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  • Pirates

    January 26, 2010 @ 2:46 pm | by Bryan

    Rihanna has released a version of Bob Marley’s Redemption Song in order to raise funds for people in Haiti. As the pop star told Oprah, “This song, for me, any time there was a difficult situation, I always listened to this song. It’s so liberating. Even now, I listen to it when my back is up against the wall. I feel the people of Haiti need to hear something inspiring.” Hmmm….

    Redemption Song is my favorite Bob Marley track. Rita Marley said that her late husband was already in a lot of pain when he wrote it. I don’t know if that pain is what separates the song from others. Or if it’s the simplicity of a man singing with nothing but a guitar to aid him. Or maybe it’s the knowledge that there’s something subversive in the lyrics, even if you don’t know what that something is.

    Years ago, in a dingy room in one of the halls of residence at the University of Zimbabwe, a friend tried to explain to me exactly why those lyrics are subversives. Imagine genuinely believing that someone had literally saved your soul from eternal damnation; pulled you out of ‘the bottomless pit’, so to speak. Imagine then that the same person, minutes later, put you in chains and sold you into a cruel, brutal captivity.

    Old pirates, yes, they rob I;
    Sold I to the merchant ships,
    Minutes after they took I
    From the bottomless pit.

    What does that have to do with Haiti’s earthquake? Simply put, I think you, me, Rihanna and anyone else who can afford to get onto the internet and read this, we’re today’s pirates.

    I once lived in a cockroach infested house. They were invisible most of the time and would only come out after we had all gone to bed. But if you got up in the middle of the night and switched on a light, especially in the kitchen, you would see them scurrying towards the closest hiding place. The response to Haiti’s earthquake reminded me of that house; I felt as though I were seeing the same process, only in reverse. Disaster struck, and where many saw international solidarity and good will, I saw a swarm scurrying onto a vulnerable population for all sorts of reasons – some, genuinely there to help; more for chess-like geopolitical positional advantage; and even more for marketing reasons, in order to gain greater brand exposure and recognition for one’s country, company or organisation. And I suppose it was inevitable: a disaster like that, it was bound to have a huge television audience.

    And let’s be honest, under normal circumstances, who cares about Haiti? Who really cares about it’s history? So what if the French and Americans have plundered and sucked it dry? And if it’s political instability is in good part the result of the meddling of Western countries (including the seemingly benign, like Canada) and institutions like the United Nations?

    What if said meddling leads to your financial gain and mine? Thomas Pogge, in several books and academic papers, argues that if we are involved in, or benefit from institutions that exploit or in other ways harm people, even if those people are on the other side of the world, we are guilty of harming those people and have a duty towards them. Pogge, in my opinion, convincingly makes his point, and he clearly demonstrates the fact that we the global aristocrats – we who don’t worry about whether or not we’ll eat anything tomorrow – do in fact benefit from institutions that harm people in places like Haiti.

    But if we took the likes of Pogge seriously, we couldn’t continue to live as we do. So when Senator David Norris suggested on radio yesterday that people in Ireland may be partially responsible for the situation in Haiti, he was unsurprisingly put in his place by his audience. Not only was he told that the Irish are incredibly generous (the Department of Foreign Affairs have been very busy lately because there has been a lot to say about the Irish government’s response to the earthquake), but what happened in Haiti was a natural disaster. It wasn’t, of course. There may have been an earthquake, but the exaggerated loss of life resulted from the structural failures that led to poor infrastructure and administration in that country. Those structural failures, if you believe Pogge, come back to you and I.

    So what are we to do? We’ll express remorse. We might even learn where the country is on the map. Some will give. Some will give a lot, maybe even of their time. They’ll try to raise funds for the disaster relief, and they may even go to Haiti or other miserable places to help comfort the suffering. But for most of us, something else will capture our attention in the coming months. The World Cup maybe. Or we’ll find out that some other celebrity had an affair. Or a row will erupt over whether bankers should be burdened with an additional tax on their second imported luxury car. Whatever it is, we’ll forget about Haiti until its next disaster.

    Institutionally, the likes of John O’Shea and The Economist will do their best to turn Haiti into a modern day colony, only with benevolent colonial masters. Bill Clinton will probably get another term in office, even if it is a smaller one. Naomi Klein will despair as she watches the process she described in her book unfold. Things will probably go wrong. Poor Haitians are likely to go on being the wretched of the earth (or at the very least, the wretched of the Western Hemisphere). And you and I will be the better for it, even if we oblivious to the workings of the world.

    I wonder if that is what Rihanna had in mind when she decided to fundraise for Haiti with Bob Marley’s song? Probably not. But I’m sure Marley would have seen the irony in the fact that I gain financially from this piece. I too am a pirate.

  • Copenhagen and Dublin

    December 8, 2009 @ 3:29 pm | by Bryan

    Members of an environmentalist group pretend to be dead during a protest demanding a real climate deal on the first day of the UN Climate Change Conference in Copenhagen. Photograph: Miguel Villagran/Getty Images

    Members of an environmentalist group pretend to be dead during a protest demanding a real climate deal on the first day of the UN Climate Change Conference in Copenhagen. Photograph: Miguel Villagran/Getty Images.

    What do Copenhagen and Dublin have in common? Probably quite a few things. At the moment, the biggest might be that they are both sites of struggle over distribution. In Dublin’s case, what is being distributed are the costs of Ireland’s economic recovery. In the case of Copenhagen, it is the distribution of the benefits of industrialisation and the burden of the planet’s upkeep.

    I don’t often agree with The Economist’s take on things, but their analysis of the situation in Copenhagen is, in my opinion, spot on. In an article titled Stopping climate change, the newspaper writes:

    …The problem is not a lack of low-carbon technologies. Electricity can be generated by nuclear fission, hydropower, biomass, wind and solar energy; and cars and lorries can run on electricity or biofuels. Nor is the problem an economic one. A percentage point of global economic output is affordable for a worthwhile project. Saving the banks has cost around 5% of global output.

    So the problem is both simpler and cheaper to fix than most people think. But mankind has to agree on how to share out the costs, both between and within countries

    It is only fair to point out that the science of climate change – especially the idea that human activity is responsible – is a contested field. Let’s therefore assume that there is only a strong possibility that our industrial activity currently poses a grave challenge to the future of the planet. Let’s also assume that The Economist is wrong and that correcting for climate change will cost something like 20% of global GDP. Doesn’t the same rationale that leads me to buy insurance still force us to take the potential threat of the ecological disaster seriously enough to fork out that 20%?

    If it does, who should pay? What does ‘global justice’ require? If the current consensus is right, if climate change is man made and disproportionately affects the poorest nations, then as things stand, wealth is unjustly being transferred from the poor to the rich. As things stand, the poor are paying for my lattes, high-speed broadband, and for my relatively cheap fuel by way of the destruction of their natural environment and the problems that creates – food insecurity, political instability, and others.

    And supposing the politicians in Denmark come to the same conclusion, what then? Is it the biggest polluters, or the people who consume their products who have a moral responsibility to pay for the damage they’ve done? Is it possible to separate self-interest and greed from such ethical considerations? Do the delegates have a responsibility to anyone other than the citizens they represent? Should this be an opportunity for the transfer of wealth back to the poor nations?

    If what has come out of Dublin thus far is anything to go by, the outcome will lead to a distribution of wealth along the lines of the current distribution of power. In other words, I don’t think Copenhagen will bring about very much substantial change. Poor people don’t tend to have very much power and the environment is easy to ignore – especially when you don’t live in a drought-prone area.

  • Serfs and aristocrats

    November 10, 2009 @ 1:38 pm | by Bryan

    At the launch of From The Republic of Conscience in the National Library last night were Colm O'Gorman, executive director of Amnesty International's Irish section, former president Mary Robinson, and poet Seamus Heaney. Photograph: Aidan Crawley

    At the launch of From The Republic of Conscience in the National Library last night were Colm O’Gorman, executive director of Amnesty International’s Irish section, former president Mary Robinson, and poet Seamus Heaney.
    Photograph: Aidan Crawley.

    Former President Mary Robinson is reported to have said that

    …the question of overseas aid was “no longer a them and us” question. “If you add it to climate there’s an interconnection . . . We’re going to be all in this together because we need to reduce the emissions across the world. It’s a really interconnected future until 2050. The future of the poorest is also our children’s and our grandchildren’s future.”

    I wonder how many people believe that. I know I’m not completely sold.

    Is there an interconnection? Absolutely. People in places like Ireland and the United States aren’t just concerned about the emissions from China’s factories out of concern for Chinese workers. The effects of climate change aren’t limited to the source of the human activity responsible for the causal environmental damage. That said, isn’t it curious that while most of us would rather the Chinese didn’t do anything that jeopardises our future, we’re still very happy with the fact that we have access to cheap manufactured goods? The world may be interconnected in some ways, but I suspect that the future of the poorest will be as removed from that of the wealthy as is currently the case.

    There’s a fascinating dichotomy in the realm of global interconnectedness. On one hand, there are the areas in which everyone seems happy to be related. Climate change is a perfect example. The human rights arena an even better one. Climate change is a no-brainer because simple self-interest dictates that I should care about something that could have disastrous consequences for me, regardless of who is doing it. Human rights are more complicated. Provided that countries like Ireland don’t have to accommodate plane loads of refugees, and that export markets aren’t significantly affected, it’s hard to see how self-interest could possible be the driving force behind a concern for the rights of women in Benin.

    Then there is the other side of the coin. If there really is this interconnectedness, what are my responsibilities? If climate change really is a shared challenge; if it is primarily the product of human industrial and commercial activity; if the benefits of that activity predominantly accrue to one group of people and the burdens to another – surely some sort of redistribution and overall commitment to getting by on less is required? But take note, no OECD country has decided to redistribute wealth to the ‘bottom billion’ by implementing a drastic national tax (ideally a tax that would also drastically reduce consumption so that those in poor countries could increase theirs without threatening the environment). Similarly, with human rights, if we value them that much, if we think that poor women in Benin are due the inalienable rights enjoyed by those in liberal Western democracies, then why is it virtually impossible for those same women to get access into an OECD country? And it’s not the illiberal state of Benin that denies them this access, but the liberal, human rights-championing OECD democracies.

    The future of the poorest is also our children’s and our grandchildren’s future.

    No it’s not. Not so long ago I heard a political scientist refer to the ordinary citizens of rich nations as the aristocrats of the world. He was right. The world is still very much a ‘them’ and ‘us’ place. The definitions determining who constitutes ‘them’ and ‘us’ may be more fluid today than in past, but the future of the serf is still likely to be serfdom. That of the aristocrat, provided the established order of things doesn’t change, will likely be aristocracy.

  • Money makes the world go round?

    October 6, 2009 @ 5:07 pm | by Bryan

    Yes campaigners celebrate outside the main count centre in Dublin Castle on Saturday after the convincing Yes vote in the Lisbon Treaty referendum. Photograph: Cathal McNaughton/Reuters

    Yes campaigners celebrate outside the main count centre in Dublin Castle on Saturday after the convincing Yes vote in the Lisbon Treaty referendum. Photograph: Cathal McNaughton/Reuters.

    Let’s face it, there was only ever going to be one result to Lisbon II. It has been said that it is evaluated experience, rather than simply experience itself, which is the best teacher. So let’s evaluate the referendum’s outcome. Why was there such an overwhelming ‘Yes’ vote? In my opinion, it all boils down to money.

    What did the ‘No’ camp have to offer? Legitimate concerns about sovereignty, the spirit of democracy, and justified anger. Anger at not only being asked to pass a reworked version of a document that was well and truly rejected not too long ago, but also being asked to rethink what officialdom considered the lapse in judgement that resulted in Lisbon I’s defeat. These legitimate concerns were unfortunately shrouded by various elements on the ‘No’ side, in nonsensical non-issues.

    The ‘Yes’ camp also put forward their fair share of nonsense. But at the heart of their appeal was economic survival. In short, their message was, “Mess this up and you will literally pay for your mistake.” I have no idea if that proposition was correct. But that’s irrelevant since at the end of the day, a large majority, staring economic uncertainty in the face, chose not to risk irritating those nice Europeans who have over the years invested significantly in Ireland.

    When this issue is stripped bare of niceties, isn’t this the lesson: money really does make the world go round? Couldn’t we also say that in the hierarchy of societal ideals, financial security trumps the finer questions around constitutionality and even democracy? Were that not the case, there surely wouldn’t have been such an all encompassing effort to circumvent the safety mechanism worked into the Nice Treaty that called for unanimity? Lisbon I’s Irish defeat would have sounded the treaty’s death knell.

    Why then, does the Western political establishment make such a big deal about Hugo Chávez calling for a vote to remove term limits, or Kagame establishing himself as a de facto military dictator? In both cases, the vast majority of the local population has decided that the prospect of economic stability trumps constitutional concerns. Just like the majority of the population here, they would rather be prosperous than rigidly stick to the tenets of some piece of paper.

    Both here and elsewhere, money really does seem to make the world go round.

  • Hooray for the G20?

    September 25, 2009 @ 1:50 pm | by Bryan
    YouTube Preview Image

    “The fact that 20 or so individuals right now are determining economic trade policies for four to five billion people just isn’t right,” Mr. Griffith said. “That’s why we’re here.”

    Most news organisations are making a big deal over the fact that the G8 is being replaced by the G20. The fact that a handful of the most powerful ‘developing nations’ are being added to the elite club that gets to set the economic rules for the rest is supposed to represent the dawn of a new inclusive era or something. It does no such thing.

    Let’s take a look at some of these ‘developing nations’. China. India. South Africa. Turkey. Brazil. These aren’t exactly the nations that I would pick were I trying to get a good understanding of the concerns of the typical state in the South. China is China. India, while being home to some of the world’s poorest people, is also incredibly wealthy. So much so, the Indians not only sent a rocket to the moon, they were also the ones who recently discovered water there. They’re not exactly Malawi or Haiti – nations trying to come up with a formula for growing enough food to meet domestic needs. As for Brazil, the OECD has been trying to woo them for a while. The OECD, you may have noticed, have not expressed much interest in Cuba or Paraguayi. The G20 is so inclusive that neither Nigeria nor Egypt, Africa’s second and third wealthiest nations, were deemed worthy. And yet, just about all of Europe is represented there by the EU. But just to make sure, France, Germany, Italy and Britain get their own special seats. The same is true of North America – the US, Canada and Mexico are all members.

    So just to re-cap, the G20 is made up of Europe, North America, and everyone else with too much economic clout to ignore. And what happens when only the powerful get to make the rules? Let’s look at the response to the recent financial crisis, shall we? As was recently demonstrated on the excellent three part BBC television series, The Love of Money, the politically powerful got together with the economically powerful to craft a solution to the crisis. Unsurprisingly, it was decided that to avoid catastrophe, the economically powerful could not be allowed to fail. Equally unsurprisingly, the chosen mechanism of their rescue was a transfer of wealth from the rest, to those deemed to large to fail. Could it be that the proposal to transfer wealth to struggling mortgage holders instead of, or in tandem with the banks bailout, would have got more of a hearing were struggling mortgage holders part of the deliberations? Hoping that China, Brazil or even South Africa will represent Malawi’s economic interests is like expecting AIB or Bank of Ireland to ask the Finance Minister to consider my local credit union’s needs, and give some of the taxpayer money allocated to the banks to St. Anthony’s Credit Union instead. I’m not saying it couldn’t happen, but I wouldn’t hold my breath.

    Like Trevor Griffith, I have serious problems with a small group from the most powerful nations making potentially life and death decisions for the rest of the planet. If however, that’s the direction the world is going to take, then at least let’s be completely honest about it and get rid of the charade that is the United Nations General Assembly. Maybe let’s get rid of the UN altogether? It can’t be that important if the real decision makers use it as a pit stop en-route to G20 meetings.

  • A giant leap for mankind?

    July 21, 2009 @ 3:33 pm | by Bryan
    YouTube Preview Image

    “Let others go to the moon,” said Tanzania’s President Julius Nyerere, “We must work to feed ourselves.”

    I share Nyerere’s ambivalence towards space travel. There are so many problems here on earth, that I’m not sure if things like the race to land on the moon, or to land on Mars, are a wise use of limited resources.

    Granted, useful technologies are invented in the process of getting to the next NASA frontier, but I don’t think the world’s greatest challenges are technological. Global inequality has worsened since 1969 while technology has advanced drastically. Let’s face it, technology is great for those who possess it, but since most of it doesn’t come cheap, the technological advances that were birthed from the space program probably haven’t translated into anything of practical value for the majority of the planet. Don’t get me wrong, I love being able to get my emails delivered to my mobile phone. I’m just not sure that convenience of that sort counts as helping to make the world a better place.

    I remember, years ago, asking a fellow Zimbabwean if he was planning on doing anything special for the Independence Day holiday. His response that while the country was free from British rule, he didn’t feel independent of the people running the country so he planned on deliberately not celebrating. Maybe he rubbed off onto me. I couldn’t care less about the fact that yesterday was the 40th anniversary of the moon landings. A massive transfer of wealth to those who currently have nothing would be a giant leap. Stepping onto another planet … that affects ‘mankind’ how?

  • Imagination and the lack thereof

    July 7, 2009 @ 3:18 pm | by Bryan

    In Caritas In Veritate (Charity in Truth), the Pope today called for a rethinking of the world’s economic system. You know the system is in trouble when everyone, including the Vatican, wants it reformed.

    A book that has had a huge influence on my thinking is Edward de Bono’s Lateral Thinking (1970). In it, he claims that one of the greatest barriers to creativity is the desire to build on what is already there, as opposed to trying something completely different. Starting from what is already known limits the direction and nature of change or progress possible. The inbuilt flaws of the ‘now’ constrain the ‘what could be’. I wonder if these calls for economic reform aren’t falling into the same trap.

    I can’t help but believe that Margret Thatcher’s TANA (there are no alternatives) was the result of a depressing lack of imagination. But being ‘imaginatively challenged’ isn’t confined to stuffy conservatives. Progressives and radicals are also given to the same condition. When you bring up the idea of politico-economic alternatives, there is an assumption on both sides of the ideological divide that you have to be talking about some variant of Marxism or Sweden-like socialism.

    I wonder if part of the problem the Pope is trying to highlight is our capitalism/communism view of the world. I wonder if real alternatives will only be found when we break free from that dichotomy and try to see the world and our possibilities in broader terms.

    If someone could just figure out what that would look like, I might be able to actually finish my dissertation! Oh, yes … the world might also turn into a better place.

  • Swine flu

    April 30, 2009 @ 4:32 pm | by Bryan

    I don’t mean to trivialise a very serious problem, or to appear insensitive to the families of those who are ill and those who have died. That said, I don’t understand the hysteria around swine flu that is emanating from a lot of media outlets.

    All potentially fatal illnesses must be taken seriously. Communicable diseases should also raise public concern. But outside of Mexico, swine flu has resulted in one mortality. I understand the need for monitoring, the need to keep the public informed, and the need for a public awareness campaign to limit the risks of further transmission. But hospital acquired MRSA is far more significant in Ireland than swine flu. In fact, even in Ireland, the spread of HIV between heterosexual, white non-i.v. drug users is a growing problem that isn’t given the time of day outside of the medical community.

    So why all the panic about swine flu? Is it a reflection of modern culture? Maybe we have all watched so many episodes of shows like 24 that we have been conditioned to expect global disasters that have the potential to wipe out the whole race. Or maybe, we just like ‘excitement’ and a developing story. That 3000 people die each day of malaria in Africa, while lamentable, is something we have come to expect. It’s no longer news. And it’s something that is happening far away. Swine flu on the other hand is exciting! There have probably been less than 3000 cases in total (and that probably becomes definitely once you exclude Mexico), but it could happen to you! Swine flu might be coming after you! If it does, statistics show you’ll probably be fine after a few days’ treatment. But the fact that it might land on your doorstep is enough for this virus to be a top story.

    I never cease to be amazed by how the world works.

  • Much ado about nothing

    April 2, 2009 @ 1:22 pm | by Bryan

    German chancellor Angela Merkel greets France's president Nicolas Sarkozy before a bilateral meeting in London April 1, ahead of a G20 summit meeting. Photo: Eric Feferberg/REUTERS

    German chancellor Angela Merkel greets France’s president Nicolas Sarkozy before a bilateral meeting in London April 1, ahead of a G20 summit meeting. Photo: Eric Feferberg/REUTERS.

    Is the G20 summit much ado about nothing? Maybe not quite nothing. There will be lots of photos taken. A lot of leaders get to have their pictures taken with the most popular US president in a very long time. Gordon Brown might come off looking pretty good which could help his political plight. A bunch of politicians and the protestors they attract will get to spend some time in London.

    Great. But in terms of substantive issues? A new global order? I don’t think so. The people who ran the planet before the meeting will leave the summit with it still firmly in their control. The likes of Brazil, India and China have a bigger say than they did ten years ago, but its their pre-recession economic clout, not this summit, that give them their say.

    Regulators, a bigger over-draft from the IMF, the vilification of tax havens and bankers, and promises on protectionism that won’t be kept aren’t worth celebrating, are they? Maybe the statement that will come out at the end of the summit may change my mind. I doubt it.

    An UNCTAD (United Nations Conference on Trade and Development) summit that revives the demands of the now old NIEO (New International Economic Order) … now that would be worthy of all this hype!

  • April Fools’ Day

    April 1, 2009 @ 7:00 am | by Bryan

    One of my favourite television shows is a US animated satirical series called The Boondocks. Written by Aaron McGruder, it looks at modern day America from a ‘black perspective’. One of the best and most controversial episodes saw Martin Luther King Jr. come back from the dead and share his opinion on the state of the nation. His opinion of it wasn’t great.

    I don’t do satire. It’s just not me. But had I that gift, this post would have a different title – I’m not sure what. It would have an important Irish historical figure come back from the dead. For good measure, joining my Irish ghost would be the odd French, British and German philosopher, people who wrote on the rights and brotherhood of man. I would have them walk around their former towns and cities. I would then take them to Libya and have them discuss the deaths of those people who were trying to make their way to a new world.

    The dialogue would centre on humanity, law and people’s propensity to forget their own history. I might also throw in some African figures – Nkrumah, Lumumba, Fanon, Biko, Sankara … and have them comment on the fact that their descendants are sometimes willing to risk their all to escape free Africa.

    My April fool’s satirical piece would then end on a discussion on the world’s response to the financial crisis. I’m not sure how it would end though. To berate the most powerful for caring more about the risk to their wealth than the plight of the poor is a little obvious and unoriginal. A scary prophecy based on the unsustainable global order wouldn’t be much better. Maybe a sneak peak into the future with the roles reversed (Europeans on rickety boats trying to get into Africa) could work. But if it’s going to be believable, the preview really should be of the ‘North’ (Britain and the US at the forefront, France and Germany trying to assert themselves right behind them) having used up all of their resources, on the verge of invading the ‘South’. That just might work.

    But like I said, I don’t do satire. Unfortunately. Happy April Fools’.

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