-Caveat Lector-

-------- Original Message --------
Subject: Out on the streets, we are putting the demo back into democracy
Date: Sat, 08 Jan 2000 16:53:35 +0200
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The GUARDIAN (London)Thursday January 6, 2000

Home-made revolution

Out on the streets, we are putting the demo back into democracy

By George Monbiot

A few months ago, I dropped my pager in a puddle. Water was gurgling
around inside it; the display scrambled then disappeared. Two days
later, it recovered completely. Since then I have trodden on it and
dropped it on the pavement, yet I have never succeeded in harming it.
My radio, by contrast, falls apart whenever I have the temerity to
turn it on.

The longer I keep hold of my pager, the more money the manufacturers
make, as they get paid every time someone leaves a message. The longer
I keep hold of my radio, the less profitable the manufacturer becomes.
It is astonishing how powerless consumers remain after decades of
"consumer democracy".

When coal was valued above children, eight-year-olds were sent to
extract it. When food was expensive, men and women were transported
for stealing a loaf of bread, or blinded for poaching a rabbit. Black
people were exchangeable for rifles, beer and sugar. No sane and
compassionate human being would lament the passing of these inverted
values.

But far from liberating us, the decline in the cost of resources has
merely introduced us to a new captivity. To maintain the value of
production, companies and governments had to encourage us to consume
more. They have been spectacularly successful. Risen from slaves to
workers to citizens, we are now reduced to consumers.

And the world's assets are stripped to keep the mill grinding.
Ecologists predicted that oil, copper and nickel would soon be
exhausted. They were wrong. Paradoxically, the renewable resources -
soil, fresh water, fisheries and forests - have disappeared first, as
consumer demand outstrips biological supply. The consequences for the
poorest are grave. They can live without oil and copper: but not
without water and soil.

Now the ex-citizens of the richer world are in danger of slipping in
status again, from consumers to commodities. Our genes have already
been seized and patented. If germline gene therapy - altering
heritable characteristics - becomes commercially viable, our offspring
will be the subjects of fierce commercial competition. We will find
ourselves obliged to earn the money to improve them. The slave trade
was justified by racism: this new human traffic will be driven by an
even more virulent form of discrimination: genism. Those who can buy
will be able to claim, with some justification, that they are
biologically distinct from those who cannot: they won't wish to breed
or even mix with the genetically unwashed.

These processes looked inexorable. But people all over the world have
begun to rediscover their citizenship. They recognise that governments
are happy to shove us, as so much coke, into the corporate furnace,
only because we let them.

A handful of scruffy activists helped reduce the value of Britain's
road-building programme from 23bn to 4bn in just four years. Two
unemployed dissidents forced McDonald's to try to sue for peace after
it mistakenly assumed that it could crush them in court. Monsanto,
once the world's most bullish biotech company, charged into a wall of
opposition, and broke its corporate skull. First the Multilateral
Agreement on Investment, then the World Trade Organisation's attempt
to write a charter for corporate rule, were exposed and delayed.

Activists have realised that they can achieve far more through
confrontation with power than through cooperation. Voluntary
organisations and trade unions which have been negotiating for years
to try to soften the blows delivered by the corporate giant have found
themselves outflanked, as campaigners put the demo back into
democracy.

More quietly, but just as importantly, trading relationships are
beginning to shift. While governments have been attempting to engineer
a single, harmonised global market, throughout Europe and the US
citizens' groups are breaking the market up. Organic box schemes and
farmers' markets have begun to democratise commercial encounters,
reducing the scale of business until the power of producers and
consumers is roughly equivalent, reintroducing accountability to the
food chain.

In farming, forestry and fishing, companies are finding themselves
obliged to seek a licence to trade, submitting their products to
independent certification by bodies such as the Soil Association and
the Forest Stewardship Council. Though governments are ever more
reluctant to regulate, citizens seem to be able to force corporations
to shoulder their responsibilities.

However, most of the world's key institutions have been infiltrated by
corporate lobbyists. Bodies such as the Transatlantic Business
Dialogue and the International Chamber of Commerce are allowed to
write the rules governing global relationships between producers and
consumers. Binding bilateral agreements, already approved, pose even
greater threats to democracy.

But the homespun revolution which will make the old world order
impossible to sustain has already begun. It will, mostly, be quiet,
local and, I hope, bloodless, occasionally building up to massive
confrontations of the kind which sent governments scurrying for cover
in Seattle.


=================================
_____________________________________________________
                               *  The Activist  *
                            http://get.to/activist

 This is not about the world that we inherited from our forefathers,
     It is about the world we have borrowed from our children !!
_____________________________________________________


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