Gangster
Capitalism And
The Third Maroon War
By John Maxwell
04 December, 2006
Black
Agenda Report
We
are all Maroons now, whether we know it or not, wherever we are on the
face of the Earth, whoever we are, black, white or in-between, male
or female, human, as long as we are alive, animal or vegetable, on land
or in the sea or the air, our very existence is under attack.
If we want to survive we
have to take action. We need to resist the destruction of our own and
our planet’s integrity, resist degradation and deformity and protect
ourselves from extinction.
We are under siege by a system
gone mad, an economic system gone berserk, unaccountable to anyone and
responsible to nothing because this system has no rules. It can do anything
it wants to anyone, any living organism.
“Human dignity itself
becomes a marketable commodity.”
It is destroying oceans,
mountains and entire ecosystems, and with giant dams, even slowing the
revolution of the Earth. It destroys everything in its way, creating
deserts out of fertile land, submerging low-lying lands , poisoning
the air we breathe, altering weather systems in unpredictable ways and
producing more destructive hurricanes and typhoons, even slowing down
the mighty Gulf Stream itself , destroying the ice-cover at the North
Pole, breaking up the ice continent of Antarctica into icebergs bigger
than Jamaica and threatening life itself everywhere on Earth.
It is a system described
by George Soros, one of the world’s richest men, as “Gangster
Capitalism.”
On the world stage it calls
itself “Globalization.” On the local stage, everywhere,
its adherents call it “Development.”
In this system, everything
and everyone is for sale. Human dignity itself becomes a marketable
commodity, affordable to those with enough money to buy themselves a
little time.
A Father Kills His
Son
In Vietnam forty years ago,
the Americans thought they were buying time and safeguarding Progress.
The Domino Theory was ascendant, and South East Asia was to be made
safe for democracy. This ideal led to the killing and maiming hundreds
of thousands of people, some American, some Vietnamese. Here is the
story of three Americans:
The son speaks: “The
areas around us were heavily defoliated, so defoliated that they looked
like burned-out areas, many of them. You know, almost every day that
you were in riverboat patrol, you were… being subjected to the
Agent Orange factor.”
The father speaks:: “
It is the case that the particular area in Vietnam in which my son's
boat operated a great deal of the time was an area that was sprayed
upon my recommendation, and in that sense it's particularly ironic that
in a sense, if the causal relationship can be established, I have become
an instrument of my son's own tragedy.
The son is Elmo Zumwalt III,
son of Elmo Zumwalt II, Admiral and Chief of Naval Operations of the
USA. Elmo the younger died at 42, destroyed by cancers induced by Agent
Orange. His father died 11 years later, aged 79.
While serving as Commander
of US naval forces in Vietnam from 1968 to 1970 the elder Zumwalt had
ordered the spraying of the defoliant Agent Orange in the Mekong Delta,
seeking to deny cover to snipers on the river banks.
The older Zumwalt killed
his son; His son’s genes, deformed by Agent Orange, severely damaged
his grandson’s nervous system resulting in serious learning disabilities.
He is unable to speak for himself.
Hundreds of thousands of
south east Asians were also killed and maimed by Agent Orange and many
of their children have been born and are now being born dead, disabled
or hideously deformed.
“Dioxin is now present in the waters of Kingson Harbor”
Agent Orange is a mixture
of two phenoxyl herbicides – 2,4-dichlorophenoxyacetic acid (2,4-D)
and 2,4,5-trichlorophenoxyacetic acid (2,4,5-T). These were developed
for agro-industry – factory farming – to control broad-leaved
weeds. In broad-leaved plants they induce rapid, uncontrolled growth,
eventually killing them. They were used all over the world by the middle
of the 1950s. At least one Extension Officer in Jamaica, my friend “Buddha”
Webster, was killed by exposure to this toxin.
It was later learned that
a dioxin, 2,3,7,8-tetrachlorodibenzo-para-dioxin (TCDD), is produced
as a byproduct of the manufacture of 2,4,5-T, and was thus present in
any of the herbicides that used it. This chemical is among those now
present in the waters of Kingston Harbor, and as I pointed out five
years ago, were redistributed in the dredging of the harbor. TCDD is
a carcinogen, frequently associated with soft-tissue sarcoma, Non-Hodgkin's
lymphoma, Hodgkin's disease and chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL).
2,4,5-T has since been banned for use in the US and many other countries.
Its initial effects include liver damage, loss of energy and diminished
sex drive.
During the 1970s, at the
height of the destabilization of the Manley government, I saw at Newport
East, a big transformer built for JPS dropped onto the quayside, breaking
open and spilling into the harbor gallons of dioxins, which remain there
to this day.
The Resource Curse
Almost all the countries
now described as “developing” or “underdeveloped”
share one major characteristic: for hundreds of years their people,
their lands – their resources – have provided the raw materials
for the development of the so-called “developed world.”
As one American comic has
said: “What is our oil doing underneath Iraq and Venezuela?”
Almost every war ever fought
and most of today’s wars and civil wars derive from the idea that
the strong are entitled to the resources of the weak because the weak
don’t know how to use their resources appropriately. In this perspective,
Jamaican farmland is not serving its proper purpose by producing food.
Jamaican bauxite is necessary for “Progress” – to
make more planes, more frying pans, more garbage and to stiffen the
GDP.
“There is an
imminent threat of catastrophic changes because of global warming.”
In Rio de Janeiro, fourteen years ago, political leaders and bureaucrats
from all over the world (including Jamaican Prime Minister P.J. Patterson)
met to agree on a new compact to define development or “progress”
if you will. They signed the Treaty of Rio, otherwise known as Agenda
21 and it committed the nations of the world to work together to assure
the survival of the planet and all the living things which inhabit it
by adopting and practicing Sustainable Development.
The first paragraph of the
preamble of the treaty is worth remembering:
“Humanity stands at
a defining moment in history. We are confronted with a perpetuation
of disparities between and within nations, a worsening of poverty, hunger,
ill health and illiteracy, and the continuing deterioration of the ecosystems
on which we depend for our well-being.”
Environmentalists put it
more crudely: We are living beyond our means, overdrawing our credit
from the earth, destroying finite resources for greed.
The oil industry is only
now waking up to the prospect that its behavior may condemn all of us
to a future of darkness, disease and destitution; only now beginning
to recognize that there is an imminent threat of catastrophic changes
because of global warming. Even Mr. Bush and Mr. Howard of Australia
seem to be seeing the light. The Chinese seem to have some way to go
before they emerge from their tunnel of development.
In the Rio statement on Sustainable
Development, the world’s leaders acknowledged “the integral
and interdependent nature of the Earth, our home” and proclaimed
as the first principle of development that:
“Human beings are at
the center of concerns for sustainable development. They are entitled
to a healthy and productive life in harmony with nature.”
The Predator’s
Progress
Progress is today defined
by measuring how much of one’s patrimony can be safely delivered
into the hands of developers. We offer them incentives to come to despoil
our patrimony, abuse and deform our social relations and generally disinherit
us. In gracious exchange they will make billions of tax free dollars
and demonstrate how different they are to the rest of the miserable
and oppressed of the earth. In return we can live in the Bronx.
All over the world indigenous
populations are counseled to be investor friendly, to assist the despoliation
of their holy mountains in Chile; the poisoning of their streams and
the deforestation of their landscapes in New Guinea; the displacement,
murder and rape of thousands to make way for oil pipelines in Burma
(Myanmar). The Progress-bringers are destroying the glaciers of Iceland,
the Jarrah forests of Western Australia and the communal tranquility
of the Cedros Peninsula in Trinidad.
“We offer them incentives
to come to despoil our patrimony, abuse and deform our social relations
and generally disinherit us.”
The 2005 Yale/Columbia Environmental
Sustainability Index (ESI) showed Trinidad and Tobago as having the
worst percentage of negative land impacts of 146 countries, yet Trinidad's
government is ignoring the protests of its people who don’t want
any more pollution and degradation of their small and beautiful island.
Public protests in Chile,
Brazil and Vietnam have kept proposed aluminum smelters out of those
countries The Trinidadian citizens group Cedros Peninsula United say
that when they managed to obtain a copy of Alcoa's (secret) Environmental
Clearance – jointly signed by Alcoa and the government's Energy
Corporation – they found it full of omissions, inaccuracies and
outright false statements.
The Barrick Corporation of
Canada, like Alcoa, a transnational despoiler of the environment, is
proposing to mine 500 tons of gold from mountain peaks in Chile. The
Barrick corporation intends (Listen to This!) to relocate three glaciers
(rivers of ice) to get at the gold.
As you might imagine, the
people of Chile are not accepting this proposed rape of their environment.
Environmental Time-Bombs
The proposed assault on the
Cockpit Country [in Jamaica]is not simply an assault on the sensibilities
of a few environmentalists. It is an affront to the whole of humanity.
When the great devastation comes we won’t be saved by bauxite
or alumina, but by the species finding shelter in the land of Look Behind
and similar refuges around the world.
A hundred years ago Jules
Verne described the Gulf Stream as "the sea's greatest river,[and]
we must pray that this steadiness continues because ... if its speed
and direction were to change, the climates of Europe would undergo disturbances
whose consequences are incalculable."
The Sea’s Greatest
River is slowing down, and the consequences have been calculated. A
few weeks ago the British government published a report by Sir Nicholas
Stern on the economic consequences of climate change. The report says
the possibility of avoiding a global catastrophe is "already almost
out of reach."
Stern says changes in weather
patterns could drive down the output of the world's economies by up
to £6 trillion a year by 2050, an amount equivalent to almost
the entire output of the EU. This catastrophic prospect is the direct
result of “Progress” as defined by people who have more
money than conscience.
“The possibility
of avoiding a global catastrophe is ‘already almost out of reach.’”
If the Gulf Stream slows to a stop or even if it simply continues to
slow down, the effects on climate, farming and the populations of the
world will be in one word, Disaster.
Joseph Stiglitz, Nobel Prize
Economist of 2001, former Chief Economist of the World Bank says:
“The Stern Review of
the Economics of Climate Change … makes clear that the question
is not whether we can afford to act, but whether we can afford not to
act. [The report] provides a comprehensive agenda – one which
is economically and politically feasible – behind which the entire
world can unite in addressing this most important threat to our future
well being.”
Neither Stern nor Stiglitz
nor Soros is some wool-gathering tree-hugger. They are among the people
recognized as the brightest in the world. I prefer to believe them rather
than some PR flack from any aluminum company or the Port Authority or
any other agency of the Jamaican government.
The Spanish hotels on the
North coast are disasters in their own right and will soon become catastrophic
losses because of sea level rise and hurricanes. And we will pay for
them as we will pay for the Doomsday Highway which is already obsolete.
As I pointed out in my column,
“People at Risk” in February 2002, some of the geniuses
of the Jamaican “development” process tolerate no opposition
to “Progress.” They will destroy our coral reefs and degrade
the harbor to take bigger container ships – themselves extinct
within twenty years. At that time I reported that the bottom of Kingston
Harbor contained several extremely dangerous substances and warned that
PAJ dredging would redistribute them unpredictably and in a manner which
would almost certainly be hazardous to health, particularly to the people
of Portmore I reported that among toxins present were: Arsenic, Cadmium,
Dioxins (including derivatives of Agent Orange), Lead, Lindane, Hexachlorobenzene,
Tetrachloroethylene and good, old Mad Hatter’s Mercury.
“Progress” has
brought civil war, genocide and HIV/AIDS to Africa. It has deformed
our politics, driven away our best and brightest all in search of the
Holy Grail of “Development.”
We can eat Trelawny yam and
gungoo peas. We can’t eat Red Mud, although we may have to drink
it, if progress has its way with the Land of Look Behind.
Prosit !
John Maxwell
of the University of the West Indies (UWI) is the veteran Jamaican journalist
who in 1999 single-handedly thwarted the Jamaican government's efforts
to build houses at Hope, the nation's oldest and best known botanical
gardens. His campaigning earned him first prize in the 2000 Sandals
Resort's Annual Environmental Journalism Competition, the region's richest
journalism prize. He is also the author of How to Make Our Own News:
A Primer for Environmentalists and Journalists. Jamaica, 2000. Mr. Maxwell
can be reached at [email protected]
This article originally appeared
in the Jamaica Observer
Copyright©2006John Maxwell
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