Karnal wrote on Feb 14
th, 2014 at 11:30am:
aquascoot wrote on Feb 14
th, 2014 at 10:10am:
Karnal wrote on Feb 14
th, 2014 at 9:33am:
Postmodern Trendoid III wrote on Feb 13
th, 2014 at 10:35pm:
Yawn. Equality won't happen. It can't happen. Nor should it happen. Equal in what? Equality in everyone having 3 BMWs? Equality in the size of your lawn? Or equal to live in garbage bins?
No, Mistie,
equality in things like access to basic health care, education, subsistance wages and safe working conditions. I understand lawns and garbage bins are important to you. It's good to be neat and tidy, and these are worthwhile values to have.
But 90% of people on the planet have more pressing concerns, and this number is growing. The number of people with tidy lawns and bins is getting smaller, despite the burgening middle classes in countries like India and China.
Liberal-demokratic ideology holds that equality
will happen the more countries develop. It says that as a middle classe emerges and grows, so will political freedoms, freedom of speech, popular elections, etc, etc, etc.
Equality is a value intrinsic to liberal-demokracy, and this is the dominant political ideology in the world today. The big geopolitical question now is whether China will develop in such a direction.
Yawn.
these things have all been achieved in australia. the dream has been realised and the left should fall to their knees and give thanks and stop whinging
I completely agree, but what Australia has done is outsource its poverty to the developing world. Almost everything we buy is made somewhere else, food and services excluded.
Back in the 1980s, for example, Australia had clothing and footwear industries. Now, these industries have been outsourced to countries like China, Bangladesh and Vietnam.
There, labor costs are as little as a dollar a day. In Bangladesh, workers are locked in. If extra hours are required, security guards prohibit their exit. Shifts have been reported to go up to 48 hours. There is no overtime, no child care, no minimum safety requirements. When fires happen, workers burn. When buildings collapse, workers are crushed. When workers suffer from lung conditions relating to the cotton and polyester fibres they inhale, they are dismissed. There is no safety equiptment, social security, compensation, or pensions.
The clothes they produce are sold in Australian shops and department stores. We wear them. The workers who produce something as personal as the clothes we wear are an intrinsic part of our economy.
I agree, Aquascoot. We've achieved most of the conditions workers have faught for in this country since the 1880s. However, what we've done in the process is cut adrift our manufacturing sector.
This has returned to the triangular trade system of the 19th century - the "golden age" of globalisation. There, cotton was grown and harvested by slaves in the US, textiles were manufactured by cheap labour in India, and clothing was made by tailors for markets in England, Europe and the US. It was a system based on inequality, where workers were effectively owned by their "employers". It could not have happened if everyone had basic human rights.
While we have excellent conditions for workers in Australia,
Bangladeshi workers are literally locked in until their labour is no longer required to meet our needs (cheap clothing). To pretend that this isn't happening, or that the system that perpetuates it doesn't exist, or that it's all about having a bigger lawn or being jealous of neighbours with two BMWs is like living in la la land.
Still, that's creative and critical thinking for you.
Yawn.
Things will improve!!!
I saw an interview in bangladesh and the greenies and do gooders were calling for a ban on "Guess" jeans as these were made in such factories. The workers were pleading that if westerners stop buying these jeans (ie join the leftard protest), they, the workers will starve.
baby steps , karmal, baby steps.
private enterprise WILL drag the people of bangladesh out of poverty.
the market has done this for most of asia and it can happen quite quickly.
south korea, japan, vietnam.....these places were basket cases.
What helps ?
THE MARKET.
CAPITALISM.
you bemoan vlad putin and the oligarchs.
standards of living are rising in russia.
what is dragging the rural chinese out of substistence farming.
Good old fashioned CAPITALISM.
in 20 years time, the bangladeshi will be moving into calls for education, health care, OH andS.
Its maslows hierachy all over.
What good is a school or a hospital if you have no job and cant buy food.
tackle things in their correct order.