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Monday, October 17, 2011

Anti-capitalists help anti-knife crime campaign

I FIND the Occupy protests a little surreal. After years highlighting the fact (through this blog) that defeating knife crime - and other violent crime - also requires corporate and societal greed to dissipate, it is almost bemusing to see ordinary people + anti-capitalists coming together to protest along the same lines.

"You are turning the world into a 'den of thieves' "
 - Jesus Christ speaks out

Can such protests help give back aspiration and hope to young people and those dispossessed by the current economic mess? I don't really know - but it feels like a start. Anything that contributes to driving knife crime and violence out of society deserves support.

Here are the demands of the Occupy protesters in London - Guardian article: Occupy London protest issues demands forCity of London clean-up. And in Wall Street, here are the broadly described demands... more and better jobs, more equal income distribution, less profit (or no profit) for banks, lower compensation for bankers, and more strictures on banks on negotiating consumer services such as mortgages and debit cards, cut influence of corporations - financial firms in particular - especially in politics, and they want a more populist set of government priorities: bailouts for student debtors and mortgage holders, not just for banks.

In response, an anonymous poster to this blog sent me a link to an explanatory 'lesson in economics' video rebutting such demands:



PS: I was just thinking that the protesters are perhaps scared of the negative impact of capitalism... I know I am (no home, no money, no clothes, no food etc) - and not a little fed up, of course, with 'those people and businesses at the top of the tree' continuing to line their nests and hoovering money out of everyone below them like a huge cocaine snorting pipe (come to think of it, their addiction to money is pretty much like drug abuse). That said, it seems many of us ordinary people also exhibit signs of this addiction... at least at times.

So the protest at St Paul's Cathedral, London, is not, perhaps, about "occupying" the City... it's about seeking sanctuary from the awful consequences of failed capitalism - and also making a stand against the misery it has been creating. Fear and anger are great motivators to protest - and the Christian Church, as God and Christ's representative on earth - has a duty to help those who are afraid, are the powerless, are the dispossessed, are the poor...

Having said that, we can be reminded of 'capitalist' insight given once by Winston Churchill... "There never will be enough of everything while the world goes on. The more that is given, the more there will be needed. That is why life is so interesting." That said, there is much abundance in life - and it's not all about money and possessions. Think we just need to work out how everyone can enjoy 'abundance'.

4 comments:

  1. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=F6Z5Yb7Pjqk

    Relevant video.

    ReplyDelete
  2. Why are the St Paul's Cathedral reverend gentlemen resigning at present and no-one in the London Stock Exchange, politics, business or finance? Surely it should be the bankers, financiers, corporate money-lovers etc? hmm... perhaps they don't realise what they've done... yet.

    ReplyDelete
  3. That's Stefan Molyneux, he anti gun control and believes in laissez faire capitalism.

    I suggest you look for allies elsewhere.

    ReplyDelete
  4. Thanks for the heads up; I've searched across the web a little and can see he's 'controversial'.

    Some of what he says might be considered relevant but I did think some of it wasn't as cogent as it deserves, I guess. That said, the video is a riposte to the anti-capitalist protests / Occupy work so I didn't post the video in support of the aims of this blog - it's counter arguments, part of the ongoing debate.

    Let me know if anyone finds a more relevant videos and I can post those.

    ReplyDelete

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