A Brief Colonial History Of Ceylon(SriLanka)
Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
A Brief Colonial History Of Ceylon(SriLanka)
Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
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Thiranjala Weerasinghe sj.- One Island Two Nations
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Wednesday, August 29, 2018
Becoming Serfs

The elites divert attention from their pillage by blaming foreign countries such as China or undocumented workers for the economic demise of the working class.
( August 28, 2018, Boston, Sri Lanka Guardian) You
know the statistics. Income inequality in the United States has not
been this pronounced in over a century. The top 10 percent has 50
percent of the country’s income, and the upper 1 percent has 20 percent
of the country’s income. A quarter of American workers struggle on wages
of less than $10 an hour, putting them below the poverty line, while
the income of the average CEO of a major corporation is more than 300 times the pay of his or her average worker, a massive increase given that in the 1950s the
average CEO made 20 times what his or her worker made. This income
inequality is global. The richest 1 percent of the world’s population
controls 40 percent of the world’s wealth. And it is getting worse.
What will the consequences of this inequality be economically and
politically? How much worse will it get with the imposition of austerity
programs and a new tax code that slashes rates for corporations,
allowing companies to hoard money or buy back their own stock rather
than invest in the economy? How will we endure as health care insurance
premiums steadily rise and social and public welfare programs such as
Medicaid, Pell Grants and food stamps are cut? And under the tax code
revision signed by President Trump in December, rates will increase over
the long term for the working class. Over the next decade, the
revision will cost the nation roughly $1.5 trillion. Where will this end?
We live in a new feudalism. We have been stripped of political power.
Workers are trapped in menial jobs, forced into crippling debt and paid
stagnant or declining wages. Chronic poverty and exploitative working
conditions in many parts of the world, and increasingly in the United
States, replicate the hell endured by industrial workers at the end of
the 19th century. The complete capture of ruling institutions by
corporations and their oligarchic elites, including the two dominant
political parties, the courts and the press, means there is no mechanism
left by which we can reform the system or protect ourselves from
mounting abuse. We will revolt or become 21st-century serfs, forced to
live in misery and brutally oppressed by militarized police and the most
sophisticated security and surveillance system in human history while
the ruling oligarchs continue to wallow in unimagined wealth and
opulence.
“The new tax code is explosive excess,” the economist Richard Wolff said
when we spoke in New York. “We’ve had 30 or 40 years where corporations
paid less taxes than they ever did. They made more money than they ever
did. They have been able to keep wages stagnant while the productivity
of labor rose. This is the last moment historically they need another
big gift, let alone at the expense of the very people whose wages have
been stagnant. To give them a tax bust of this sort, basically reducing
from 35 percent to 20 percent, is a 40 percent cut. This kind of crazy
excess reminds you of the [kings] of France before the French Revolution
when the level of excess reached an explosive social dimension. That’s
where we are.”
When capitalism collapsed in the 1930s, the response of the working
class was to form unions, strike and protest. The workers pitted power
against power. They forced the oligarchs to respond with the New Deal,
which created 12 million government-funded jobs, Social Security, the
minimum wage and unemployment compensation. The country’s infrastructure
was modernized and maintained. The Civilian Conservation Corps (CCC)
alone employed 300,000 workers to form and maintain national parks.
“The message of the organized working class was unequivocal,” Wolff
said. “Either you help us through this Depression or there will be a
revolution.”
The New Deal programs were paid for by taxing the rich. Even in the
1950s, during the Eisenhower presidency, the top marginal rate was 91
percent.
The rich, enraged, mounted a war to undo these programs and restore the
social inequality that makes them wealthy at our expense. We have come
full circle. Dissidents, radicals and critics of capitalism are once
again branded as agents of foreign powers and purged from universities
and the airwaves. The labor movement has been dismantled, including
through so-called right-to-work laws that prohibit agreements between
unions and employers. The last remaining regulations to thwart corporate
pillage and pollution are removed. Although government is the only
mechanism we have to protect ourselves from predatory oligarchs and
corporations, the rich tell us that government is the problem, not the
solution. Austerity and a bloated and out-of-control military budget,
along with the privatization of public services and institutions such as
utilities and public education, we are assured, are the way to economic
growth. And presiding over this assault and unchecked kleptocracy are
the con artist in chief and his billionaire friends from the fossil fuel
and war industries and elsewhere on Wall Street.
The elites cook statistics to lie about a recovery from the 2008 global
financial crash. To gather unemployment statistics, for example,
government agents ask people two questions: Are you working? If they
answer “yes” they are counted as employed even if they have a temporary
job in which they work only an hour a week. If they say “no” they are
asked if they have been looking for work. If they have not looked for
work in the last four weeks they are magically erased from the
unemployment rolls. And then there is the long list of those not counted
as unemployed, such as prisoners, the retired, stay-at-home spouses and
high school and college students who want jobs. Alternative facts did
not begin with Donald Trump.
“You don’t have to be a statistical genius to understand that over the
last 10 years, a significant number of people gave up looking because
it’s too disgusting,” Wolff said. “The jobs they were offered were
inferior to what they had before or so insecure that it made their
family life impossible. They went back to school, went into the illegal
economy or began to live off their friends, relatives and neighbors.”
“The quality of the jobs, the security, the benefits and the impact on
physical and mental health have been cascading downward as the wages
remain stagnant,” he went on. “We’re not in a recovery. We’re in an
ongoing decline, which, by the way, is why Mr. Trump got elected. This
is happening to capitalism in Western Europe, Japan and the United
States. This is why an angry working class is looking for ways to
express and change its circumstances.”
“Society has a responsibility to itself,” Wolff said. “If the private
sector can’t or won’t manage that, then the public sector has to step
in. It’s what [Franklin] Roosevelt said when he came on the radio: ‘If
there are millions of Americans who ask for nothing other than a job,
and the private sector can’t provide it, then it’s up to me. Who else is
going to do it?’ If we cut back on welfare we are making people depend
on the private sector. What happens to people thrown on a private
capital sector that cannot and will not function in a socially
acceptable way?”
“Instead of creating a middle class, it polarizes everything,” he said
of the inequality. “It allows the top executives to go completely crazy
with their pay packages. They are paid beyond what’s reasonable, beyond
what their fellow capitalists receive in other parts of the world. There
is a collapse of the ability to buy things. A company that saves all
this money through a tax cut from Mr. Trump is not going to spend its
money hiring people, buying machines, producing more. They’re having
trouble selling what they already produce. They’re impoverishing the
very people they sell to. What do they do with the money? They take it
and pay themselves. They give themselves higher pay packages. They buy
back their own stock, which they’re legally allowed to do. It pushes the
price of the stock up. Their [personal] compensation is connected to
how well the price of the stock does. No jobs are created. No growth is
created. The price of stock is going up even though the viability of the
enterprise—because of the [company’s] collapsing market—is shrinking.”
“Capitalism is hollowing itself out,” he said. “The capitalists refuse
to face this because they are making money, for a while. That’s the same
logic as the monarchs before the French Revolution building the
fantastic Versailles without understanding they were digging their own
graves in those lovely gardens.”
The elites divert attention from their pillage by blaming foreign
countries such as China or undocumented workers for the economic demise
of the working class.
“It’s a classic ploy of crooked politicians stuck with a problem of
their own making, blaming somebody else,” Wolff said. “We take the poor
10 or 11 million immigrants in this country with questionable legal
status and we demonize them. We scapegoat them. They couldn’t possibly
account for the difficulties in this economy. Throwing them out does not
fundamentally change the dynamics of the economy. It’s childishly easy
to show this. But it’s good theater. ‘I am smiting the foreigner.’ ”
“Tariffs are another way to smite the foreigner,” Wolff went on. “The
tariff is a punishment of others. These days, the bugaboo is China. They
are the bad ones. They are doing this. I’d like to remind people two or
three things about these tariffs. One: Historically, they don’t work
very well. It’s very easy to evade. For example, we put a tariff on
steel from China. What do the Chinese do? They cut a deal with the
Canadians or the Mexicans or the Koreans or the Europeans. Sell it to
them, who resell it here. It’s on the same ship coming here. It just has
a different flag at the back. This is childish. It’s well known.”
“Number two: It’s political theater,” he said. “It doesn’t change very
much. For example, a good half of the goods that come from China come
from subsidiaries of American corporations that went to China over the
last 30 years to produce for the American market. You are smiting them
by closing off their market. They’re going to be angry. They’re going to
lose their investments. They’re going to take corrective action. All of
this is negative for the American economy. It’s bizarre.”
“Finally, the Chinese, their politicians being not that different from
ours, will have to posture in return and retaliate,” he said. “They’re
already targeting our farm products. It is chaos. The United States,
when we were a young country, was accused by the British and the
Europeans of stealing their technology and intellectual property. Never
before has it been easier to communicate intellectual property than it
is today. The Chinese have been doing their share of this as an
up-and-coming economy. It’s not new. It’s not frightening. It’s a part
of how capitalism works. To suddenly get people outraged as if something
special is going on, that’s just dishonest.”
There is no discussion in the corporate-controlled media of the effects
of our out-of-control corporate capitalism. Workers struggling under
massive debts, unable to pay for ever-rising health care and other basic
costs, trapped in low-wage jobs that make life one long emergency, are
rendered invisible by a media that entertains us with court gossip from
porn actresses and reality television stars and focuses on celebrity
culture. We ignore reality at our peril.
“We’ve given a free pass to a capitalist system because we’ve been
afraid to debate it,” Wolff said. “When you give a free pass to any
institution, you create the conditions for it to rot right behind the
facade. That’s what is happening.”
Chris
Hedges, spent nearly two decades as a foreign correspondent in Central
America, the Middle East, Africa and the Balkans. He has reported from
more than 50 countries and has worked for The Christian Science Monitor,
National Public Radio, The Dallas Morning News and The New York Times,
for which he was a foreign correspondent for 15 years

