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frank scott <[log in to unmask]>
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Sun, 26 Dec 1999 00:15:11 -0800
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COASTAL POST
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January 1, 2000

Changing the Future

"The country is governed for the rich,  the corporations, the
bankers,the speculators, and  the exploiters."

She may have been blind, mute and deaf, but she was certainly not
dumb.That is more than can be said for many  still ignorant of the
system Helen Keller was talking about, long ago. Those who made their
last payment of the 20th century to the forces she identified can draw
little comfort from the fact that their next  payment will be to those
same forces, in the 21st century. The corporate rich cited by Helen
Keller are still in control of government, and that is true not only of
this country but most of the globe.

The new year opens with some hopeful signs that this old order may be
passing, under the pressure of a democratic coalition working to push it
into the dustbin of history, where it belongs.

The WTO demonstrations in Seattle were only one example of a critique
being made that is larger than single issue outrages. Activists working
for social change have long been occupied with  specific wars and
particular cases of people defiled or land despoiled . Now, a larger
number of involved citizens have begun to  address the general system
responsible for those specific outrages, and more .

It may take  time to completely rid ourselves of the need for single
issues and special bad guys, but we seem closer to understanding that
change for the betterment of humanity  means change in how humanity is
organized to produce and distribute the resources of the earth.

The beginning of a new millennium is as good a time as any  to organize
for achieving solutions by better understanding the major cause of our
problems.

Whether seen from the narrow perspective of individual groups or from
the broader focus of a human race, the present system is the greatest
threat to our future. All of our problems are not the creation of
capitalism, but most of our problems cannot be solved  with the global
market  remaining under the control of private capital.

Material and moral poverty help to create war, bigotry , pollution and
countless other problems that confront humanity. And capitalism, while
it generates fantastic wealth and progress for some, guarantees that the
majority will suffer that material and moral poverty.

This system, not an individual CEO, sucks the earth dry and burns its
fossil fuels to move people in the most destructive and wasteful
manner.This system, not an individual developer or real estate merchant,
treats the earth under which the fuel lies as infinitely more valuable
than billions of human beings, for whom it shows complete disregard, if
not  murderous disrespect.

Individuals are the basis for social life, but individualism is the
enemy of  a humane organization of that life. And  the power of global
capital is sustained,in part,by people believing its propaganda about
individuals being free only as consumers in a market place. Just as bad
is the acceptance of the myth that any national or global organization
attempting to share the wealth with more than a few at the top is a
socialist horror, worse than death. Such “horror” has been supported by
famous people like Albert Einstein, as well as the very wise woman
quoted at the top.  Did you know that?

Blaming the contradictions of life on a foreign menace, or on our own
personal shortcomings, are what help  sustain  miserable outcomes that
are the realities of our political  economics. A new criticism of the
global  system, being made by the largest  coalition of modern times,
offers tremendous hope for the next period in history.

That hope depends on continued growth in a movement directed toward
democratic control of policies that affect more than a handful of
people, and the creation of a democracy able to cross borders of
geography and culture. Some will resist,  seeing any  control, whether
autocratic or democratic, as a sacrifice of individual rights. They
believe the religious dogma of metaphysical free markets that mean
lifelong struggle for the working masses,and material wealth for the
privileged few. But they are only a symptom, not the source of the
problem.

If we mean to change things for the best, we need to confront realities
about the worst. Especially regarding an alleged stock market boom  that
is really a working force bust, and the myths of debt and deficit
spending that confuse, rather than clarify reality.

The Reagan era was  about sustaining an economy by increasing government
debt. The Clinton era has been  about sustaining an economy by
increasing personal debt. Big difference. We pay both ways. Things that
were social responsibilities have become  personal responsibilities, in
a revival of 19th century political economics accepted by people whose
minds are clouded by political fables, media fairy tales and historical
fantasy.

We need to understand that it is anti-democratic and dangerous to our
survival  to allow  continued corporate domination of just about
everything. That means confronting capitalism, a system analyzed long
ago,  but kept far away from the consciousness of its subjects. We
remain locked into pursuit of  personal success  that guarantees social
failure. Changing the system means a far more social focus that could
bring about personal fulfillment through democratic community.

If we  have truly started on the path towards that democracy, the
millennium may really turn out to be  new. The great woman few of us
really know about, quoted at the top, advised the following  about
activism:

"Be not dumb, obedient slaves in an army  of destruction. Be heroes in
an army of  construction." -Helen Keller

Follow her advice, and have a  really happy new year.


Copyright (c) 2000 by Frank Scott. All rights reserved.

             This text may be used and shared in accordance with the
fair-use provisions of U.S. copyright law, and it may be archived and
redistributed in electronic form, provided that the author is notified
and no fee is charged for access. Archiving, redistribution, or
republication of this text on other terms, in any medium, requires the
consent of the author .



frank scott
http://www.marin.cc.ca.us/~frank
email: [log in to unmask]
225 laurel place, san rafael ca. 94901
(415)457 2415   fax(415)457 4791

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