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"Free trade" agreements - Hypocrisy and Illusion |
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by Siv O'Neall Axis of Logic Entered into the database on Friday, January 06th, 2006 @ 11:21:43 MST |
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Manipulated – again! The emptiness behind the slogan ‘free trade’ has been pointed out
again and again by numerous NGOs, by Progressive Internet sites and by individual
objectors to the obscene power of the transnational corporations. It needs however
to be stressed constantly until the corporate empire falls and IN BOLDFACE
CAPITALS, that the ‘free trade concept’ which the rich
countries are holding forth as the savior of the world from poverty, increasing
unemployment and horrendous inequality is just a legerdemain, an empty illusion.
It is a way of duping all of us into believing that something positive is coming
out of this huge scam. In particular, the part of the world that is the target of the greed of the
big corporations (represented by the World Trade Organization) is of course
the poor countries in the South, especially Africa, which is being mercilessly
screwed into becoming helpless buyers of overpriced products from the rich countries
while they are being prevented, through crafty agreements, imposed by the World
Bank, from continuing the production of what has been their main source of income
and sustenance for hundreds of years. All for the profit of the already rich
countries and corporations, and the people be damned. Propaganda terms like ‘Free trade’, bringing ‘democracy’
to Iraq, ‘Pax Americana’ are all of the same ilk. They mean exactly
the opposite of what they seem to mean. The so-called Free Trade Agreements, such as NAFTA (North America), CAFTA,
(Central America), and FTAA (the Americas, specifically South America) have
very little to do with free trade. An ‘agreement to eliminate or reduce
trade barriers’ may sound like a positive thing. But positive to whom?
Who benefits? And are trade barriers actually reduced? What the WTO is doing
in reality is raising customs duties on products from third world nations at
the same time as they are hugely subsidizing their own industrial agricultural
products in order to be able to ‘dump’ these products on the third
world countries whom they have deprived of the capacity of feeding themselves.
They achieve this by forcing new laws to be applied in those countries, laws
that grant new rights to transnational companies at the expense of traditional
farming. Privatization of services and national resources, most importantly
water (Water Privatization: The
World Bank's Latest Market Fantasy, By Maude Barlow and Tony Clarke), deprives
numerous third world countries of their self-sufficiency and causes malnutrition
and absurdly high death rates, particularly among infants, deaths that could
have been largely avoided, had it not been for the obscene greed of the multinational
corporations. Small farmers all over the world are getting the short end of the stick. In
India, the deliberate destruction of the age-old agricultural policy via the
introduction of the ‘free market’ system has radically changed the
way of life of millions of small farmers. Suicides and untold disasters have
resulted from the total inhumanity of the system. See ‘India:
free markets, empty bellies’ (Le Monde Diplomatique, Sept 2002). What then is ‘free’ about the ‘free market’? It leaves
the rich countries free to dump their cotton, food products, etc. on the poor
countries, free to move their work force to cheap labor areas in the third world,
free to hide their money in tax havens, free to enjoy the proceeds of global
capital speculation based on the artificial conditions they themselves are creating,
free to screw the world into believing that the free market economy is the inevitable
solution to all the economic problems on the planet. And I haven’t even begun to mention the ecological disasters created
by the ‘free market’ system. The total irresponsibility and unaccountability
that has been festering like gangrene, increasing for decades, but taking a
quick jump forward when it became clear that the tragedy of September 11 made
any form of illegality possible under the benign surveillance of the neocons
and their figurehead George W. Bush. Just whisper the word ‘terrorism’
and any hideous crime becomes possible. No laws have to be applied. The scam and the reality ‘Eradicating poverty’, Tony Blair’s pet theme sounds so respectable,
so fair, so altruistic. Do you really think he cares? Or that any other politicians
really care? Oh, there may be a couple of exceptions, but by and large, politicians
are in the service not of the people who elect them (for lack of a better alternative)
but in the service of the big corporations who feed them generously. There is, however, some hope today, particularly looking at the winds of freedom
and independence that can be clearly felt in Latin America. The creation of
Mercosur,
The Common Market of the South, in existence since January 1995, to which
organization Venezuela was added at the recent summit in Mar del Plata (Nov
4 - 5, 2005), has become a humane and powerful alternative to the U.S. corporation-controlled
FTAA. George W. Bush who arrived at the summit in Mar del Plata with hopes of
winning over Latin America for his own FTAA, left Argentina greatly disappointed.
World Hunger facts
(outside the U.S.) • 852 million people are hungry Developing nations • 815 million people are undernourished • 1.2 billion people live on less than $1/day Industrialized/developed nations • 9 million people are undernourished Transitional nations • 28 million people are undernourished The figures speak for themselves. The hope for a saving solution In the final analysis, our great hope is people’s power. Is it really
possible in the long run to go on starving a huge part of the population of
the world and getting away with it, in the sole interest of a handful of shameless
and already obscenely rich corporations? Also the forward march of South American unity, a powerful example of people’s
power, offers maybe the greatest hope for democracy to be rekindled in the fight
against the U.S./corporate fascist empire. Do remember Bolivia’s Water war in the fall of 2000. See Bolivia's
Water War Victory Also see: South
American Unity May No Longer Be a Distant Dream: The Region’s Left-leaning Governments Strive for Integration
as Washington’s Plan to Isolate Venezuela’s Chávez Fails
(Monday, 11 April, 2005) The propaganda value of free trade agreements is fading, along with the failure
of the scheme to provide any of the goals it promised to fulfill, even though,
not surprisingly, there seems to be total silence on this matter in the U.S.
mainstream press. Only the mega-corporations are thriving. Opposition
Delays Free Trade Implementation By Brendan Coyne (from The New StandardNews) “As CAFTA member-nations struggle to comply with the free trade pact's
requirements, opponents of the deal say the delays show how unpopular and undemocratic
the mandated reforms are. Stubborn opposition to provisions of the Central American Free Trade Agreement
(CAFTA) will keep the pact from going into effect on the first of the year as
planned by the Bush administration. The delay has enlivened efforts to undo
the deal by groups who fear the pact could have a crippling effect on workers,
small farmers and the economies of the nations involved.” "The problems associated with implementing CAFTA demonstrate what we've
been saying all along: this agreement goes beyond trade in requiring dramatic
changes in domestic laws that grant new rights to transnational corporations
at the expense of working people," the Quixote Center’s 1) Tom Ricker
said.“ The con game There is plenty of negative news as well on the future of NAFTA (North American Free Trade Agreement): The high price of 'free' trade (by Robert E. Scott) “Since the North
American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) was signed in 1993, the rise in the
U.S. trade deficit with Canada and Mexico through 2002 has caused the displacement
of production that supported 879,280 U.S. jobs. Most of those lost jobs were
high-wage positions in manufacturing industries. The loss of these jobs is just
the most visible tip of NAFTA's impact on the U.S. economy. In fact, NAFTA has
also contributed to rising income inequality, suppressed real wages for production
workers, weakened workers' collective bargaining powers and ability to organize
unions, and reduced fringe benefits.” (from EPI - Economic Policy Institute) The much vaunted ‘free trade’ agreements are doing what might be
irreparable damage to an indefinite number of mostly third-world countries.
They are opening the way to installing corrupt regimes all over the world, primarily
in Africa, which is fast becoming a failed continent due to free trade policies.
See Christian
Aid The cost of 'free trade' to Africa's poor – $272 billion /20.06.05 “Africa is a massive $272 billion worse off as a result of ‘free’
trade policies forced on the continent as a condition for receiving aid and
debt relief. According to new research from Christian Aid, poor countries in sub-Saharan
Africa have lost billions of dollars worth of business over the past twenty
years after being forced to open their markets to imports. The amount Africa
has lost is equivalent to a sum large enough to wipe out all Africa’s
debt and enable every child in the world to be sent to school and vaccinated. The report, 'The
Economics of Failure: The Real Cost of ‘Free’ Trade’ stands
on its head the traditional pro-market argument that free trade automatically
leads to growth and a way out of poverty.” It is high time for the world to see through the shameless greed and hypocrisy
that are ruining innumerable countries on the planet, primarily developing and
transitional countries, manipulations which are also threatening, to a lesser
degree, the wellbeing of the already industrialized countries. It is time to
wake up and get mass movements going to fight the corruption and stop the steady
walk to the edge of the cliff with the massive collapse we are now headed for.
This is not just an enormous threat for third-world disaster. We are all concerned,
you and I and everyone you know and love. 1) a nondenominational humanitarian organization Siv O’Neall is an Axis of Logic columnist, based
in France. She can be reached at siv@axisoflogic.com |