Globalization
Feb. 28th, 2004 12:58 pmGlobalization has been presented as purely a trade issue, but it is actually about appropriation of resources. It makes property out of things that have never before been owned as property. Native plant life replenishes itself and belongs to communities. The idea of patenting seeds, plants and even genes of certain organisms threatens to change this. Similarly, water, which has alwasy been recognized as a commons, is being privatized. This confilict involves nearly all of humanity--and all the species on this planet--versus a handful of corporations.
Why is this happening now? Because capital has reached its limits. Capital accumulation always needs new domains, new frontiers. During colonialism, the frontiers were other continents. Europeans came and took the land that belonged to the native communities in India and Africa. Now the frontiers are water, plant life, and life itself.
The limits of capitalization have been reached in teh wealthy, industrialized North: how many more suvs can you sell to families that already have two of them? In the Southern Hemisphere, people are poor. You can't sell them suvs, so you create new markets in teh necessities of life, items that even the poor must have daily. Thus you have a mechanism with which to suck capital from the poorest people of the world.
--Vandana Shiva
Now, if we challenge the notion of property, that has an affect on the validity of ownership in the past. Not that I have done research significantly in the past, but you owned property based on whether your government acknowledged you owned that property. Before organized government, you owned it by virtue of being able to defend it from others. Is the only thing making property valid is that you merely have a powerful authority acknowledge that it is yours?
Discuss.
Why is this happening now? Because capital has reached its limits. Capital accumulation always needs new domains, new frontiers. During colonialism, the frontiers were other continents. Europeans came and took the land that belonged to the native communities in India and Africa. Now the frontiers are water, plant life, and life itself.
The limits of capitalization have been reached in teh wealthy, industrialized North: how many more suvs can you sell to families that already have two of them? In the Southern Hemisphere, people are poor. You can't sell them suvs, so you create new markets in teh necessities of life, items that even the poor must have daily. Thus you have a mechanism with which to suck capital from the poorest people of the world.
--Vandana Shiva
Now, if we challenge the notion of property, that has an affect on the validity of ownership in the past. Not that I have done research significantly in the past, but you owned property based on whether your government acknowledged you owned that property. Before organized government, you owned it by virtue of being able to defend it from others. Is the only thing making property valid is that you merely have a powerful authority acknowledge that it is yours?
Discuss.
no subject
Date: 2004-02-29 04:21 am (UTC)I'm not quite sure what 'by itself' means, but no matter what, that's just false. Dwarf wheat quadrupled the yield of wheat in Mexico, India, Pakistan and several countries in Africa, saving about 1 billion lives. Remember all those Neo-Malthusian predictions that in the 80's there would be mass starvations? Know why that didn't happen? Because of Dwarf wheat, and other GM foods like it. Check it out here: http://www.usu.edu/cpl/research_dwarf_wheat3.htm
Moreover, it's not just about productivity. So called 'Golden Rice' has the potential to prevent blindness in a few hundred thousand children a year in areas where adequate amounts of vitamin A are scarce. (Shiva has written on Golden Rice calling it a 'hoax,' but her case was quite weak.)
"She claims that before biotech cotton was introduced commercially in India, yields were at 15 quintiles per acre. After the introduction of biotech cotton, output dropped to 2 quintiles per acre. Furthermore, she asserts that Monsanto cooked the books and planted articles in scientific journals."
Well I can't speak to these points in particular, except to say that no one claimed that GM foods was a pancea. It's a trail and error method, much like any other humanitarian effort.
"he World Bank, with the intent (or supposed intent) of easing the poverty situation in Bolivia, advocated privatization of as many of the public services for Bolivia. International Water, a subsidiary of Bechtel got the contract for privatization. In a city where the minimum wage is less than 100 dollars per month, cost for water from International Water was reaching 20 dollars. This ammounted in mass protests, violence, etc., until the Government withdrew the contract from International Water."
Again, I can't defend everything that the World Bank has done, but this clearly seems like a well-intentioned case where things just didn't work out like they hoped. It's in no one's interest to have people dying of thirst.
"If I had a choice between believing a person whose goal is to ensure the nourishment of poor families around the world versus the word of corporations who seek to maximize profits to acquire more luxuries, I'm going to believe the well educated individual who is motivated by feeding the poor."
Oh, I don't trust the companies. I believe people like Norman Borlaug. He was responsable for Dwarf Wheat, and when he won the Nobel Prize in 1970, they estimated that he had saved 1 BILLION human lives (you can speculate as to how many his work has saved in the 34 years since.) Borlaug clearly qualifies under your criterion. I'm also curious what alternatives Shiva proposes in place of GM foods.
"We are currently in a world where governments and businesses are not separate. In many cases, governments are making decisions that benefit businesses directly at the expense of the basic needs of the people."
I just don't think this really makes sense. Companies can't make profit by starving people in absolute poverty, and they can't make much by merely exploiting them. What they want, ne, what they NEED is more customers. That's why they have a vested interest in raising the quality of life.
"If there really was a free market, perhaps things would work more smoothly."
This is one point I agree with you on. There's all sorts of hypocricies and double standards regarding 'free trade' between industrialized nations and the third world. These need to be exposed and remidied. But the remedy is consistency, and the expansion of globalization, not the constriction thereof. These double-standards have (for the most part) lessened as globalization continues, as a direct result of international presure brought to bear by institutions like the WTO.
no subject
Date: 2004-03-01 06:43 am (UTC)As for companies involved in GM foods, they have succeeded in driving the subsistance farmers out of business, and creating a dependency of people on their products. If it is true that creating super crops leads to super pests and weeds (which makes sense) then these business guarantee business for them because they have to keep developing new crops to keep ahead of the pests and weeds that are adapting. So we basically step up evolution, and truly may not experience a long term improvement, while experiencing a dramatic shift in income inequality.
When reading Borlaug's arguments with regard to these issues, he doesn't seem to have a lot to say, based on the research I've done so far. And I haven't yet found an article where he addresses Shiva head-on.