 and the Commodity Futures Modernization Act of 2000. By preventing mergers between the various branches of Wall Street, the former act reversed basic Depression-era legislation passed to prevent the sort of collapse we are now experiencing.
Read more

terça-feira, 23 de setembro de 2008

A Note from Naomi

I wrote The Shock Doctrine in the hopes that it would make us all better prepared for the next big shock. Well, that shock has certainly arrived, along with gloves-off attempts to use it to push through radical pro-corporate policies (which of course will further enrich the very players who created the market crisis in the first place…). But here’s the thing: these tactics can only work if we let them. They work when we give in to our fear and our desire for “strong leaders” – even if they are the same strong leaders who used the September 11 attacks to launch the Disaster Capitalism Complex. Sadly, there are no saviors in this crisis, and the only hope of preventing another dose of shock politics is loud, organized grassroots pressure on all political parties.

In this newsletter, Debra Levy, who runs www.shockdoctrine.org and was my closest colleague in researching The Shock Doctrine, has compiled my recent writing and interviews on the crisis, as well as information about an upcoming protest in New York. We also have the gory details of how the right wing think tanks are already using the market shock to push for some old fashioned economic shock therapy.

We send this with an urgent request: please, don’t be silent. If you have read the book, you know that this is precisely the kind of moment in which we stand to lose (or gain) it all. If we are slow, the radical changes will be locked in; if the Bush Administration gets its way, the actions taken this week will not be subject to repeal or to any legal challenge. So write letters to the editor, call your elected representatives, contact the Obama campaign, and let them know: the way to solve a crisis born of deregulated capitalism is not with more gifts and giveaways for Wall Street!

sábado, 20 de setembro de 2008

Toyota:

Cartoon by Khalil Bendib

Auto Industry Race to the Bottom
by Barbara Briggs, Special to CorpWatch September 16th, 2008

Beneath Toyota’s buffed shine lies a dark undercoat. The Toyota Corporation enjoys a fine reputation for well-built cars, environmental innovation, flexible production lines and effective management practices. But in its quest for ever-increasing efficiency, profitability and growth, the world’s largest auto manufacturer has sparked a race to the bottom that, like its car sales, is global in scope.

Around the world, the company has been complicit in union busting in the Philippines, and engages in cozy relationships with Burma/Myanmar’s military dictatorship.

In the U.S. – where Toyota has 13 facilities employing some 36,000 people, and sells an average of 56,923 vehicles each week – the need of the Big Three (General Motors, Ford and Daimler Chrysler) auto companies to compete is causing profound changes in the industry.

And in Japan, at its flagship operation in Toyota City, some 30 percent of the workforce is temporary workers who earn as little as half what permanent employees do. In the surrounding area, a network of closely-related supplier companies utilizes thousands of foreign guest workers under conditions that, by many definitions, qualify as human trafficking.

Toyota Japan has also created a work environment so stressful that, each year, an estimated 200 to 300 employees are incapacitated or killed from overwork and stress related illness.

Prius in the Making
Read more

Barbara Briggs is assistant director of the National Labor Committee in Support of Worker and Human Rights. In June 2008, the New York-based NLC released a 60 page report, The Toyota You Don’t Know: The Race to the Bottom in the Auto Industry. The full report can be accessed via the NLC’s website: http://www.nlcnet.org/reports.php?id=562

segunda-feira, 15 de setembro de 2008

Free Speech and the War on Terror

John Pilger was born and educated in Sydney, Australia. He has been a war correspondent, filmmaker and playwright. Based in London, he has written from many countries and has twice won British journalism's highest award, that of "Journalist of the Year," for his work in Vietnam and Cambodia. His new book, Tell Me No Lies: Investigative Journalism and Its Triumphs, is published by Jonathan Cape He can be reached through his website: http://www.johnpilger.com/

Thomas Friedman's Blacklist; Tony Blair's Censorious Proscriptions
By John Pilger

August 19, 2005
If those who seek to understand what drives people to commit terrorist acts are vilified as "just one notch less despicable" themselves, we can say goodbye to freedom of speech.

Thomas Friedman is a famous columnist on the New York Times. He has been described as "a guard dog of US foreign policy". Whatever America's warlords have in mind for the rest of humanity, Friedman will bark it. He boasts that "the hidden hand of the market will never work without a hidden fist". He promotes bombing countries and says World War Three has begun.

Friedman's latest bark is about free speech, which his country's constitution is said to safeguard. He wants the State Department to draw up a blacklist of those who make "wrong" political statements. He is referring not only to those who advocate violence, but to those who believe US actions are the root cause of the current terrorism. The latter group, which he describes as "just one notch less despicable than the terrorists", includes most Americans and Britons, according to the latest polls.

Friedman wants a "War of Ideas report" which names those who try to understand and explain, for example, why London was bombed. These are "excuse-makers" who "deserve to be exposed". He borrows the term "excuse-makers" from James Rubin, who was Madeleine Albright's chief apologist at the State Department. Albright, who rose to secretary of state under President Clinton, said that the death of half a million Iraqi infants as a result of a US-driven blockade was a "price" that was "worth it". Of all the interviews I have filmed in official Washington, Rubin's defence of this mass killing is unforgettable.

Farce is never far away in these matters. The "excuse-makers" would also include the CIA, which has warned that "Iraq [since the invasion] has replaced Afghanistan as the training ground for the next generation of 'professionalised' terrorists". On to the Friedman/Rubin blacklist go the spooks!
Read more on CounterPunch

domingo, 14 de setembro de 2008

US$ 10 12 de resgate para os jogadores da Wall Street

Quadro: George Grasz "Eclipse of Sun", 1926. Oil on canvas. 210 x 184 cm. Heckscher Museum, Huntington, NY, USA.










Nada para as famílias e os reformados
por Michael Hudson

Se o movimento para um Executivo Unitário com um poder presidencial sem peias já o assusta, a viragem da direita radical dos EUA para a Finança Unitária deveria assustá-lo ainda mais — e aumentar as suas dívidas também. Os acontecimentos financeiros das últimas duas semanas de Março de 2008 demonstraram que o "realistas económicos" e os "mercadores de dinheiro", que Franklin Delano Roosevelt (FDR) expulsara do templo das finanças, voltaram para maltratar a nossa economia conduzindo-a aos horrendos apuros da inédita criação do risco-dívida, eufemisticamente chamado "alavancagem" e "criação de riqueza".

As poucas limitações que subsistem para o cada vez mais centralizado planeamento do sector financeiro, especialmente ao nível do Estado, estão a ser varridas para o lado com o pretexto de "salvar o sistema". Os poucos beneficiários da Wall Street que utilizam esta frase explicam simplesmente o que é este sistema. Em primeiro lugar, seus administradores políticos são indústrias de lobbies indicadas para altas posições administrativas e de planeamento nas agências públicas que supostamente regulamentam estas indústrias. Sua ideia de planeamento financeiro é colocar um milhão de milhões (trillion) de dólares em fundos de agências governamentais e em garantias de créditos em risco. Esta agência de financiamento era suposta que fosse utilizada para ajudar famílias americanas médias a obter habitação e cuidados de saúde, e para proteger suas poupanças e proporcionar as suas aposentadorias. Ao invés disso, ela está a ser mobilizada para apoiar banqueiros e administradores financeiros da economia. Na verdade, as últimas poucas semanas assistiu-se a milhões de milhões de dólares serem comprometidos na economia de guerra e no apoio aos bancos.

A livre criação de crédito do sistema bancário, que duplica aproximadamente a cada cinco anos para a economia como um todo, ameaça culminar na escravização de muitas famílias americanas através da dívida, bem como de indústrias e governos estaduais e locais. O excedente económico está a ser rapidamente absorvido por uma combinação de serviço da dívida e planos de emergência (bailouts) governamentais para credores cujos esquemas Ponzi estão a entrar em colapso por todo o lado, desde o imobiliário residencial até o comercial, assim como os empréstimos para tomadas de controle (takeover) de corporações por bolhas económicas de crédito estrangeiro.

Este é o contexto no qual devem ser vistas as perturbações financeiras das últimas semanas envolvendo o Bear Stearns, o JPMorgan/Chase e a paisagem da dívida em mutação rápida. "O sistema" que o Tesouro, o Federal Reserve a as agências do New Deal capturadas pela administração Bush está a tentar salvar é uma vasta economia Ponzi. Quero dizer com isto que o plano de negócios é os credores emprestarem aos devedores dinheiro suficiente para que eles paguem os custos dos juros de modo a que se mantenham em dia nos seus empréstimos.

Nos últimos anos este sistema dependia de os preços de activos como imobiliário, acções e títulos serem inflacionados o suficiente a fim de permitir aos devedores penhorarem estes activos como colateral ao mais alto preço do mercado para mais e mais novos empréstimos. Mas agora que a bolha do imobiliário se rompeu (e na verdade, quando as acções afundam), o problema é como salvar o topo do nosso iceberg económico que mergulhou numa situação líquida negativa – uma situação em que as dívidas ligadas à propriedade excederam seu valor de mercado. Alguém deve assumir uma perda – mas quem?

Normalmente é o banqueiro ou o investidor que assumem a perda. Mas agora supõe-se que eles sejam "resgatados" e isto está a ser apresentado como um retorno à estabilidade. Mas era um sistema que, para começar, nunca fora estável.. De facto, para este resgate funcionar a maior parte dos americanos terá de possuir menos e dever mais, apesar de se lhes dizer que tudo isto faz parte do caminho para a criação de riqueza – como se fosse sua riqueza, não aquela dos seus credores. A dádiva do seguro ao Bear Stearns/JPMorgan Chase para "salvar o sistema financeiro" proporcionou uma ilustração viva de como as Finanças Unitárias desenvolveram um relacionamento parasítico com o trabalho americano no seu papel como contribuidor das pensões, do consumidor e dos proprietários de casas. O sistema que está a ser subsidiado permite ao sector FIRE (Fire, Insurance and Real Estate) dirigir e viver fora dos esforços produtivos dos outros – as pessoas que fabricam coisas reais e proporcionam serviços reais.

Este artigo encontra-se em http://resistir.info/ .

sábado, 13 de setembro de 2008

Naomi Klein Strikes Back at Critics

of Her 'Shock Doctrine' Book
Responding to critics from the libertarian Cato Institute and The New Republic.
One year ago, I set off on a book tour to promote The Shock Doctrine. The plan was for it to last three months, quite long by publishing standards. Twelve months later, it is still going. But this has been no ordinary book tour. Everywhere I have traveled- from Calgary, Alberta to Cochabamba, Bolivia -- I have heard more stories about how shock strategies have been used to impose unwanted pro-corporate policies. I have also been part of stimulating debates and discussions about how the current round of crises -- oil, food, financial markets, heavy weather -- can be transformed into opportunities for progressive change.
And there have been other kinds of responses too. The Shock Doctrine is a direct attack on the intellectuals and institutions that have disseminated corporatist ideology around the world. When I wrote the book, I fully expected to get hit back. Yet for eight months following publication, there was an eerie silence from the "free-market" ideologues. Sure, a few dismissive reviews appeared in the business press. But not a word from the Washington think tanks that I name in the book. Nothing from the University of Chicago economics department. Even The Economist magazine, which used to attack me gleefully and with great regularity, never mentioned the book in print. An American television producer, who was trying to find an opponent to debate me on-air, confided that she had never been turned down so consistently. "They seem to think if they ignore you, you'll go away."

Well, the silence from the right has certainly been broken. In recent months, several articles and reports have come out claiming to debunk my thesis. The most prominent are a "background paper" published by The Cato Institute, extended into a full length book in Swedish (!), and a lengthy essay in The New Republic by senior editor Jonathan Chait.

Several readers have written to asking me to respond to these attacks, if only to help them defend the book more effectively. I resisted at first (clinging to my summer vacation) but I appreciate the feedback and several points do need correcting. Since the reports by Cato and The New Republic -- though purporting to come from radically different points on the political spectrum -- share some marked similarities, I've decided to tackle them together. Here goes.

Sorry Boys, Milton Friedman Supported The War

Both Jonathan Chait and The Cato Institute claim that the late economist Milton Friedman was a staunch opponent of the invasion of Iraq. The Cato paper states of me that, "She claims that Friedman was a 'neoconservative' and thus in favor of an aggressive American foreign policy, and she argues that Iraq was invaded so that Chicago-style policies could be implemented there. but nowhere does she mention Friedman's actual views about the war. Friedman himself said: 'I was opposed to going into Iraq from the beginning. I think it was a mistake, for the simple reason that I do not believe the United States of America ought to be involved in aggression.' And this was not just one war that he happened to oppose. In 1995, he described his foreign policy position as 'anti-interventionist.'"

sexta-feira, 12 de setembro de 2008

The Party Police by Amy Goodman

"They who can give up essential liberty to obtain a little temporary safety, deserve neither liberty nor safety."

Published on Thursday, September 11, 2008 by TruthDig.com

The Democratic and Republican national conventions have passed, but controversy surrounds how they were funded and how they were run. Mass arrests of peaceful protesters, excessive police violence, wholesale disregard for the Bill of Rights and the targeting and arrest of journalists marred what should have been celebrations of democracy. The "host committees," the legal entities that organize and pay for the conventions, act as large party slush funds, outside of campaign-finance restrictions. Scores of major corporations (and a couple of unions), barred from giving unlimited funds to political parties, could give whatever they wanted to the host committees of Denver and St. Paul, Minn.

According to a recent article in National Underwriter magazine, "Both the Republican National Committee and Democratic National Committee refused to comment on their insurance purchasing decisions, or even reveal who was providing coverage for their respective conventions." Bruce Nestor, president of the Minnesota chapter of the National Lawyers Guild, who organized scores of legal observers around the Twin Cities to protect citizens' legal rights, told me: "St. Paul actually negotiated a special insurance provision with the Republican host committee so that the first $10 million in liability for lawsuits arising from the convention will be covered by the host committee. The city is very proud of this negotiation. It's the first time it's been negotiated between a city and the host committee. But it basically means we [the city] can commit wrongdoing, and we won't have to pay for it." According to the Minnesota Independent, more than 40 journalists were arrested or detained during the Republican National Convention.

Like what happened to "Democracy Now!" producer Nicole Salazar, videotaping protests in downtown St. Paul. She was violently forced to the ground, her nose bloodied, was held down with a man's knee or boot on her back, with another person pulling on her leg. Fellow producer Sharif Abdel Kouddous was thrown against a wall and kicked in the chest and back. The police might normally intervene and arrest the perpetrators. Except here, it was the police who were the assailants. And they arrested their victims. Arriving on the scene, I tried to have my colleagues freed, as we were all accredited journalists, and the police arrested me. And we were not the only ones.

As the mayors and police of St. Paul and Minneapolis patted each other on the back for a job well done, the nonprofit group FreePress, the head of the local chapter of the Newspaper Guild and other media advocates and reporters delivered more than 50,000 signatures to the mayor's office demanding that the charges against the journalists be dropped. We were met by St. Paul Deputy Mayor Ann Mulholland. Free Speech TV CEO Denis Moynihan asked about the Republican host committee indemnification of the city, "Isn't that just giving a $10 million ticket to the police to violate civil rights?" Mulholland countered, "We are very proud of that ... the $10 million was critical for our city. We would not have been able to host the convention otherwise."

The two major-party conventions have become protracted, expensive advertising spectacles for the presidential candidates. It makes sense that Democrats and Republicans would want to control the message. But democracy is not an advertisement, nor is it under the sole dominion of the two parties. People were engaged in Denver and St. Paul in a vast array of civic dialogue, public gatherings, marches, protests, concerts, art openings-in fact, there was more democracy happening outside the convention halls than inside them. The convention center names tell the story: It was the Pepsi Center in Denver, the Xcel Energy Center in St. Paul. Xcel, which pushes nuclear power, gave $1 million to each convention. Both top candidates support nuclear power as a viable option.

In Denver, but particularly in St. Paul, dissent was crushed with a massive array of paramilitarized police, operating under the U.S. Secret Service, granted jurisdiction over the "National Special Security Events" that the conventions have been dubbed. Corporations pay millions to the host committees, earning exclusive access to lawmakers and candidates. The host committees, in turn, unleash police on the public, all but guaranteeing injuries, unlawful arrests and expensive civil litigation for years to come. More than just a campaign-finance loophole that must be closed, this is a national disgrace.

Throughout the convention week, one of the 25 remaining typeset copies of the Declaration of Independence was on display at St. Paul City Hall-not far from where crowds were pepper-sprayed, clubbed, tear-gassed and attacked by police with concussion grenades. As the clouds clear, it is instructive to remember the words of one of the Declaration's signers, Benjamin Franklin:

"They who can give up essential liberty to obtain a little temporary safety, deserve neither liberty nor safety."

quinta-feira, 11 de setembro de 2008

Playing with Children's Lives: Big Tobacco in Malawi


















Cartoon by Khalil Bendib

by Pilirani Semu-Banda, Special to CorpWatch
February 25th, 2008

Sickly and malnourished, Kirana Kapito began his working life on a large commercial tobacco estate in Malawi's northern region. The farms sell their produce on the country's auction floors directly to international corporations including Limbe Leaf Tobacco, majority owned by the Swiss-registered Continental Tobacco Company and U.S.-based Alliance One Tobacco.

Kirana is one of 250 million children across the world involved in work that is damaging to their mental, physical and emotional development. Some 57 million of these endangered children live in Sub-Sahara Africa. And with an estimated 1.4 million child laborers, the small, southern African nation of Malawi has the highest incidence of child labor in southern Africa, according to the Olso, Norway-based, FAFO Institute for Applied Social Science.

Kirana was eight years old when he first went to work in the fields. Estate owners transported him and his parents from their home village, Mulanje, along with 45 other families. The truck journey covered more than 1,000 kilometers and ended in the tobacco fields in Rumphi in northern Malawi.

Kirana's mother, Jane Kapito, 45, says the family left home seeking a better life. “Four years later, my whole family is still struggling with poverty. My son has to work as hard as everyone else if we have to afford the basic necessities. The money that my husband and I receive from the tobacco estate is not enough,” she says.

Now 12, Kirana has never been to school. For the past six months, his health has been failing and he can no longer work as hard as he used to. His mother says her little boy is malnourished and therefore contracts different infections easily. The family often goes without a proper meal for up to three days.

“Just in the past two months, Kirana has been afflicted by malaria, diarrhea and pneumonia,” Jane Kapito said. “He's my only child and I am so scared of losing him.”

This family's struggle is repeated throughout Malawi's tobacco industry, where poverty ensures that every member must contribute to the workload.
Read more

quarta-feira, 10 de setembro de 2008

Howard Zinn: “To Be Neutral, To Be Passive In A Situation

Is To Collaborate With Whatever Is Going On”

We speak with legendary historian Howard Zinn, author of one of the most popular books on American History, “A People’s History of the United States.” In his youth, Zinn was a bombardier in World War II and participated in the Napalm bombing in France. He went on to dedicate his life to opposing wars of all kind. He was an active fighter in Civil Rights Movement and served as an advisor to the Student Non-Violent Coordinating Committee. In the late 1960s, he traveled to Vietnam with Father Dan Berrigan during intensive US attacks and negotiated the release of US POWs. In fact, Howard Zinn was a part of most struggles for social justice in this country during his lifetime. He joins us in our firehouse studio.

The Business of America How Consumers Have Replaced Citizens

and How We Can Reverse the Trend
By Saul Landau

About the Author
Saul Landau, an internationally-known scholar, author, commentator, and filmmaker on foreign and domestic policy issues. Landau's most widely praised achievements are the over forty films he has produced on social, political and historical issues, and worldwide human rights, for which he won the Letelier-Moffitt Human Rights Award, the George Polk Award for Investigative Reporting, and the First Amendment Award, as well as an Emmy for "Paul Jacobs and the Nuclear Gang". Landau has written over ten books, short stories and poems. He received an Edgar Allen Poe Award for Assassination on Embassy Row, a report on the 1976 murders of Chilean Ambassador Orlando Letelier and his colleague, Ronni Moffitt. He is a senior Fellow at the Institute for Policy Studies.

Gore Vidal says, "Saul Landau is a man I love to steal ideas from"

About the Book
"When President Bush promoted shopping as a patriotic duty, the American culture of consumption hit a new low. But a quiet revolution is growing in the developing world and in a new generation of Americans, fighting the advance of the shopping malls and the desolation they leave behind.Written by one of the most insightful critics of American commercialism, The Business of America probes the forces that have transformed citizens into consumers eager to take as much as they can from the planet. From on-line shopping to spectator sports to the cash-and-carry ethos of political campaigns, Saul Landau decodes the subtle ways in which advertising images tell us to correct our inadequacies with more things: SUVs, credit cards, air conditioning, video games.The winds of change are blowing, Landau shows, from resurgent student protests for underpaid janitors to the "Group of 21," the developing countries that stopped the World Trade Organization dead in its tracks in 2003. Eschewing nostalgia for a simpler time--a less-interconnected world that can never return-The Business of America shows how we as citizens can regain our identities, stripping away the plastic overlay of consumerism.

A Short History of Neo-liberalism

Twenty Years of Elite Economics and Emerging Opportunities for Structural Change
Conference on Economic Sovereignty in a Globalising World
Bangkok, 24-26 March 1999

The Conference organisers have asked me for a brief history of neo-liberalism which they title "Twenty Years of Elite Economics". I'm sorry to tell you that in order to make any sense, I have to start even further back, some 50 years ago, just after the end of World War II.
In 1945 or 1950, if you had seriously proposed any of the ideas and policies in today's standard neo-liberal toolkit, you would have been laughed off the stage at or sent off to the insane asylum. At least in the Western countries, at that time, everyone was a Keynesian, a social democrat or a social-Christian democrat or some shade of Marxist. The idea that the market should be allowed to make major social and political decisions; the idea that the State should voluntarily reduce its role in the economy, or that corporations should be given total freedom, that trade unions should be curbed and citizens given much less rather than more social protection--such ideas were utterly foreign to the spirit of the time. Even if someone actually agreed with these ideas, he or she would have hesitated to take such a position in public and would have had a hard time finding an audience.

However incredible it may sound today, particularly to the younger members of the audience, the IMF and the World Bank were seen as progressive institutions. They were sometimes called Keynes's twins because they were the brain-children of Keynes and Harry Dexter White, one of Franklin Roosevelt's closest advisors. When these institutions were created at Bretton Woods in 1944, their mandate was to help prevent future conflicts by lending for reconstruction and development and by smoothing out temporary balance of payments problems. They had no control over individual government's economic decisions nor did their mandate include a licence to intervene in national policy.

In the Western nations, the Welfare State and the New Deal had got underway in the 1930s but their spread had been interrupted by the war. The first order of business in the post-war world was to put them back in place. The other major item on the agenda was to get world trade moving--this was accomplished through the Marshall Plan which established Europe once again as the major trading partner for the US, the most powerful economy in the world. And it was at this time that the strong winds of decolonisation also began to blow, whether freedom was obtained by grant as in India or through armed struggle as in Kenya, Vietnam and other nations.

We the Peoples of Europe

Susan George
11 April 2008

Abstract
Is the EU Constitution dead in the water? Although it may have disappeared from the headlines, right-wing European leaders have not given up on pushing through a binding EU text providing total freedom for goods, services and capital but few advantages for Europeans. A more neo-liberal, anti-democratic document than the one rejected by the French and the Dutch may be hard to imagine, but the new reform treaty tries hard. What do they have in store for us? What should European people be fighting for?

Leading writer and alter-globalisation activist Susan George explains what is at stake for all peoples of Europe. What must we reject and how will such a document affect our lives? Who will it really empower – corporations or ordinary Europeans? What kind of future do we want to build together as Europeans? Written with clarity and authority and authority, this book will help you make up your mind.

Contents

terça-feira, 9 de setembro de 2008

Greenspan e O Mito do Crente Sincero

Aquele estudante alto de pós-gradução, vindo da Suécia em visita aos EUA, não se satisfazia com um dito brincalhão.

Ele queria respostas. "Eles não podem ser motivados só pela cobiça e pelo poder. Devem ser motivados por alguma coisa mais elevada. O que?"
Não despreze o poder e a cobiça, tentei sugerir-lhe — construíram impérios. Mas ele queria mais:

"E quanto a uma crença em que estão a construir um mundo melhor?" Desde que principiei o circuito de promoção do meu livro The Shock Doctrine tenho tido um certo número de trocas de ideias como esta, revolvendo em torno da mesma questão básica: Quando líderes políticos de extrema-direita e seus conselheiros aplicam brutais terapias económicas de choque será que eles acreditam honestamente que os efeitos do gotejamento (trickle-down) construirão sociedades equitativas – ou estarão eles apenas a criar deliberadamente condições para mais privatizações? Dito cruamente: Será que nas últimas três décadas o mundo foi transformado mais por ideologias sublimes do que por cobiças rasteiras?

Uma resposta definitiva exigiria ler as mentes de homens como Dick Cheney e Paul Bremer, o que prefiro evitar. A ideologia em causa assevera que o auto-interesse é o motor que conduzi a sociedade às suas maiores alturas. Será a busca do seu próprio auto-interesse (e a dos doadores de suas campanhas) compatível com aquela filosofia? Aqui está a maravilha. Eles não têm de escolher. Infelizmente, isto raramente satisfaz estudantes graduados à procura de um significado mais profundo. Por felicidade agora tenho uma nova escapatória: citar Alan Greenspan.

A sua autobiografia, The Age of Turbulence, [1] tem sido apregoada como a resolução de um mistério. O homem que mordeu a língua durante dezoito anos como responsável do Federal Reserve ia por fim contar ao mundo aquilo em que realmente acreditava. E Greenspan havia entregue, utilizando seu livro e a publicidade que o cercou como uma plataforma para a sua ideologia "libertário-republicana", ralhando com George W. Bush por abandonar a cruzada por governo pequeno e revelando que se tornara um elaborador de políticas por pensar que podia avançar a sua ideologia radical mais efectivamente "de dentro, ao invés de ser um panfletário crítico" a actuar nas margens. Mas o mais interessante acerca da estória de Greenspan é o que ela revela acerca do ambíguo papel das ideias na cruzada do livre mercado. Uma vez que Greenspan é talvez o mais poderoso ideólogo vivo do mercado livre, a nível mundial, é significativo que o seu compromisso para com a ideologia pareça fraco e superficial. Um compromisso que parece menos o de um crente sincero e assemelha-se mais a uma conveniente estória de fachada.

Grande parte do debate em torno do legado de Greenspan girou em torno da questão da hipocrisia, de um homem a pregar o laissez-faire que repetidamente interveio no mercado para salvar os jogadores mais ricos. A economia legada por Greenspan dificilmente se ajusta à definição de um mercado libertário mas parece muito como outro fenómeno descrito no seu livro: "Quando líderes de um governo rotineiramente procuram indivíduos do sector privado ou dos negócios e, em troca de apoio político, concedem-lhes favores, diz-se que a sociedade está nas garras do 'capitalismo do compadrio' ('crony capitalism'). Ele estava a falar da Indonésia sob Suharto, mas a minha mente foi directamente para o Iraque sob a Halliburton. Greenspan actualmente está a advertir o mundo acerca de um perigoso retrocesso que ameaça o capitalismo. Aparentemente, isto nada tem a ver com as políticas de negligente desregulamentação que foram a sua marca característica. Nada a ver com salários estagnados devido ao livre comércio e a sindicatos enfraquecidos, nem com pensões perdidas para a Enron ou no crash das dot-com, ou lares arrestados na crise das hipotecas subprime. Segundo Greenspan, a desigualdade desenfreada é provocada por péssimas escolas secundárias (o que também nada tem a ver com a sua ideologia de guerra à esfera pública). Participei de um debate com Greenspan em Democracy Now! e fiquei impressionada por verificar que este homem que prega a doutrina da responsabilidade pessoal recusa-se a assumir qualquer responsabilidade que seja.

Mas contradições ideológicas são relevantes apenas se Greenspan for um crente sincero. Não estou convencida. Greenspan escreve que quando estudante não tinha interesse em grandes ideias. Ao contrário dos seus companheiros de classe que eram influenciados pelo keynesianismo com a sua promessa de construir um mundo melhor, Greenspan era simplesmente bom em matemática. Ele começou a fazer investigação para corporações poderosas; era lucrativo, mas Greenspan não proclamava estar a dar uma alta contribuição social.

Então ele descobriu Ayn Rand. "O que ela fez... foi fazer-me pensar porque o capitalismo é não apenas eficiente e prático como também moral", disse ele em 1974. As ideias de Rand acerca da "utopia da cobiça" permitiram a Greenspan que continuasse a fazer aquilo que fazia mas infundiu ao seu serviço corporativo um novo e poderoso sentido de missão. Naturalmente, o outro lado da moeda disto é a cruel indiferença para com aqueles deixados para trás. "Propósito firme e racionalidade alcançam alegria e completude", escreveu Greenspan como zeloso recém convertido. "Parasitas que persistentemente evitam tanto um propósito como uma razão perecem como deveriam". Foi com esta mentalidade que tanto o ajudou que ele apoiou a terapia de choque na Rússia (72 milhões empobrecidos) e no Extremo Oriente após a crise económica de 1997 (24 milhões lançados ao desemprego)?

Rand tem desempenhado este papel de potenciador da cobiça para incontáveis discípulos. Segundo o New York Times, Atlas Shrugged, sua novela que termina com o herói a traçar um sinal de dólar no ar tal como uma bênção, apresenta-se como "um dos mais influentes livros de negócios já escritos". Uma vez que Rand está simplesmente a condensar Adam Smith, sua influência sobre homens como Greenspan sugere uma possibilidade interessante. Talvez o verdadeiro propósito de toda a literatura da teoria do gotejamento seja libertar empreendedores para que prossigam o seu mais estreito interesse enquanto afirmam altruísticos motivos globais – não tanto como uma filosofia económica mas como uma elaborada racionalização retroactiva.

O que Greenspan nos ensinou é que afinal de contas o gotejamento não é realmente uma ideologia. É antes como o amigo que nos telefona após algum excesso embaraçoso e nos diz, "Não se aflija: você merece". [1]

A era da turbulência , Editorial Presença, Lisboa, 2007, 572 pgs., ISBN: 9789722338295


Este artigo encontra-se em http://resistir.info/ .

segunda-feira, 8 de setembro de 2008

Os democratas endossam a "Guerra global ao terrorismo"

Obama "corre atrás" de Osama
por Michel Chossudovsky [*]
A "promessa americana" de Obama é a guerra.

Barack Obama abraçou a "guerra global ao terrorismo"
A campanha Obama-Biden endossou o principal bloco constitutivo da agenda de política da administração Bush: "Correr atrás de Osama bin Laden, eliminá-lo".

A retórica é mais suave mas a substância é quase idêntica:

Pois enquanto o senador McCain voltava as suas vistas para o Iraque poucos dias após o 11/Set, ergui-me e opus-me a esta guerra, sabendo que ela nos distrairia das ameaças reais que enfrentamos. Quando John McCain disse que podíamos simplesmente "sair de alguma maneira" do Afeganistão, argumentei por mais recursos e mais tropas para acabar o combate contra os terroristas que realmente nos atacaram no 11/Set, e deixei claro que devemos remover Osama bin Laden e seus auxiliares se os tivermos à vista. John McCain gosta de dizer que perseguirá bin Laden até os Portões do Inferno — mas ele não irá mesmo à caverna onde ele vive.

E hoje, quando meu apelo por um prazo para remover nossas tropas do Iraque foi reflectido pelo governo iraquiano e mesmo pela administração Bush, mesmo depois de sabermos que o Iraque tem um excedente de US$79 mil milhões enquanto nós estamos atolados em défices, John McCain é o único na sua teimosa recusa a finalizar uma guerra equivocada.

Esse não é o juízo que precisamos. Isso não manterá a América segura. Precisamos de um presidente que possa enfrentar as ameaças do futuro, não a manter-se agarrado às ideias do passado. ( The American Promise, August 28, 2008, Democratic Convention. Denver )

The Culture Struggle by Michael Parenti

How to think about cultural imperialism, cultural relativism, racism and gender oppression; this book treats culture as a component of social power and political struggle in the United States and elsewhere.

“Michael Parenti has educated generations of Americans—including my own—on the merits of a radical world view and progressive politics. In The Culture Struggle, Parenti is at the top of his game. His arguments about the importance of culture and his debunking of dominant ideology is masterful and written with precise and crystal clear prose that few other writers can approach, let alone equal.”
— Robert W. McChesney, co-author of Tragedy and Farce

Using vivid examples and riveting arguments throughout, The Culture Struggle ranges from the everyday to the esoteric. Despite its brevity, this book offers a wealth of stimulating insights. Richly informed, penned with eloquence, irony, and economy of language, The Culture Struggle helps us understand the world we live in.

One of America’s most astute and engaging political analysts, Michael Parenti shows us that culture is a changing process and the product of a dynamic interplay between a wide range of social and political interests. It is not enough to study the prevailing political realm; we also must grasp developments throughout the entire civil society. In short, to understand a society we need to understand the problem of culture as well as that of power.

Drawing from cultures around the world, Parenti demonstrates that beliefs and practices are readily subjected to political manipulation, and that cultures are instruments of social power. Many parts of modern culture are being commodified, that is, packaged and sold to those who can pay. Folk culture is giving way to a corporate market culture.

Art, science, medicine, psychiatry, and even marriage have been used as instruments of cultural control across the centuries. Powerful interests also employ racism, sexism, and class supremacy to maintain their existing politico-economic rule. Culture is both something to be contained and itself an instrument of domination.
Seven Stories Press, 140 pp., paperback
Table of Contents

Mistério: Como a Riqueza

Causa a Pobreza no Mundo
por Michael Parenti [*]

Há um "mistério" que deve ser explicado: como é possível que se os investimentos empresariais e a ajuda estrangeira, além dos empréstimos internacionais, aumentaram de forma espectacular em todo o mundo ao longo da última metade do século passado também tenha aumentado a pobreza? O números de pessoas pobres está a crescer numa proporção maior que a da população mundial. O que podemos concluir disto?

Na segunda metade do século passado, os bancos e a indústrias dos EUA (além de outras empresas ocidentais) investiram muito nas regiões pobres da Ásia, África e América Latina conhecidas como "Terceiro Mundo". As transnacionais são atraídas pelos ricos recursos naturais, o alto rendimento devido aos baixos salários, e pela quase completa ausência de impostos, regulamentos ambientais, direitos laborais e custos de segurança laboral.

O governo dos EUA subsidiou esta fuga do capital mediante a concessão às empresas de isenções fiscais destes investimentos no mundo, e inclusive com o pagamento de parte dos gastos de transferência, o que escandalizou os sindicatos que vêm como os postos de trabalho se evaporam na sua própria casa. As transnacionais expulsam os negócios locais no Terceiro Mundo e apoderam-se dos seus mercados. O cartel estado-unidense da indústria agropecuária, generosamente subsidiado pelos contribuintes estado-unidenses, inunda o mercado de outros países com os seus produtos excedentes de baixo custo e afunda os agricultores locais. Tal como descreve Christopher Cook em Diet for a Dead Planet (Dieta para um planeta morto): expropriam as melhores terras para o cultivo industrial destes países, para convertê-la habitualmente em monocultura, o que requer grandes quantidades de pesticidas, reduzindo cada vez mais as áreas cultivas de centenas de variedades de colheitas que tradicionalmente seriam de alimento às populações locais.
Ler mais...

[*] Trabalhou em numerosas universidades dos Estados Unidos. Os seus livros mais recentes são The Assassination Of Julius Caesar , Superpatriotism , The Culture Struggle e L'horreur impériale : Les Etats-Unis et l'hégémonie mondiale (encomendas efectuadas através dos links acima permitirão que resistir.info receba uma pequena comissão). O original encontra-se em http://www.sinpermiso.info/ Este artigo encontra-se em http://resistir.info/ .

Democracy For the Few - Michael Parenti

“…The Parenti text challenges students, perhaps for the first time, to critically assess the dominant pluralist paradigm; that it invites students to consider the ubiquity of politics in their lives; that they confront the struggle and inevitable conflict between democracy and capitalism, which is usually ignored.” —Christopher A. Leu, California State University, Northridge

“Years after they read it, some students have remarked that it was the most important book they’ve read in college.” —Michelle Brophy-Baermann, University of Wisconsin, Stevens Pt.

“Parenti is more readable than Noam Chomsky, and more serious than Michael Moore.” —Richard Stahler-Sholk, Eastern Michigan University

The study of politics is itself a political act, containing little that is neutral. True, we can all agree on certain neutral facts about the structure of government and the like. However, the book that does not venture much beyond these minimal descriptions will offend few readers but also will interest few. Any determined pursuit of how and why things happen draws us into highly controversial areas. Most textbooks pretend to a neutrality they do not really possess. While claiming to be objective, they are merely conventional. They depict the status quo in implicitly accepting terms, propagating fairly orthodox notions about American politics.

For decades, mainstream political scientists and other apologists for the existing social order have tried to transform practically every deficiency in our political system into a strength. They would have us believe that the millions who are nonvoters are content with present social conditions, that high-powered lobbyists are nothing to worry about because they perform an information function vital to representative government, and that the growing concentration of executive power is a good thing because the president is democratically responsive to broad national interests. The apologists have argued that the exclusion of third parties is really for the best because too many parties (that is, more than two) would fractionalize and destabilize our political system, and besides, the major parties eventually incorporate into their platforms the positions raised by minor parties (which is news to a number of socialist parties whose views have remained unincorporated for more than a century).
Reacting to the mainstream tendency to turn every vice into a virtue, left critics of the status quo have felt compelled to turn every virtue into a vice. Thus they have argued that electoral struggle is meaningless, that our civil liberties are a charade, that federal programs for the needy are next to worthless, that reforms are mostly sops to the oppressed, and labor unions are all complacent, corrupt, and conservative. The left critics have been a much needed antidote to the happy pluralists who painted a silver lining around every murky cloud. But they were wrong in seeing no victories, no “real” progress in the democratic struggles fought and won. Democracy for the Few tries to strike a balance; it tries to explain how democracy is incongruous with modern-day capitalism and is consistently violated by a capitalist social order, and yet how democracy refuses to die and continues to fight back and even make gains despite the great odds against popular forces.

quinta-feira, 4 de setembro de 2008

Al Gore: A Generational Challenge to Repower America

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=35jWlIknSFw&feature=related

Below is the full transcript of the speech as prepared.

Ladies and gentlemen:

There are times in the history of our nation when our very way of life depends upon dispelling illusions and awakening to the challenge of a present danger. In such moments, we are called upon to move quickly and boldly to shake off complacency, throw aside old habits and rise, clear-eyed and alert, to the necessity of big changes. Those who, for whatever reason, refuse to do their part must either be persuaded to join the effort or asked to step aside. This is such a moment. The survival of the United States of America as we know it is at risk. And even more - if more should be required - the future of human civilization is at stake.

I don't remember a time in our country when so many things seemed to be going so wrong simultaneously. Our economy is in terrible shape and getting worse, gasoline prices are increasing dramatically, and so are electricity rates. Jobs are being outsourced. Home mortgages are in trouble. Banks, automobile companies and other institutions we depend upon are under growing pressure. Distinguished senior business leaders are telling us that this is just the beginning unless we find the courage to make some major changes quickly.

The climate crisis, in particular, is getting a lot worse - much more quickly than predicted. Scientists with access to data from Navy submarines traversing underneath the North polar ice cap have warned that there is now a 75 percent chance that within five years the entire ice cap will completely disappear during the summer months. This will further increase the melting pressure on Greenland. According to experts, the Jakobshavn glacier, one of Greenland's largest, is moving at a faster rate than ever before, losing 20 million tons of ice every day, equivalent to the amount of water used every year by the residents of New York City.

Two major studies from military intelligence experts have warned our leaders about the dangerous national security implications of the climate crisis, including the possibility of hundreds of millions of climate refugees destabilizing nations around the world.

Just two days ago, 27 senior statesmen and retired military leaders warned of the national security threat from an "energy tsunami" that would be triggered by a loss of our access to foreign oil. Meanwhile, the war in Iraq continues, and now the war in Afghanistan appears to be getting worse.
Read more

THE TIPPING POINT:

How Little Things Can Make A Big Difference. - Review

IN 1966, ROBERT KENNEDY GAVE THE SPEECH in South Africa that included his now-famous statement about the improbably large changes for the good brought about through individual bravery and idealism. "Each time a man stands up for an ideal," Kennedy said, "or acts to improve the lot of others, or strikes out against injustice, he sends forth a tiny ripple of hope, and crossing each other from a million different centers of energy and daring, those ripples build a current that can sweep down the mightiest wall of oppression and resistance." Not only can, but in the case of South Africa, did, just one generation later.

But how? How were Nelson Mandela, Oliver Tambo, and others able to defeat apartheid? Why have their counterparts in China and North Korea failed to defeat communism? And why have their counterparts in Russia and Eastern Europe been successful in defeating communism? Malcolm Gladwell, the author of this gem of a book, would say that events in South Africa, Russia, and Eastern Europe reached a "tipping point," while events in China and North Korea did not.

Gladwell, a talented staff writer for The New Yorker who began his career writing for conservative publications like The American Spectator, is not the sort of person who's burning to change the world. There is, in fact, nothing in Gladwell's book about turning the tides of history or throwing off the shackles of oppression, and quite a lot about how to devise a successful children's television show or sell a new brand of sneaker. Even when Gladwell writes about emotional issues like teenage suicide, he does so with a detachment that can seem other-worldly. Nonetheless, The Tipping Point could well prove to be an influential text for political activists.

Gladwell's book is built around the theory that ideas, trends, habits, and other kinds of social behavior spread much the same way that infectious diseases do. This idea is not a new one. Richard Dawkins, in his 1976 book, The Selfish Gene, coined the term "meme" (from the Greek "mimesis," which means "to imitate") to describe the non-biological mechanism by which certain behavioral patterns spread through the human race. What genes do through reproduction, memes do through imitation. Aaron Lynch, in his 1996 book, Thought Contagion: How Belief Spreads Through Society, elaborated on Dawkins' idea and demonstrated the ways that memes for such various things as parenting strategies, religious convictions, sexual habits, and political beliefs replicate themselves. In Lynch's view, people don't acquire ideas so much as "ideas acquire people."

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Essential Dissent

Graham Willett, University of Melbourne

Sean Scalmer, Dissent Events: Protest, The Media and the Political Climate in Australia UNSW Press, 2002, (260pp.)

Do social movements work? It seems like an obvious question and in light of the outpouring of research and analysis over the past thirty or forty years on social movements and social movement activism, one could be forgiven for thinking that the question had long since been settled. Or, failing that, had at least resolved itself into a war of position between competing theories.

And yet, not. Sydney Tarrow, doyen of social movement researchers, remarked as long ago as 1989 that ‘until recently, it was difficult to find much in the literature regarding the success of social movements in bringing about social or policy change!’ The ‘until now’ has an optimistic ring about it that seems unwarranted. In fact, things have not improved all that much since then. This is odd, isn’t it? After all, if social movement theory and analysis has any real point, it ought—at least in part—to be about whether all those thousands of people engaged in the vast array of activities that constitute social movements (hundreds of thousands on a world scale) are wasting their time or not.

Even from an analytic point of view, it seems somewhat unfortunate that academics have devoted so much time and thought to how social movements arise, how they are constituted and how they operate, and yet neglected the obvious corollary question: did they cause the changes we have observed in the world, or not?

For the most part, those of us engaged in this area of research have been inclined to rely on impression, anecdote and hunch. The occasional wild assertion is not unheard of. But there has also been a certain sleight of hand along the lines of the following: movements exist which demand certain changes, change along these lines has taken place (to a greater or lesser extent to be sure), therefore the activities of the movements have caused the changes. It’s kind of like the smoking/lung cancer connection; all corollary, very little causal mechanism.

Sean Scalmer’s Dissent Events is important to social movement analysis for two reasons. In the first place, it actually contributes to our understanding of the effectiveness of movements. And, secondly, in doing this, it demonstrates what it is that we have been doing wrong.

Scalmer’s concern is with a particular activity which he calls the ‘political gimmick’. The gimmick is an action, often illegal, often involving small numbers of people, but always scandalous, outrageous, intended to shock and to draw attention (most commonly from the media). Think draft card burning, the Freedom Ride, sit-ins and die-ins, tearing up the Floral Clock, or, more recently, lip-sewing.

The choice of term is unfortunate. It suggests something trivial, which is exactly—as Scalmer demonstrates—what it is not. On the contrary, he argues that gimmicks are ‘at the root of democratic advance, social movement mobilisation and theoretic renewal’ (p. 176). The gimmick opens up new spaces in which to act: churches, parliaments, the streets become legitimate sites of protest. It brings new issues onto the public agenda or restores to prominence fading ones. It draws more and more people into activity around more and more questions—‘an exhilarating chase across social space, as radical actors joyously opened up new issues’ (p. 80). It stakes out new limits against which more moderate and institutionalised activists are measured and found wanting, even by themselves, forcing them to follow hastily after. The mechanisms by which debates and issues are transformed—and the role of the gimmick in this process—have never been clearer.

No one interested in the history of political activism in Australia can afford to overlook this book.
But it is the way that Dissent Events works that matters here, too. In a series of meticulous case studies, Scalmer argues his claims. Comparing the Egon Kisch stunt of 1934 (where a prominent European anti-fascist activist jumped overboard to draw attention to the efforts of the Australian government to deny him entry for a speaking tour) with the draft card burning of 1966, he alerts us to the fact that the first—although it entered into Australian political folklore—had no lasting impact. The latter launched a movement that changed everything. Why? The prevailing political, social and cultural climate in each case is very different, to be sure. But that alone explains very little. What we also need to know is how is it that US models of activism (the draft card burning, the Freedom Ride of Aboriginal activists and their supporters who toured the towns of rural NSW to draw attention to the extent of racist practices there) were imported, translated and applied here. Scalmer tell us. How is it that Arena magazine went from conventional Marxist analysis to flagship of the New Left in Australia in the space of a few short years? Scalmer tells us. What can the early years of Hansonism tell us about political activism in our time? Again, Scalmer tells us.

On their own, the studies that Dissent Events offers are impressive. No one interested in the history of political activism in Australia can afford to overlook this book. But, they are models, too, on how other researchers have to do their work. And, frankly, it is intimidating. Scalmer counts and measures in meticulous detail: to track the rise of the gimmick, for example, he (and I hope he had a team of research assistants here), identified, catalogued and coded 3500 political events reported in the Sydney Morning Herald from 1965 to 1971. Examination of the research revealed a very much more uneven pattern in the rise of political activity than many of us would have expected. It revealed, too, the extent to which, and the ways in which, more confrontational forms of activity replaced less confrontational forms. The findings are invaluable—but the work involved is daunting. Similarly, his analysis of the political shifts in Arena over the course of the second half of the 1960s, is a result of detailed content analysis that would surely make lesser hearts quail.

And yet, the results speak loudly. Without this work, we will never be able to be sure that what we think is happening has been happening—and our histories and analyses will always remain partial, anecdotal, unreliable. Which is where my earlier critique of social movement theory came in.

There remains one overwhelming problem, though. Even if we become increasingly confident that our reporting of movement activity and movement ideas are more accurate than they were, there remains the problem of audience. What do the shocked authorities, the scandalised public think and/or do in response to these new activities, new issues, new demands? How and why does opposition to the Vietnam War and conscription, to the criminalisation of homosexual acts, to the destruction of the environment (to take the issues wider than Scalmer does) develop? What is the connection between the movement and society?

I suspect that we are still a ways from cracking this particular problem, though works like the Tipping Point (Gladwell, 2000), with its sociology of fads and fashions will help; as, I suspect, will academic research into the world of ‘viral marketing’ (the use of innovators and early adopters to shape the market). But if we are to venture into these realms, we will need to take the findings—and the methods—of Dissent Events as essential baggage.