This long but important post highlights the systemic impoverishment and
slaughter inherent in neo-liberal ideology, and in its forebears. In
1883, Henry George wrote:

"That a people can be enslaved just as efficiently by making property
of their lands as by making property of their bodies, is a truth that
conquerors in all ages have recognized, and that, as society developed,
the strong and unscrupulous who desired to live off the labor of
others, have been prompt to see. The coarser form of slavery, in which
each particular slave is the property of a particular owner, is fitted
only for a rude state of society, and with social development entails
more and more care, trouble and expense for the owner. But by making
property of the land instead of the person, much care, supervision and
expense are saved by the proprietors; and though no particular slave is
owned by a particular master, yet the one class still appropriates the
labor of the other class as before.

"That each particular slave should be owned by a particular master
would in fact become, as social developmeent went on, and industrial
organization became more complex, a manifest disadvantage to the
masters. They would be at the trouble of whipping, or otherwise
compelling the slaves to work; at the cost of watching them, and of
keeping them when ill or unproductive; at the trouble of finding work
for them to do, or of hiring them out, as at different seasons or at
different times, the number of slaves which different owners or
different contractors could advantageously employ would vary...

"In all our cities there are, even in good times, thousands and
thousands of men who would gladly go to work for wages that would give
them merely board and clothes-- that is to say, who would gladly accept
the wages of slaves...

"The cruelties which are perpetrated under the system of chattel
slaverry are more striking and arouse more indignation because they are
conscious acts of individuals. But for the suffering of the poor under
the more refined system no one in particular seems responsible. That
one human being should be deliberately burned by other human beings
excites our imagination and arouses our indignation much more than the
great fire or railroad accident in which a hundred people are roasted
alive. But this very fact permits cruelties that would not be tolerated
under the one system to pass almost unnoticed under the other. Human
beings are overworked, are starved, are robbed of all  the light and
sweetness of life, are condemned to ignorance and brutishness, and to
the infection of physical and moral disease; are driven to crime and
suicide, not by other indivisuals, but by iron necessities for which it
seems that no one in particular is responsible." (Social Problems,
pp.150-159)


In the following article, Professor Herman begins the task of
identifying those who are responsible. The roster of course is endless,
as it is with war criminals (Military Division). Whether or not you
agree with his selection, Professor Herman has given us an important
analytical tool by establishing the concept of war criminals (Economic
Division).

Caspar Davis


***** FORWARDED MESSAGE *****

 (Thanks to Michael P and Janet Eaton)

Edward S. Herman, author, long-time Professor of Finance in the Wharton
School, coauthor - of Manufacturing Consent w. Noam Chomsky, - of The
Global Media w. Robert McChesney. Regular contributor to Dollars &
Sense, Extra!, also regular columnist for Z magazine.
=======================
WAR CRIMINALS (ECONOMICS DIVISION): THE DIRTY TWENTY

by Edward S. Herman

Identifying any kind of war criminal is tricky. It is common to latch
on to the hit men, or the ones issuing the immediate orders, while
ignoring the planners and decision-makers, the funders, and those
providing intellectual and moral support. And of course war criminals
(military division [MD]) are always found only on the losing side, when
frequently there are outstanding candidates among the winners.
Identifying war criminals is hard to do without an arbitrariness that
renders the whole effort dubious.

As for economics-based criminality, the very idea is anathema to the
western establishment, because it points up an area in which its
principals are vulnerable. Just as the West (and especially the United
States) fought against incorporating economic (and social) rights as
fundamental rights in post World War II formulations of the
International Declaration of Human Rights, so today it avoids the
phrase "class war" as well as the possibility of criminality associated
with economic policy and private economic actions. The western
establishment devotedly supports capitalism, which means "economic
freedom," which means the freedom to starve as well as accumulate
wealth.

It also means the right of establishment politicians to carry out
economic policies that immiserate and kill large numbers of people, and
the right of the corporate elite to fire, exploit, and otherwise
mistreat employees within the (flexible) limits of the law. These
rights are fundamental to the system, and spokespersons for
contemporary capitalism view any immiseration produced by its normal
operations as inescapable facts of nature, like cosmic rays. As we are
in a New World Order of resurgent corporate power, more aggressive
class warfare, an ongoing global redistribution of income upward,
return to "Dickensian" work conditions, and environmental devastation,
the notion of economic criminality is especially dangerous.
Immiseration must be normalized, and it is the function of the
intellectuals at the Cato, American Enterprise, Manhattan and other
institutes, and economists at the University of Chicago and elsewhere,
to extend the intellectual and moral boundaries of potential
immiseration.

The press has the responsibility of keeping such uncomfortable notions
as economics-based criminality out of sight. Each year Oxfam puts out
powerful documents on global poverty and the devastating effects of
World Bank and International Monetary Fund (IMF) policies on the
world's non-elite billions (a superb illustration is its 1995 The Oxfam
Poverty Report), but these are never reviewed or even reported in the
New York Times. Similar suppression or marginalization is applied to
the publications and conferences of Food First, the Development Group
for Alternative Policies, the Global Exchange, PROBE International, and
other dissident groups, and to campaigns like last year's "Fifty Years
Are Enough" (celebrating the 50th anniversary of the World Bank).

The media also treat in a very low key the massive looting by western
clients like Mobutu, Suharto and the Salinas boys and their allies, the
union busting operations of Caterpillar, and the damage inflicted on
the underlying populations by neoliberalization in countries like
Mexico and Chile. I have always thought it enlightening that the great
thief, Philippines dictator Ferdinand Marcos, was treated very gently
by the U.S. media until 1986, when he became so weak internally that he
could no longer serve U.S. interests and was written off by U.S.
policy-makers, at which point his looting suddenly became newsworthy!

In addressing economic criminality we run into some of the same kinds
of problems that establishment analysts encounter in identifying
military war crimes. Who is "responsible" in a complex system of
division of labor? Do we look behind the middle and top managers to the
large shareholders and bankers who may call the shots? Do we stop with
the political leaders who make and execute laws or do we reach back to
the election funders, advisers, planners and intellectuals urging on
the criminal projects? Pinning the label of criminality on individuals
ignores the systemic element in such crimes--the fact that they are not
only the result of how the system works, but that large numbers share
responsibility. It is true that some can be identified with special
discretionary powers and exceptional involvement in war and economic
war crimes, but we still face difficult problems. Information on
criminal economic behavior, which extends over the entire globe, is
limited and the actual locus of economic and political decisions if
often difficult to establish. In short, our selection is going to have
a strong element of arbitrariness.

Why bother then? As noted earlier, one reason is to highlight the
arbitrariness of the establishment's confinement of war crimes to those
that fit its biases and to focus on the immorality and viciousness of
important forms of criminal economic activity. A second is to name
names, and to call the scoundrels in question by their deserved name of
war criminal--economics division. They are all quite respectable folk,
much honored. A man like Michel Camdessus, a prime war criminal-ED who
heads the International Monetary Fund, considers himself a "socialist"
and do-gooder.

Economic crimes deserving attention fall into two categories: first,
are those that harm large numbers by enforcing an economic policy that
serves the global elite, as with Camdessus' "structural adjustment"
programs for poor countries. A second form of crime is large scale
theft, as in the case of Mobutu, the Western imposed looter in Zaire,
and Suharto in Indonesia. The robbers also help immiserate, but they do
it not so much through policy actions as by directly reducing the GDP
available to the populace by their own robbery and that carried out by
foreign businesses who have made entry payoffs. A number of war
criminals-ED are also war criminals-MD. Mobutu and Suharto, in addition
to looting, have also participated in large scale repression and murder.

The Dirty Twenty

I am going to break my list of war criminals-ED into four categories:
Government Leaders, Middle Managers, Businessmen, and
Economists-Intellectuals-Advisers. I will include only criminals
currently active, so that Margaret Thatcher, Carlos Salinas, Ronald
Reagan and George Bush are excluded, although they would show up in a
historical accounting. I am also going to list only twenty in total,
with a very brief explanatory comment, although the potential list
would be of large size. I invite readers to send in their own additions
or emendations to my list. Perhaps Z Magazine should have an annual
listing of war criminals-ED, given the unwarranted neglect of this
subject by the mainstream media.

Government leaders:

1. Bill Clinton: for his contribution to welfare "reform," for his
economic policy of slow growth, tight monetary and fiscal policy, and
trickle-down economics, which has caused insecurity to rise and the
income distribution to become more unequal in his tenure. Also for his
support of Yeltsin and Russian "reform," his Iraq policy of holding 18
million people hostage and subject to an economic boycott, and his
general fronting for global neoliberalism and the corporate order.

2. Boris Yeltsin: for his key role in beggaring millions of Russians,
in service to a looting economic mafia and the West.

3. General Suharto: one of the great thieves (and mass murderers) of
the twentieth century, who created a "favorable climate of investment"
in Indonesia, and is consequently treated in the West as a "moderate"
and "modernizer."

4. Mike Harris: the current Progressive [sic] Conservative Premier of
Ontario, who relishes putting workers out of work and poor people out
on the streets; a caricature of a rightwing ideologue, with executive
power.

5. Sese Seko Mobutu: possibly the greatest thief of the twentieth
century in ratio of loot to GDP, with estimated wealth in excess of $5
billion; put in place by U.S. intervention, supported by the IMF and
World Bank, and very solicitous of creditor claims, if not the basic
needs of his people.

6. Ernesto Zedillo: successor to Salinas as head of the PRI, in charge
of managing the huge contraction of the Mexican economy at the expense
of the underlying population, to keep payments flowing to Mexico's
creditors. Also responsible for the ongoing repression of peasant and
indigenous uprisings.

Middle Managers:

7. Michel Camdessus: long time head of the IMF, whose structural
adjustment programs have imposed enormous burdens on the world's poor,
while servicing the demands of the global transnational corporations
and banks. Camdessus is very possibly directly responsible for more
human deaths than any person since World War II--the neoliberal
equivalent of Adolph Eichmann.

8. Allan Greenspan: Reaganite head of the Fed has not only managed a
monetary policy focusing on inflation control, slow growth and a
sizable reserve army of unemployed, he contributed to the S & L debacle
with an adulatory letter of recommendation for S & L crook Charles
Keating, now in jail for fraud.

9. James Wolfensohn: a recently appointed head of the World Bank, who
continues to carry out its policies of environmentally destructive
loans for dams, support for leaders like Zedillo, Suharto and Yeltsin,
and structural adjustment programs for countries like Haiti-- his job
is criminal by structural necessity.

Business leaders:

10. Jim Bob Moffett: chairman of Freeport-McMoRan, a transnational
mining company, now famous for its environmental destruction and
criminal abuses of the native population in West Papua, New Guinea
(under the rule of Indonesia, the company assisted by the Indonesian
army); also one of the leading polluters in North America.

11. M. A. Van den Bergh, Managing Director of Royal-Dutch-Shell: for
his and Shell's role as long-time collaborator with the Nigerian
dictatorship; has abused the Ogoni people's lands for decades, keeping
them under control with the help of the Nigerian military.

12. Donald Fites: the CEO of Caterpillar has set a standard in union
busting, with his triumph over the UAW in a four year strike.

13. Al Dunlap: champion of down-sizing, Dunlap did a major job on Scott
Paper employees, and has now been brought in to kill jobs on behalf of
the stockholders at Sunbeam Corporation.

14. Charles Hurwitz: corporate raider, who cost the taxpayer $1.6
billion in S & L losses, is most famous as boss of Pacific Lumber,
owner of the Headwaters Grove, the last major private ancient redwood
forest in California. Pacific Lumber has been notable for ruthless
clear cutting of the California redwoods.

15. William Simon: pioneer in the leveraged buyout method of ripoff,
which led the way to the Reagan era buyout-merger frenzy; also a top
organizer and subsidizer of neoliberal and rightwing propaganda as head
of the Olin Foundation.

Economists and intellectuals:

16. Jeffrey Sachs: Harvard's and the neoliberal world's leading shock
therapist, responsible for human devastation in Bolivia, Poland and
Russia. Any failings in these shock treatments were a result of
inadequate speed and comprehensiveness, not Sachs' misunderstanding of
institutions, cultures, and economics itself.

17. Arnold Harberger: Chicago School guru who was the leader of the
Chicago boys in Chile, and is proud to have brought free markets to
that country (over many thousands of murdered bodies).

18. Robert Bartley: editor of the Wall Street Journal, passionate
supporter of supply side economics and all the death squads necessary
to bring it to fruition here and abroad.

19. Charles Murray: author of the anti-welfare classic Losing Ground
and the racist classic The Bell Curve, Murray has been in the
intellectual forefront of the attack on the poor, weak and black.

20. Thomas Sowell: Hoover Institution economist, one of three black
social scientists (the others: Walter Williams and Shelby Steele) who
have given the Charles Murray slant to affirmative action and welfare
state policies in general. Sowell won a close competition among the
three.

This selection can be contested; the potential candidates run into the
thousands. The Dirty Twenty are all "good" (i.e., despicable)
candidates, but in a sense they are symbolic representatives of a large
criminal class.
==============

"The industrial system is handicapped by dissension, misdirection, and
unemployment of material resources, equipment, and man power, at every
turn where the statesmen or the captains of finance can touch its
mechanisms." Thorstein Veblen (1921)

http://clear.lakes.com/~eltechno
***** END of FORWARDED MESSAGE *****



Reply via email to