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
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Monday, March 2, 2020
Curious Disruptions in both Super-Powers
Corona-virus and China’s globalism America’s Democrats are in revolt
Two unforeseen spats have come to the boil in the last two months. One
is the corona-virus (CoV), which has spread from its epicentre in Wuhan,
China and threatens to become a pandemic. It has created panic in
China, South Korea, Japan, Iran and Italy and the WHO has declared a
global alert. After making a cockup during the first ten days the
Chinese government responded with ruthless efficiency, the useful side
of authoritarianism you might say, imposed draconian controls, built
hospitals, moved doctors with military precision and now seems to have
got the better of the virus. I expect mass hygiene, medical science and
government measures will best CoV before long.
An interesting spin off is that the authority of the Party and in
particular of President Xe has been challenged in domestic social media.
There are fearless, unusual in China, demands for freedom of expression
and Party elite are in a bit of a funk. I am hopeful of some loosening
up, as a survival tactic and that the post-Mao universal two-term limit
on national leadership will be imposed again. I am cautiously optimistic
that the One-Party-Regime will relax some way towards a
Half-Party-State.
The second matter that has, quietly come to a boil under the bonnet is
more USA-centric. Socialism has been a near swear word in the US from
long ago. For example, my extended family in the US - and believe me,
thanks to their collective fecundity they are indeed numerous - never
made a distinction between the devil incarnate and Karl Marx, or
socialism and purgatory. I have news for you; things seem to be changing
in the next generation of Americans – read on to the end.
CoV disrupts globalism
If CoV drags on into April and May the world economy will be gummed up
because China is the centre, the cog, in the global manufacturing and
components supply chain. A breakdown of the China centred global
supplies will have a far, far more serious knock-on effect on the world
economy than, say a recession in the US. If the global chain is
disrupted recession threatens not only China but everywhere. Japan and
South Korea are near recession already, it may reach America and the
West if the lock-down continues. The global economy stands on five
pillars; manufacturing, communications, energy, transport and finance.
China is the heart of manufacturing and infrastructure construction; it
sits at the hub of the goods and components supply chain and provides
components for computers and communication systems the world over. A
slowdown in China will also reduce demand for oil and coal upsetting the
Middle East and Australia. As trade slows it inflicts pain on shipping
companies. Disruption of goods, components, energy and transport chains
will create more problems for the global economy than a recession in
America. The former may trigger the latter as the slide in global stocks
which commenced in earnest on Monday 24 February augurs. The 10-year US
Treasury Yield has been in decline for a long time which means that
cautious investors are wary about the health of the economy and its
outlook. A global stock-market collapse is in progress right now as we watch.
For example, car manufacturers in Germany and washing machine and
electronic gadget makers in Mexico, Japan and France depend on timely
supply of components along the chain. Disruption destabilises industry
everywhere. The corona-virus epidemic is doing just this. European car
manufacturers depend on components from say a Guangzhou supplier who may
be linked to subcontractors in other parts of the country; these chains
are deep and complex. The whole of Hubei Province and many cities – up
to 500 million people - have been locked-down or partially locked-down.
Two hundred million went home to the countryside for the Lunar New Year;
the government is slowing down their return for fear crowded trains,
busses, factories and housing will speed up spread of the virus. The
situation is still very serious and aggravated by mountains of fake news
and outright lies spread by Hong Kong’s fascistic-Democrats and Western
anti-China propaganda groups.
The old Silk Road connected ancient Chang'an (modern Xi’an) - China’s
Anuradhapura though older - via Central Asia, Persia and Byzantium
(later Constantinople now Istanbul) to Rome bearing silk, porcelain and
beautiful artefacts in exchange for silver. From Asoka’s time it also
retraced its steps taking Buddhism and later Islam to China. The ancient
Silk Road was a highway but it is wrong to think of the "New Silk Road"
as a transport link; transport is less than half the story. BRI (Belt
and Road Initiative) is an ambitious economic launch. Not just ports and
China-Europe railways but infrastructure and industrial projects are
emerging all along the route. For example in Sri Lanka, more important
than Hambantota harbour are Colombo Port City, highways, power-plants
and proposed Industrial zones. BRI dwarfs the Marshal Plan and is aimed
at Asia, North Africa and a few European countries (Greece). The Marshal
Plan committed $150 billion in today’s money to rebuild Europe after
WW2, but BRI plans $6 trillion investment in 160 countries, about half
to be raised by the host countries themselves; China has so far
committed $400 billion. America is opposed to the global projection of
Chinese economic power and engages in worldwide anti-China campaigns,
but it does not have the economic resources to compete against these
initiatives. A Thucydides Trap has been sprung.
Revolt in the US Democratic Party
Had I told you last year that millions of young people would call
themselves democratic-socialists and socialism would cease to be a dirty
word I am certain you would have asked me to go have my head examined.
The Bernie Sanders campaign has taken off like a rocket; it acknowledges
itself as democratic-socialist and has brought tens of thousands of
young people (the Democrats future) and is softening the older
generation as well. I taught in an American university, briefly, four
decades ago and I thought I knew the people well. To have tens of
thousands, maybe millions of Americans declare that democratic-socialism
is fine is like going to another planet. This America is new to me.
Let me convey in ten bullet-points culled from stump speeches and printed material what the highlights of this socialism are:
* Health care for all, that is a national health service like in the European countries
* Stop pharmaceutical companies from ripping-off $100 billion a year in profits
* Ten million affordable housing units for low income families
* Economic, social and racial justice (Socialism in three keywords)
* A commitment to environmental protection
* Equal pay for equal work; that is fairness to working women
* Tuition free university and tertiary education
* Universal child care and assistance with school funding for low income families
* A universal minimum wage of $15 per hour
* Reform a broken and racist criminal justice system (US has world’s largest prison population)
If this is socialism, "Well what’s wrong, it’s fine", is the response of
a youthful and energised Bernie throng. Instead of talking about the
collective ownership of the means of production, or decrying
appropriation of the social surplus by the capitalist class the message
is kept simple and real life. It is translated to match practical and
populist needs and it resonates. The young fear no gulags, knocks on the
door in the dead of night or a one-party state that will dare regiment
their lives.
That bogey is non-existent for this new generation; that is an imagined
serfdom in the fevered brain of Friedrich Hayek (1988-1992) and James M
Buchannan (1919-2013). The latter, of infamous "public choice theory"
was the quintessential guru of economic imperialism. Hayek and Buchanan
were ideologues and seminal influences on Margaret Thatcher and Ronald
Regan. That is the legacy that America’s rising democratic socialists
have rejected. Bernie had the temerity to say on TV that Castro did a
lot of good things too, not only preside over an authoritarian state. He
was not lynched!
The 10-point wish-list seems unduly populist, undoable and
unfinanceable; but that is no longer true. Superabundance has been made
possible by the very success of capitalism’s revolutionary role in the
development of productivity and technology - Marx’s "productive forces".
A 21-st Century post-capitalist America has the capacity to provide
what Bernie and his cohorts dream about. As Marx put it: "(Capitalism)
despite itself, is instrumental in creating social disposable time by
reducing labour and thus freeing everyone their own development. –
Grundrisse (abbreviated). In mundane terms, the rational utilisation of
the productive power of the world’s most advanced and productive economy
makes a democratic socialist programme feasible.
At this point in time I cannot foretell whether Sanders will secure
Democratic Party nomination and if he does whether the enthusiasm of his
youthful democratic socialist wave will override Trump all the way the
victory in November as a liberal wave did in electing Obama. Very
unlikely, and if not, no matter. A genie has been released from the
bottle and America will not be the same again. Trump in his second term
will be a prisoner in the White House. There are advantages in
progressing at a measured pace instead of attempting to turn America
democratic-socialist in one fell sweep, which frankly is undoable.
Whether Bernie wins or loses the nomination and the November election
youthful American democratic-socialist surely appreciate that this is
only the first innings of a long game.
Did the 1917 Russian Revolution run too far ahead and too fast; history
is a cruel taskmistress in punishing premature social revolutions? But
that analogy is false because America, now at the acme of its power is
objectively overripe for socialism. A social-democratic US will
unstoppably shift global attention away from China’s place as global
loadstar of the starry-eyed left. Oh dear, again I am running ahead too
far; but only a little (sic!). The corona-virus will be banished but a
great social-democratic wellspring cannot be diminished.