3.27.2006

politics: astute dissection of the preznit

by Jane Smiley.

I've never been a fan of her fiction, but she pins some people down with this essay.

The part that stuck out for me, something I've felt for years now:

I once knew a guy who was still a Marxist in 1980. Whenever I asked him why Communism had failed in Russia and China, he said "Mistakes were made". He could not believe that Marxism itself was at fault, just as you cannot believe that the ideology of the unregulated free market has created the world we live in today. You are tempted to say: "Mistakes have been made", but in fact, psychologically and sociologically, no mistakes have been made. The unregulated free market has operated to produce a government in its own image. In an unregulated free market, for example, cheating is merely another sort of advantage that, supposedly, market forces might eventually "shake out" of the system. Of course, anyone with common sense understands that cheaters do damage that sometimes cannot be repaired before they are "shaken out", but according to the principles of the unregulated free market, the victims of that sort of damage are just out of luck and the damage that happens to them is just a sort of "culling". It is no accident that our government is full of cheaters--they learned how to profit from cheating when they were working in corporations that were using bribes, perks, and secret connections to cheat their customers of good products, their neighbors of healthy environmental conditions, their workers of workplace safety and decent paychecks.


The same thing is true of the 'health care' system in this country.
"Business Ethics" is an oxymoron of epic proportions. Expecting huge coroprations to promote any intersts but their own is like expecting a hungry shark to exercise restraint and self control around a bleeding seal.

Anyway, it's a well-written broadside. Check it out.

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