Although
the U.S. doesn�t come close to meeting the criteria of a failed
state, there are many things about which citizens should be concerned.
The
Fund for Peace put out a set of criteria several years ago and has
published a �failed states index� for five years, and probably the
primary criterion is that a failed state has lost physical control
of its territory.
America
certainly has not lost control of its territory.� In fact, it appears
that it is gathering more territory to itself, seeing itself as
the governing force in both Iraq and Afghanistan, as well as having
its way with parts of Pakistan.
But
that�s not the immediate problem.� There are a few other criteria
for failed states and they include:� ��erosion of legitimate authority
to make collective decisions, an inability to provide reasonable
public services, and an inability to interact with other states
as a full member of the international community��� (Recall that
scores of nations opposed the invasion of Iraq, but that didn�t
stop the Bush-Cheney Administration.)
Other
concerns include a central government weak enough that it can not
provide necessary public services and that exhibits a sharp economic
decline.�
The
British Department for International Development provides this broad
description of a failed state:� �Governments that cannot or will
not deliver core functions to the majority of its people, including
the poor.���
The
DID adds: �The most important functions of the state for poverty
reduction are territorial control, safety and security, capacity
to manage public resources, delivery of basic services, and the
ability to protect and support the ways in which the poorest people
sustain themselves.�
Mostly,
the developed countries determine which countries can be described
as failed states, so the criteria are developed to describe nations
or states that do not possess what the �first world� nations describe.�
And that starts with wealth.� If a nation has great wealth and most
of its people have a high standard of living, it�s not likely that
it would ever be considered a failed state, no matter how many other
criteria it meets.�
Corruption
of both the political and economic systems (often�and rightly so�considered
as part of one another) could be the core problems in a rich and
militarily mighty nation.� This is especially true if the nation
is considered a democratic republic.� That is, a country that belongs
to the people and is governed by the people through democratic processes.
The
U.S. is as likely to be considered a failed state as Bernie Madoff
is likely to be called the world�s greatest philanthropist, but
there are danger signs that the country is losing sight of its ideals
and goals, as those goals have been repeated in history classes
over the generations, not necessarily as they have actually been
served in the real world of aggressive national, now global, capitalism.
Here
are a few things that we should know and that we should keep in
mind as we address our problems in the New Year:
MONSANTO
� The U.S. Department of Justice is investigating this company�s
contracts and licensing practices with farmers and others.� In a
short dozen years, it has become the owner of patented seed genes
found in 95 percent of soybeans and 80 percent of the corn planted
in the country.� That�s monopolistic and, because the company�s
contracts and licensing agreements are largely secret (farmers and
smaller seed dealers can�t talk about them), the people have no
clue about how their food is grown and processed.
That
a chemical-pharmaceutical-seed giant can have such profound control
over much of the �food� we eat is dangerous to the body politic.�
Fact is, Americans don�t know much, if anything, about the food
they give their children every day.� Control of the food system
is most anti-democratic�and this is just one corporation that functions
out of sight and control of the people and their representatives.�
In most cases the latter know as little�or even less�than their
constituents about the food system.
HEALTH
CARE �REFORM� � The U.S. has one of the most technologically advanced
medical care systems in the world, but it serves a percentage at
the top and is largely dysfunctional for a sizable minority of Americans.�
In other words, if you�re not among the 47 million who have no access
to health care, you think you have coverage for most things�until
you try to use it for a serious illness or malady.� Then, as many
as another 50 million, or so, may find too late that they have inadequate
health insurance.
There
was an opportunity to fix the broken system in this first year of
the new administration, but it appears largely to have missed the
mark.� It may not be possible to even improve it in the near future.
While
the �health care industry� has spread millions of dollars among
the members of Congress during this time (and long before), there
are just a few lawmakers who have been given the power to, effectively,
stop �reform� in its tracks.
This
has been possible because the lack of will on the part of the majority
has allowed the few�Republicans and some Blue Dog Democrats�to protect
their benefactors among health insurance companies and some other
players.
This
is corruption of money and corruption of principle.� Senator Joe
Lieberman is one of the more outstanding examples of a representative
of the people who is willing to say that he is protecting insurance
companies against any government system that would provide competition
for them.� Hardly surprising, since, as an �independent� candidate
for senate, his party name said it all:� �Connecticut for Lieberman,�
not the other way around.��
CLIMATE
CHANGE� -- Representatives and senators have come out of the woodwork
during the debate on climate change, to protect some of the most
powerful and most polluting interests in the U.S.�the coal and �energy�
corporations, which are used to riding roughshod over the will of
the people and the people, themselves.
Even
as weather patterns have changed and brought some of the most destructive
storms, floods, hurricanes, and other disasters, even as glaciers
are melting, even as mountains are losing their permanent cover
of snow and ice, even as the permafrost is melting under Inuit villages,
those who are in thrall or in the pay of the powerful companies
are making it difficult, if not impossible, to have a rational discussion
of the issue and seek solutions as rational people.
It
is all about protecting the profits of those who do not want to
see those profits diminish, no matter what happens to the earth
and the creatures on it.� This is corruption over which the people
have little or no control.
DISPARITY
IN WEALTH � At this time, the U.S. has the greatest disparity between
the rich and the rest of us, since the Great Depression.� This has
happened through the relentless battering of wage workers over the
past 75 years, to keep their pay and benefits down and their productivity
up.� It has happened through the manipulation of money, the banking
system, the scam (legal ) investment system, Congress� hands-off
policy regarding the Federal Reserve, the disappearance of laws
against usury, and the de facto, if not actual, reappearance of
monopolies and trusts that have operated with impunity over decades.
This
is corruption at the most basic level.� If the people do not share
in the wealth that they created over generations, there will be
no sharing of the control of the government or the economy.� We�re
fast approaching that status.� The presidential election of 2008
may have been an anomaly and the electorate may well return to staying
home in future elections, allowing a quarter of the people to elect
governments.
THE
�GLOBAL ECONOMY� � When Corporate America could not wring any more
from its wage-earning manufacturing workers, by driving down wages
and benefits, they began moving their operations to other countries,
where, even today, some workers earn as little as 50 cents an hour.
Nothing
was done about it, except that the government provided some incentives
for corporations that took their business elsewhere.� The effect
was to empty America of its manufacturing and industrial base and
to create a �service economy,� which itself is a low-paying, no-benefit,
low-job-security culture.� In large part, this is why there are
states that are in default, including California, our largest state.�
New York isn�t far behind, and there�s a growing number of others.�
The economic crisis has been caused by greed, but greed was enabled
by corruption at the highest levels of government.
The
turn-around is not going to be easy, because profound and sweeping
changes need to be made and they will not be made by governments
or Corporate America.� If the people do not take charge of their
own country, we�ll have more of the status quo, in which secrecy
and corruption are rampant and the people suffer.�
BlackCommentator.com Columnist, John Funiciello, is a labor organizer and former union organizer.
His union work started when he became a local president of The Newspaper
Guild in the early 1970s. He was a reporter for 14 years for newspapers
in New York State. In addition to labor work,
he is organizing family farmers as they struggle to stay on the
land under enormous pressure from factory food producers and land
developers. Click here
to contact Mr. Funiciello. |