COLLECTIVE MADNESS


“Soft despotism is a term coined by Alexis de Tocqueville describing the state into which a country overrun by "a network of small complicated rules" might degrade. Soft despotism is different from despotism (also called 'hard despotism') in the sense that it is not obvious to the people."
Showing posts with label globalism. Show all posts
Showing posts with label globalism. Show all posts

Wednesday, November 11, 2009

Globalization, 17th Century Style, What has changed?



Trade and globalization: We are what we buy and how we buy it

Trade and globalization — the rules governing what we buy and sell — are now playing such a decisive role in almost every major policy that we ignore it at our peril, writes columnist David Sirota.

By David Sirota
Syndicated columnist Seattle Times

Trade and globalization — when not referencing blockbuster sports transactions or raucous street protests, debates over these abstract terms can give Ambien and Jack Daniels a run for their money as a cure for insomnia. Of course, that's the problem — the rules governing what we buy and sell are now playing such a decisive role in almost every major policy that we're falling asleep at our peril.

Most are familiar with trade and globalization, if at all, through the prism of heavy manufacturing in the so-called "old economy." We know, for instance, how NAFTA-style pacts helped destroy our factory job base.

The economics were unabashed and straightforward: By eliminating the tariffs we charged for goods made in countries with negligible wage and human rights laws, Washington removed disincentives for mass offshoring. With "free trade," our government effectively encouraged corporations to transfer production facilities abroad so as to cut costs via the cheap labor, slave working conditions and rampant union busting that flourishes in the developing world.

No surprise — two decades into this allegedly glorious "free trade" era, an ever-bigger swath of Flyover America looks just as flicks like "Roger and Me" predicted: rusted, abandoned, boarded up, and/or otherwise resembling a nuclear test site.

Even less shocking, that apocalyptic reality has been largely ignored by a political and media establishment that believes economic emergencies are only those that threaten Wall Street bankers. Indeed, if the Beltway chattering class has paid attention to trade reform at all, it has portrayed the cause as a boring "special interest" crusade of supposedly selfish unionists and crazed anarchists.

Circumstances, however, have undermined the narrative power of that deliberately dishonest cliché.

In 2009, trade and globalization have transcended their "old economy" ghetto and become central to the "new economy," health care and even the Earth's very survival.

Remember the stimulus bill that promised a job-supporting down payment on the infrastructure and technology needed to rebuild our country? Yeah, well, the success of lobbyists in neutering the legislation's "Buy American" provisions in the name of "free trade" has steered much of that money into subsidizing job growth offshore.

Worried about skyrocketing health-care costs? If you are, then you ought to be wondering about laws that bar Americans from using "free trade" to purchase lower-priced medicines from abroad.

And what about reducing greenhouse-gas emissions? You interested in avoiding a climate catastrophe? Then realize the planet's future has far more to do with good old-fashioned tariffs than any neoliberal techno-babble about "cap and trade."

That's right, because global climate change is just that — global — we must both reduce our own pollution and compel other nations to reduce theirs. We can certainly try that through saccharine promises in a treaty, but it's far more effective to use the market.

That's the beauty of Democratic Ohio Sen. Sherrod Brown's proposal. A new levy on goods made in ways or in nations that ignore greenhouse-gas caps doesn't merely discourage American companies from moving jobs to countries whose domestic laws tolerate pollution. It also economically advantages green products/companies/nations, raises revenues for clean-energy innovation and — most important — appreciates the borderless nature of the crisis.

"Carbon dioxide emissions expand if a company closes down in Toledo, Ohio, and moves to Shanghai, where the emissions standards are weaker, " Brown says.

Put another way, as coma-inducing as the words "trade" and "globalization" may seem, we are what we buy and how we buy it. That means the cause of trade reform isn't everything — increasingly, it is the only thing.

David Sirota blogs at OpenLeft.com. E-mail him at ds@davidsirota.com


Saturday, May 03, 2008

People Get Ready, there's a train a coming....


The Brookings Institution under the leadership of Strobe Talbott, seems to be increasingly focussed on the new world order which essentially sees the decline of the nation state and the rise of global governance.

In the 1980's the fascination was with the Bilderbergers, the Trilateral Commission and the Council on Foreign Relations. The "wingnuts" said that these three organizations were secretly on a mission to divide the world into three spheres controlled by the United States, the European Union and Japan.

Substitute China for Japan and you have the premise for the new new world order. According to a young academic at the Brookings institute, Parag Khanna, globalization is inexorably driving to a world controlled by "three Empires" who vie with each other for influence in the "second world" countries. Khanna's book - The Second World: Empires and Influence in the New Global Order-

Here's an interesting BBC interview with Mr. Khanna

Maybe the wingnuts weren't so nutty.