When a person is ill a competent
doctor will attempt to identify all relevant symptoms: high
temperature, site of aches and pains, loss of appetite, heart-rate,
blood pressure, etc. etc. Following diagnosis treatment will be
offered in the form of dietary advice, physiotherapy, drugs, surgery
or some combination of these or other remedies. If the aim is to
cure the illness and prevent its return then the causes of the
disease will need to be identified and eliminated. Effective
treatment can only follow correct diagnosis of the cause. The doctor
will seek to understand family history, working conditions and living
conditions. Regular check-ups and preventive care are the
surest way to avoid the onset of serious illness and an appropriate
regimen leading to a healthy lifestyle will more likely ensure
non-return of the previous disease.
Political commentary on and diagnosis
of society's ills, however, tend to focus on discussion of how to
treat the symptoms with scant regard to eliminating the causes.
Reform rather than structural change. There continues to be a
plethora of books published both criticising and then offering reforms to
the capitalist system; so many, in fact, that it points to the fact
that there is a large audience of readers dissatisfied with the
status quo, knowing the current system doesn't work for them. An
audience aspiring to structural changes?
Treating only the symptoms, i.e.
reforming the system, is ultimately doomed to failure in society as
in the patient. Capital has no interest in that which is not in its
own interest and governments are limited in their ability to implement
reforms as they are pulled in various directions by the power
of capital's demands and the need to appease their constituents
long enough to remain in power in the short term. Markets,
money and money markets don't play by rules endorsed by
consumers. Whilst claiming to promote human
freedom capitalism profits from the denial of freedom,
especially of the workers employed by capitalist enterprise.
Social consequences are largely
ignored by capital. Evidence of this is everywhere from the countries
with the richest economies to dirt-poor nations with all populations
exploited or deliberately abandoned for economic reasons by local and
global capital. More families and individuals are impoverished,
hungry and made homeless each successive year in countries from
Africa, Asia and Europe to the Americas and the general public are
afraid that they, too, may fall victim to the disease as they tighten
their belts and try and take precautions; but we have been taught
to see capitalism as a system “too big to fail.” We have also
been taught to be afraid of considering the alternative of
dismantling the system and some continue to shout “reform.” Yes, many willingly keep taking the palliative medicine rather than
working together to eradicate the disease for the benefit of
themselves and future generations.
What needs to be recognised much more
widely is that the whole set-up of capitalism - the free-market
economy and monetarism - is one enormous scam against those who produce
the wealth, whether globally or locally. Those who produce the wealth
are currently all part of a huge lottery; this year, here and now, in work; next year, maybe out of work. But,
just like a game of chance, some manage to stay lucky and others
never get a look in. Join the club. If you are one of the multitude who needs
to work in order to live, you have been duped. Well and truly.
The cause of the
disease has been identified. It's time to remove it completely.
Only a structural change will do.
2 comments:
Yes. Systemic change from the wage-system to the production for use and need system, a change from private or State ownership of the lion's share of what labour producers to common ownership and democratic control of, by and for the producers themselves.
Couldn't put it better myself!
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