How the Super Rich and the International
Corporations They Own
Killed the Goose that Laid the Golden
Egg
Or Malthus Was Right
January 03, 2014
Figure 1 A one million dollar super car, super excess
“The book An Essay on the Principle of
Population was first published in 1798 under the alias Joseph Johnson.,[1] but the author was soon identified as Thomas Robert Malthus. While it was not the first book on
population, it has been acknowledged as the most influential work of its era.
Its 6th edition was independently cited as a key influence by both Charles
Darwin and Alfred Russel Wallace in developing the theory of natural
selection.
A key portion of the book was dedicated to what is now
known as Malthus' Iron Law of Population. This name itself is retrospective,
based on the iron
law of wages,
which is the reformulation of Malthus' position by Ferdinand Lassalle, who in turn derived the name from Goethe's "great, eternal iron laws"
in Das Göttliche.[2] This theory suggested that growing
population rates would contribute to a rising supply of labour that would
inevitably lower wages. In essence, Malthus feared that continued population
growth would lend itself to poverty.” Source Wikipedia
While Malthus was certainly not the first ecological
thinker, Rachael Carson created the concept in Silent
Spring in the sixties. Since her
book created the critical new scientific field of ecology, it is now accepted
in the scientific community that because we live on a small blue planet which
is essentially a closed system, we know that the resources necessary for the
survival of our species are in limited supply. The political ramifications are
that laissez-faire capitalism will not work if we wish to survive. There must
be limits placed on the usage of critical resources and processes used to
produce industrial products. We cannot
afford to contaminate such water, air, and soil which are all necessary for
food production. The most rapid and graphic example was the photo documentary
of the horrid deformities of children in a village in Japan downstream from a
factory that carelessly dumped the Mercury used in an industrial process into a
stream that carried this highly toxic metal to the village were babies were
born with grossly deformed bodies.
Rachell Carlson's
book focused on the long-term effects of a commonly used pesticide DDT. We now know that there are tens of thousands
of synthetic compounds that now contaminate to some degree all of the water and
soil on the entire planet. Early regulatory attempts to control the use of
these compounds were totally ineffective. DDT was banned and mega agriculture
just substituted somewhat less toxic chemicals. Industrial growth in the 20th
century was both rapid and unrestrained, and to the present day all attempts to
restrain growth and protect our environment from pollution have been a failure.
Super Car Super Excess Price One Million Dollars |
Figure 2 Central
Texas Farmland after 8 Years of Drought
The politics of
the situation are profoundly depressing. During the last three decades
sociopaths (a biological phenomena that has only been understood and proven
by neurophysiologists and psychiatrists
since 2003) have exploited the political arena in the United States and now
have firm control over our government and everything it does. As
Senator Bernie Sanders was recently quoted "nothing happens in this
country without the approval of the corporations.” These mega-corporations with strong international influence are owned and controlled by the superrich, who are mostly sociopaths. The pathology of the sociopath which prevents he or she from having any empathy for any other human beings produces an insatiable lust for more and more power and money. What are the moral and ethical justifications for individual human beings who are already trillionaires, sacrificing the essential needs of the rest of the 6.5 billion humans in order to increase their already obscene wealth. I say there are none, and sociopaths are at the heart of our wasteful consumerism and ineffective efforts to control the behavior of the international corporations. It now seems perfectly clear that the 0.9% of our species that are sociopaths have been the main source of man's inhumanity to man throughout the history of our species since we organized beyond the tribal level of Hunter gatherer societies.
Central Texas Farmland after 8 years of severe drought |
How the Super Rich and the International
Corporations They Own
Killed the Goose that Laid the Golden
Egg
Or Malthus Was Right
January 03, 2014
Figure 1 A one million dollar super car, super excess
“The book An Essay on the Principle of
Population was first published in 1798 under the alias Joseph Johnson.,[1] but the author was soon identified as Thomas Robert Malthus. While it was not the first book on
population, it has been acknowledged as the most influential work of its era.
Its 6th edition was independently cited as a key influence by both Charles
Darwin and Alfred Russel Wallace in developing the theory of natural
selection.
A key portion of the book was dedicated to what is now
known as Malthus' Iron Law of Population. This name itself is retrospective,
based on the iron
law of wages,
which is the reformulation of Malthus' position by Ferdinand Lassalle, who in turn derived the name from Goethe's "great, eternal iron laws"
in Das Göttliche.[2] This theory suggested that growing
population rates would contribute to a rising supply of labour that would
inevitably lower wages. In essence, Malthus feared that continued population
growth would lend itself to poverty.” Source Wikipedia
While Malthus was certainly not the first ecological
thinker, Rachael Carson created the concept in Silent
Spring in the sixties. Since her
book created the critical new scientific field of ecology, it is now accepted
in the scientific community that because we live on a small blue planet which
is essentially a closed system, we know that the resources necessary for the
survival of our species are in limited supply. The political ramifications are
that laissez-faire capitalism will not work if we wish to survive. There must
be limits placed on the usage of critical resources and processes used to
produce industrial products. We cannot
afford to contaminate such water, air, and soil which are all necessary for
food production. The most rapid and graphic example was the photo documentary
of the horrid deformities of children in a village in Japan downstream from a
factory that carelessly dumped the Mercury used in an industrial process into a
stream that carried this highly toxic metal to the village were babies were
born with grossly deformed bodies.
Rachell Carlson's
book focused on the long-term effects of a commonly used pesticide DDT. We now know that there are tens of thousands of synthetic compounds that now contaminate to some degree all of the water and soil on the entire planet. Early regulatory attempts to control the use of these compounds were totally ineffective. DDT was banned and mega agriculture just substituted somewhat less toxic chemicals. Industrial growth in the 20th century was both rapid and unrestrained, and to the present day all attempts to restrain growth and protect our environment from pollution have been a failure.
The advent of birth control in the 60s initially raised hopes that population could be controlled in a harmless and humane way for the first time in the history of our species. Population growth in both economically prosperous countries such as western Europe, and less
prosperous countries like China have in effect been successful. However, equal
access to these techniques has not been evenly distributed. The entire
continent of Africa is the most glaring example. Population growth in Africa
has actually accelerated in the 20th century due to increased crop yields made
possible by the production of chemical fertilizers, pesticides, and herbicides.
These detrimental compounds on the ecology of the areas in which they have been
used has had profound negative effects, including the extinction of many
species of flora and fauna. Also, Climatologists, another new scientific field
intimately related to ecology, have recently discovered that the 20th century
had one of the mildest periods of the lack of rapid climate change. The 20th
century was essentially a fluke of nature as such a mild weather had not been
seen on the planet in some 100,000 years; and, combined with the one time event
of the discovery of oil and depleting it to critically low levels in a little
more than a century, allowed the world population to explode from 3 billion in
1900 to the current 6.5 billion. With the sudden return of the more violent and
normal climactic changes in the early 2000's, combined with the depletion of
oil, which was the base resource for the host of chemicals that enhanced crop
yields, billions of The Earth’s species are doomed to starvation by 2050.
Experts very widely in their prediction of precisely how many will die, but the
range is roughly 1 to 3.5 billion. However, for myself ,no matter what the
number, we will witness a population catastrophe unequaled in the history of
our species.
Figure 2 Central
Texas Farmland after 8 Years of Drought
The politics of
the situation are profoundly depressing. During the last three decades
sociopaths (a biological phenomena that has only been understood and proven
by neurophysiologists and psychiatrists
since 2003) have exploited the political arena in the United States and now
have firm control over our government and everything it does. As
Senator Bernie Sanders was recently quoted "nothing happens in this
country without the approval of the corporations.” These mega-corporations with strong international influence are owned and controlled by the superrich, who are mostly sociopaths. The pathology of the sociopath which prevents he or she from having any empathy for any other human beings produces an insatiable lust for more and more power and money. What are the moral and ethical justifications for individual human beings who are already trillionaires, sacrificing the essential needs of the rest of the 6.5 billion humans in order to increase their already obscene wealth. I say there are none, and sociopaths are at the heart of our wasteful consumerism and ineffective efforts to control the behavior of the international corporations. It now seems perfectly clear that the 0.9% of our species that are sociopaths have been the main source of man's inhumanity to man throughout the history of our species since we organized beyond the tribal level of Hunter gatherer societies.
It is also clear
that putting effective limits on the behaviors of the powerful international
corporations must somehow be accomplished. There are many viable strategies to
accomplish this, but we must come to an agreement very soon, and carry out the
selected strategies on a massive effort of every average human being. Love and
our capacity for bonding and working as a mass towards a well-defined goal is
our greatest weapon against the sociopath industrialists who are incapable of
any such loving intimacy and bonding.
Do not forget the “master plan” which was hatched by the ivory tower economists in the early ‘70’s: since the Democratic Republic was failing (although they were wrong about the reason---it was television and not a fundamental flaw in the Constitution), they decided that the best course was to return to the aristocracy with the super rich controlling the vast majority of the recources and the rest of us supporting them as “wage slaves.” It is disturbing that such educationally elite chose to ignore history which is filled with examples of the failure of aristocracies.
Walmart is the
prototype corporate structure. It not only dehumanizes it’s workers but by selling 90% Chinese goods (where the workers are also dehumanized), but they avoid all our rules to protect the environment and every other restraint we must impose on corporations to reighn in the unbriddled laissez faire capitolism which will hasten our demise, but they also saddle our Government with billions of dollars in debt which hampers our economic recovery. In addition
shopping at Walmart destroys the small town economies anywhere they put a
facility. It is clear that “sustainable economies”, not dependent on eternal growth which is firmly establiched as a DEAD END, inevery possible conotation of the meaning of those two dreadful words. A remarkable amount of work in
various fields has looked at: what is the optimum size for communities to
maximize the multitude of benefits that they offer, such as sustainable
economies, and every study comes up with about the same number 500. Bill Gates who has taken a personal interest in education, is a vigorous advocate of xchools of exactly that size: 500 students. He if often quoted: “It is not
the size of the classroom that is so important, but the size of the
school”. It is towns that can support
schools of this size, that Walmarts destroy.
One obvious tactic is to mount a vigorous national campaign to educate
the average citizen of hidden consequences of shopping at Walmart., and based on those fact institute a massive unending boycot, until they concede to accept necessary limits on their behavior.
The tactics of Gandhi, which were enormously successful,
are worth a review and an adaptation fo our current American circumstance.
Morris Creedon-McVean, DO
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