The world has estimated 30 million humans still confined to
modern-day slavery. Slavery still exists through laws and their practices. If
you’ve seen the state of migrant workers in various Middle Eastern countries,
you’d think twice before you can call their employers “humans.” Have you seen
how Qatar forced all its migrant workers to surrender their passports to their
employers, the migrants involved in laying the groundwork for the 2022 World
Cup? Money is the name of the game, and there's nothing more profitable than
owning other humans.
It’s been three years since the Syrians started leaving
their country. A total of 3.1 million humans have become homeless, and they are
regarded as unwelcome aliens in another country. The UN say there were roughly
10 million people worldwide who lacked a nationality and the human rights
protections that go with it. If you think of Rohingyas in Myanmar, you can tell
the extent to which humanity is disregarded.
Governments, claiming to be champions of human rights, are
engaged in torture and arbitrary detention in Guantanamo Bay, police brutality,
and creating groups such as the Islamic State. There’s not a single day that
goes by without reports of loathsome human rights abuses everywhere. We’ve also
seen beheadings in Mexico, and we’ve seen racism and xenophobia in Europe.
Every day, almost 25,000 people starve to death, that too
after prolonged suffering. Dying of starvation is the worst kind of death in
the modern age of science and food production.
People are fed up with the the rule-rigging that is
favouring the wealthy few. This discontent isn’t something that “left-wing groups” are
engineering. People are fed up and they are seeing the signs of betrayal, all
the back-room, under-the-table deals that help the banksters, the giant
corporations, the 1 percent, the polluters, the fraudsters, the tax-dodgers,
the out-sourcers, the union busters, the wage-thieves, the pension-cutters and
the rest of those who are rigging the system against the rest of us. We the people have had enough.
Sankhari Devi, a 54 year old widow in Rajasthan who had
never received formal education, “I am not aware if Constitution exists or what
is it…But all I know is just one thing that we need food, water, land and
employment, to survive…those are our basic needs….who else can give us those….
Not courts, not laws, not panchayats, not police ….why should we go and ask
them….These are ours…. If anyone threatens our survival we have to fight on our
own….because for us this is life”. Or, in other word, “Nobody can give you
freedom, nobody can give you justice. No laws or formal institutions can help
you survive. You need to assert for your survival” as quoted here.
The threat of revolution is all we have. Not so long ago we
could negotiate but today, established power does not see human needs as a
calculation. The capitalist system does not have capacity to turn back the
clock to restore adequate pensions, decent wages, and a humane social safety
net. Across the world, millions of activists campaign against climate chaos,
the escalating conflicts over scarce resources, the growing impoverishment and
marginalisation of the poor and the looming prospect of another global economic
collapse. But despite this growing awareness of a global emergency and the need
for massive combined action. Clearly not enough is being done to tackle the
systemic causes of the world’s interrelated problems. What we still lack is a
truly unified movement, the fusion of causes under a common banner, one that
can create a consensus for transformational change. Unless individuals and
organisations in different countries align their efforts in more concrete ways (a
process that is already underway), it may remain impossible to overcome the
vested interests and entrenched structures that maintain business-as-usual.
While there is no shortage of individuals, organizations, and even nations
wanting to alter the system to be more humane, there is an obvious shortage of
respect for those with their hand out. On the other hand, there is no serious
discussion of what wealth is, of how it is created and who owns. The bottom line is we create it and they take
it. The mess we are living through is not a matter of evil and greedy people
becoming ever more callous as they grow. It is not a matter of capitalists or
politicians being evil and selfish. The problem is much more serious. The
problem is systemic and even if we jailed all the capitalists and the
politicians today, the system would run exactly the same way tomorrow.
Reform minded movements and individuals are barely fighting
to increase wages and restore working conditions. Our collective powerlessness
including the powerlessness of the union movement is obvious. Aside from
begging we have no strategy at all. Collective begging that consists of
complaining to lawmakers, signing petitions, protesting, and various other
means are utterly toothless. Reform had been granted in the past as a result of
building class consciousness among citizens. In 1936 and 1937 workers in the
United States began sit down strikes all over the country. The capitalist class
were insecure. They were terrified of revolution. Arguments against neo-liberal
policies may conclude that extremists like Thatcher or Reagan have ruined our
standard of living. They assume a return to standards and regulations and
general sanity will right the ship and so, it is a matter of getting the right
politicians elected. Something amiss however. No matter what social democratic
party or good guy politician is elected, like Obama, they always govern for the
banks and the corporations and against Main Street. It isn't that the
politicians are cruel or cowardly as much as politicians do not govern. They
merely sit in a given seat and are told what to do. That is a more serious
matter than if we were simply dealing with opportunists and self-serving
fools. These are not necessarily evil
people. They are simply immersed in a system they barely understand and they
are powerless.
Inequality doesn’t just happen; it results from people
making decisions under a specific political and social conditions. During the
past few years many economists confidently have predicted an acceleration in
wage growth. But wage growth for most Americans remains only slightly above
inflation. We see the reason every day in the news, as the 1% uses their power
to boost their profits at their workers’ expense. The process accelerates as
they grow stronger — and seize more — while we grow weaker. The 1% grows
stronger and seizes resources to grow still stronger.
Political change occurs first in the minds of individuals.
Conservatives convinced workers that their mechanisms of collective action —unions
— were ineffective or illegitimate, and that only as individuals could they
win. That’s the equivalent of convincing medieval peasants in the divine right
of kings. Such doctrines render a people powerless. They’re shackles of the
mind. We can continue to whine about it. Or we can organise, once again.
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