Wherever
it treads, progress and wealth follows. In place of forests,
plains, and urban ruins, structures rise and people thrive.
The free market brings basic goods to the masses. Corporations
feed the world. New millionaires in China, India,
and Africa prove the value of capitalism.
Where
ever capitalism treads, it manages to convince individuals
of their invincibility.
The
United
States manages two wars and 700 military
bases around the world to �secure� Americans from �terrorists,�
who want to rob �Americans� of their freedom, even
while the State has ordered a decree proclaiming the right
to arrest, imprison, and kill not only �terrorists� but
American citizens anywhere in the world. The �Americans,�
over 6.3 million of them as of January 2010, have been
out of work for more than six months (May 2010, New
York Times). The number of homeless Americans �has
reached crisis proportions not seen since the Great Depression�
(April 2010, New York Times). In a nation
at war with �terrorists� to protect the freedom of American
citizens, nearly half its children and �an overwhelming
majority of Black children,� according to the AFP,
�will eat meals at some point during their childhood paid
for by food stamps.� The Department of Defense�s budget
is over $600 billion for fiscal year 2010.
How
much money is spent to convince the American public to
remain obedient, single-minded foot soldiers for the capitalists?
The
capitalists on Wall Street received between $89 to $100
billion in bailout funds from the Troubled Asset Relief
Program, TARP, when their game of advancing other�s money
and mortgages to their friends failed and crashed the
market in part to buy the media. Terrorists high on the
lists of terrorists are repeatedly captured or killed
on one station while on another, Americans are shown western-modeled
streets lined with high rise office buildings or apartments
in India or China. The
�people�s representatives in the U.S.,� hand-picked cronies,
complicit in the facilitation of capitalist brutality
and the corruption of the democratic experiment, know
that the 1 billion poor children on this planet, the 640
million children without adequate shelter, the 400 million
children with no access to safe water, the 270 million
children with no access to health services, and the 101
million children without education worldwide (March 2010,
Poverty Facts and Stats), are evidence of the terrifying
reality capitalists have produced.
Ammunition,
white phosphorus, F-16s, Blackhawks and Apaches helicopters,
and unmanned aircraft vehicles are, for capitalists, a
means of securing a specialized workforce of military
personnel, engineers, scientists, entrepreneurs, mercenaries,
the coerced exploited, of course, profits. Simultaneously
sink the will of the people who would otherwise defend
themselves against the consumption of their lives and
gut the earth. Capitalists give, but capitalists take
away more than they give. The capitalist control an economy
built on the perpetuation of war and the increased exploitation
of workers while dispossessing the poor and indigenous
of resources and land to amass an ever greater concentration
of wealth for themselves. Accumulation by dispossession.
Take whatever remains and forestall the inevitable.
Is this what the capitalists are thinking? Confiscate
the land and dispossess the people of their means of survival
while the capitalist drill and dynamite for more? Protected
within exclusive gates communities, with white-skins,
corporate power, and too-big-to-fail narratives, the capitalist
are ruthlessly pulling on ever taut strings. Consolation
prizes will ease collective sense of guilt for those working
toward the expansion this madness? The violence of dispossession
while too disturbing to confront eventually becomes acceptable,
routine - inevitable.
The
corporate media won�t report on the masses of indigenous
people suffering but struggling against the capitalist
confiscators. In April of this year, the Maasai women
in the Loliondo village in Tanzania, for example, walked the election polls
and turned in the identification cards necessary to vote
in the October elections (Jerry Reynolds, FirstPeoplesWorldwide.com).
A
member of parliament for the Maasai in Northern
Tanzania, Saning�o ole Telele, informed the government
that the women, members of a cattle-herding community,
were protesting the confiscation of their lands. �They
want the government to know they are not being treated
well.�
Maasai
homes have been burned down; villagers have been evicted
from their lands; and their cattle confiscated and their
herders fined, writes Reynolds. The men must leave the
community for months at a time �to look for grazing pasture
and water for livestock,� said Udamishani Gidadeli, U.N.
Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (Reynolds,
FirstPeoplesWorldWide). The women are �left stranded with
no water, medical help or food.� In addition, these women
have been subjected to rape, and many have suffered miscarriages.
�Conservation
evictions are going on with the encouragement of the government,�
Jerry Reynolds informed me by phone. �The government in
Tanzania is forced to develop its economy at the
expense of the indigenous Maasai community.�
But
the government isn�t alone in the search for wealth.
UNESCO
and the International Union for Conservation of Nature
(UCN) claim that the Maasai lands have been ecologically
in decline! If you are thinking - a national park complete
with a safari range for great western adventurers - you
are right! UNESCO and UCN have friends. The invisible
hand can�t be far behind. In fact, it�s never behind but
ahead of the game!
�The
land is deteriorating for a number of reasons,� Reynolds
said, �including drought.�
But
the government�s evictions of the Maasai from the lands
they have managed for centuries also offer a good excuse
for capitalist development. This is the story
no one wants to hear. Tourism on lands once grazed by
the Maasai is becoming another playground for the capitalists
who see nothing but profits not the Maasai�s loss of land
and way of life or the continued loss of nature�s caretakers.
Water
found on the Maasai lands, as Reynolds explained, equals
hydropower plants. The forest equals timber for export
to generate money. �In theory, this development helps
the Tanzania
government but depletes the environment and displaces
the Maasai.�
What
began as a protest in one village with women turning in
their identification cards eventually expanded to other
villages and other Maasai women following suit. According
to Reynolds� report at First Peoples World Wide in which
he quotes Susanna Nordlund, police threatened violence
if more than 400 Maasai women continued to walk toward
the Loliondo administrative division. The government trucked
a smaller group back to the Maasai village
of Ololosokwan after they were
arrested and interrogated by the police. Five hundred
women managed to hide in the bush overnight and, the next
morning, presented their party card (identification cards)
to election officials.
But,
in the end, Reynolds said, all of the women have either
returned to their overcrowded lands or have been forced
to move in with other family members outside their villages.
It�s
all good, the capitalists tell us. It�s all good. Progress!
The
gusher in the Gulf of Mexico is but
one of several gushers and but one of several messages
from Mother Earth! But melting glaciers, the drying up
of lakes and water basins, the displacement and shuffling
of the indigenous, poor, and working class don�t seem
to phase the �invisible hand,� the almighty free market.
Capitalism�s production of commodities is dispossessing
humanity and nature of life, but, ironically, the �invisible
hand� makes invisible the impacted of wealth accumulation
at all cost.
In
the novel, The
Rings of Saturn, by the late German writer
W.G. Sebald, the narrator (possibly the author himself)
flying from Amsterdam to Norwich,
contemplates the predicament of our species.
No
where, writes the narrator, does he see people. Only the
human-made things are visible.
No
matter whether one is flying over Newfoundland
or the sea of lights that stretches from Boston
to Philadelphia after nightfall, over
the Arabian deserts which gleam like mother-of-pearl,
over the Ruhr or the city of Frankfurt, it is as though there were no people,
only the things they have made and in which they are hiding.
One sees the places where they live and the roads that
link them, one sees the smoke rising from their houses
and factories, one sees the vehicles in which they sit,
but one sees not the people themselves. And
yet they are present everywhere upon the face of the earth,
extending their dominion by the hour, moving around the
honeycombs of towering buildings and tied into networks
of a complexity that goes far beyond the power of any
one individual to imagine, from the thousands of hoists
and winches that once worked the South African diamond
mines to the floors of today�s stock and commodity exchanges,
through which the global tides of information flow without
cease.
�If
we view ourselves,� Sebald continues, �from a great height,
it is frightening to realize how little we know about
our species, our purpose and our end.�
Tell
us a happy story! Give us a happy ending!
Well,
Steve Jobs of Apple wants to sell you a new and improved
iPod - with a larger camera lens!
Contact
www.firstpeoplesworldwide.org.
for more information on the Maasai struggles in Tanzania.
BlackCommentator.com Editorial Board member, Lenore Jean Daniels, PhD, has been a writer
for over thirty years of commentary, resistance criticism
and cultural theory, and short stories with a Marxist
sensibility to the impact of cultural narrative violence
and its antithesis, resistance narratives. With entrenched
dedication to justice and equality, she has served as
a coordinator of student and community resistance projects
that encourage the Black Feminist idea of an equalitarian
community and facilitator of student-teacher communities
behind the walls of academia for the last twenty years.
Dr. Daniels holds a PhD in Modern American Literatures,
with a specialty in Cultural Theory (race, gender, class
narratives) from Loyola University,
Chicago. Click here
to contact Dr. Daniels.