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Via Workers World News Service
Reprinted from the June 19, 2003
issue of Workers World newspaper
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BY MUMIA ABU-JAMAL FROM DEATH ROW: WHEN RICH FOLKS MEET (G-8)

For 29 years now, the group known as the Group of 8 (G-8) has met in various countries.
They are a self-selected group that describes itself as industrialized
democracies, and they meet together to try to manage the world's economic affairs.


Composed of Canada, France, Germany, Italy, the United Kingdom, the
United States, Japan (the original G-7), and later Russia, the group
sets the tone of global capital for decades to come.

The G-8 is set to meet soon in Evian, France.They are meeting in a time
of economic downturns, and the aura of a depression.Once again,
consumption is simply not matching production, and global business is
facing a challenge that it doesn't seem willing to solve.

Can they solve the problems looming on the world's economic horizon?
Perhaps. Will they? That certainly remains to be seen.

In July 2000, the G-8 met in Okinawa.The group pledged to cut the
percentage of people in poverty in the world by 50 percent of the 1990
poverty figure.They also pledged to reduce the percentage of AIDS cases
in the world 25 percent by the year 2010.

The world's richest nations can certainly pledge whatever they wish, but
does it appear they're living up to those pledges?

There is certainly still time, but the trend doesn't seem to be moving
in those directions.

These sweet promises to "share the [money]" with the suffering in the
world seems to have stemmed from the mass demonstrations against the WTO
(World Trade Organization) in Seattle the year before, rather than any
altruism on the part of the rich nations.Seattle revealed the depths of
unrest in the American psyche at the galloping growth of globalism; as
well as anxiety at the dearth of good-paying jobs in the "New Globalist
Order."

The rich nations, which are but instrumentalities for the wealthy
classes, are interested in one thing: more wealth.To them, the poor, the
poverty-stricken, the ailing, are as dismissible as the homeless that we
divert our gazes from in the subways.They are the modern incarnation of
the classical invention of Black writer Ralph Ellison's Invisible Man.
In this culture, to be poor is to be invisible.Until they fight.Until
they unite!Seattle should've been a deep-rooted beginning, not a high-
water mark!It should have been a rallying cry, instead of a lost
opportunity.

In this age of capitalist triumphalism, when scholars dare to proclaim
"the end of history" (as did one conservative thinker) it remains for
the people of the "industrialized democracies" to add their names to the
annals of history, by creating a tradition of resistance to the status
quo.History does not end, as long as people are determined to write
their own page.

Capitalist economies can produce prodigious quantities of products. But
it cannot buy all that it produces.That is left to people.

If people cannot afford to buy the commodities that are flooding
warehouses, then the economy simply cannot function.That means that
people must be provided with the means, the economic wherewithal, to
purchase the goods that are produced.

The world sorely needs some balance and perspective in this ongoing war
against the poor.Greed and unabashed accumulation cannot rule the day.

The G-8 meets in the place where the very symbol of the well-to-do is
reflected in the name (Evian).How many billions of people in this world
can't afford a bottle of Evian water with a week's wages (if they could
get wages)?

What is needed is globalized resistance that is humanistic, and life-
centered.To counter the predations of the G-8, and the WTO, there must
be a G-8,000,000,000 (a "Group of 8 Billion"!) where the interests of
the vast population of the world--every nation, every continent, every
tribe--is respected and truly represented.When all of humankind is seen
as precious as every other nation.

Wouldn't that be a "New World Order"?

- END -

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