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Sunday, November 27, 2011

‘Capitalism . . . ain’t workin’.



Hundreds of protesting occupiers are now an integral part of the St Paul's Cathedral’s ecosystem. Strikingly enough, the original target in solidarity with the occupiers on their ongoing demonstrations in the Wall Street  was the Paternoster Square, where London Stock Exchange - the world’s fourth largest stock exchange is situated, was thwarted by the state security.

More than 200 tents of many colours and dimensions, sheltering the radical protesters popped up in the vicinity of the church and many of the clerics are finding it difficult to come in terms with the spirits of the demonstrators. The occupiers are well organised and their activities are well coordinated which obviously reinforced my suspicions of them networking with their counterparts in the Wall Street. The tent city dwellers are often engaged in many debates among themselves, many of which are centred on politics and also have an exclusive list of various social and radical political activists, especially from the left and anarchic organisations. The masks of Guy Fawkes are so popular among them that it could be righteously termed as the mascot of their ongoing protest against the establishment.

The obvious banners are about Capitalism and its crisis, social inequalities and asserting their newly acclaimed super majority status “We are the 99%!” Though it is more lately claimed, it is always better to be claimed. In a very friendly conversation with the occupiers, one of the occupiers put across everything in a nutshell “Capitalism ain’t for the majority of people” and after a pause, “ain’t workin’ no more mate”.

Last so many months, with its distinct paroxysmal repetitiveness the media came up with the headlines like “Marx was right”, “Capitalism in crisis” and “Richest 1%”. Well, there is an anti capitalist mood prevalent among the people now, like the anti-war mood, anti-American/ Bush mood and even the anti-dictatorship mood evidently perceived from the last “Arab spring”.

The obvious linear chain reaction of milestone events from the last year “Arab Spring”, “2011 Spanish protests” and the recent “Occupy movement”- spreading over 95 cities across 82 countries are demonstrating the notion of “Domino effect” in a political disclosure of this kind of global impact. These recent widespread occupations and the demonstrations of the students and workers deemed than termed to be “anti-capitalist” or “anti super rich/ ultra rich” or “anti-plutocracy," or "anti-corporate” or “anti-bankers” outbursts were often lacking a political orientation and alternative. Energy levels are high, and so the levels of tensions among the layers of the social stratification, especially felt during the 2011 London riots. In England, masses of people are getting alienated from the society; tripled tuition fees, crack down in the welfare and support services, and a widely perceived lack of a mass political alternative front to represent the interests of the ordinary working class people. Therefore rather than becoming a serious challenge to the institutionalised establishment - obviously characterised by the exploitation of the vast majority, these protests often end up as a far cry from the changes they sought to seek. This argument often raised from the obtained wisdom gathered from the past political struggles and tensions. It is time to understand that regime changes are not the means to an end. The need is a serious political alternative representing the needs of the people and the society. What is the step ahead?

How the call for an alternative from the protesters would be materialised? The past legacy of one of the world’s first industrialised nation was a strong and organised working class movement of which the Labour party – the current opposition party is an offshoot.  Ironically, the Labour party, apparently a party endorsed by the major trade unions in Britain and financed by the political levy paid by the ordinary rank and file trade unionists, is no different from the ruling Conservative and Liberal Democrats coalition in carrying out the cuts in public expenditures attacking jobs and services apart from a consistent rhetoric to slightly mitigate those attacks in dismantling the welfare state.

The organised working class action in Britain has radically changed the lives of the ordinary people from the days of the industrial revolution, which is characterised by lack of job and social security, harsh working hours and brutal work environment to one of the first welfare states in the world, with more improved working conditions and standard health and safety practices for the well being of the workers. The Influence of the British trade union movement was diminished and constrained during the time of Margaret Thatcher, under whose iron handed regime some of the most anti trade union laws have been enacted and many of that was not repealed even by the successive Labour government.
 

                                                                                                                                                
In the 2011 Trade Union Congress, facing the angry trade union delegates, Ed Milliband, the present Labour party leader has openly condemned, the June 30th (2011) one day strike action,  called by around 750,000 public sector workers including the teachers, after a democratic ballot among the workers. Now around 3 million workers among the present 6.5 million union members are expected to take industrial strike action on November 30th which would be the largest co-ordinated action ever seen in Britain and this would be sending shivers right down the spine of the establishment.

This passing period of time is inclined to observe a dawdling paradigm shift among the people to recognise and ascertain once again, the importance of the organised working class action, and the calls for an alternative would be naturally thrusting upon the future events signalled and lead by the political representation of the working class people for a society which sustains the needs of the vast majority ordinary people than the greed of the tiny privileged 1%.


-Sajith Attepuram

Friday, November 25, 2011

‘Industrial action’, ‘labour militancy’ and opportunistic press reporting.

reporting http://webcache.googleusercontent.com/search?hl=en&newwindow=1&gbv=1&q=cache:NnUhchavahMJ:http://www.asianlite.com/columns/industrial-action-labour-militancy-and-opportunistic-press-reporting+sajith+attepuram&ct=clnk


‘Industrial action’, ‘labour militancy’ and opportunistic press reporting.



One of my friends who had just travelled to Greece for her much deserved (according to her) vacation was apparently appalled by the strike action that was carried out by the workers in Greece. She, like many of her fellow travellers, saw that industrial action of the workers as an act of dissident and got no connection or what so ever with the lives of the ordinary people. 
Here in Britain, the series of anti-austerity protests marked by important events like the March for the Alternative, on the March 26, 2011; essentially a Trade Union march, with more than half a million organised working class people and their supporters taking on the streets of London and the June 30th popularly known as the “J30” among the protesting Teachers and the public sector workers who staged a walk out,  a one day strike action against the government's politically and ideologically motivated attacks on their pension plans and retirement policies, including unilaterally raising the retirement age from 60 to 66 and replacing the final salary pension schemes with a career-average system.
The politically aligned British press and media are not ready to sympathise the industrial action of the working class people and with their specialist spin doctors/ journalists started a smear campaign against this so called “labour militancy” (often commonly used by the media). 
The much researched account of Edward S. Herman and Noam Chomsky’s “Manufacturing Consent: The Political Economy of the Mass Media (1988)”, employs the propaganda model, analyses the mass media- the news media in particular- and reveals that the multimillion corporate possessed news communication media, the press, radio and television are profit oriented businesses subject to commercial competition for advertising revenue and profit.  Manufacturing consent uses the terms “distortion” or “editorial bias” as an inherent part of the news reportage. The news that are being reported and also how they are being reported are all direct outcomes of the profit motives, commercial interests of those big media moguls’ and the level of its dependency over the involved parties in the news reportage.  There are also state-owned or more likely state oppressed media institutions that serve the role of the propagandist for the government/ state policies and also fulfil their need for public relations. 
It is often a Good News paper Reading Practice to analyse the various stakeholders involved in any particular bit of news of your concern. With this outlook if we analysed the recent industrial action and the way it has portrayed amongst the people suggest that the interest of the vast deprived majority is in direct conflict with a far tiny privileged minority. 
The increasingly pro business and neo liberal political parties along with the media which serves the purpose of the big business along with its own, cast the workers as the enemy of the people and ironically the vast majority of them are the working class itself.
The developments in the living standards in Britain and other western European countries like France and Germany have deep roots in their working class struggle. All those industrial actions like the general strikes, picketing, demonstrations and their quest for political representation have only made possible the welfare society and the social security existing in the western Europe which is put into a grave danger by their governments who conveniently penalised the ordinary people for the gamble played by the bankers upon their greed.
It is those rich businesses that lay off its work force for its operational profits, those multimillion corporations which scavenges on the increased prices of their finished products and those casino banks which fill our lives with uncertainty and instability through recessions throughout our lives, are to be feared and appalled upon and certainly not the workers who are struggling against these exploitations of the system based on greed and thrives on profit.
-Sajith Attepuram


Wednesday, November 16, 2011

New Barnfield Incinerator will release deadly and harmful nanoparticles

The recent information session (03.11.11) conducted by the Environmental Resources Management (ERM) consultants, commissioned by Veolia as a part of their preparation for the Health Impact Assessment and Planning Application to build an incinerator at New Barnfield, and was held in William Cecil Memorial Hall. The residents of Hatfield have raised many genuine concerns about the New Barnfield incinerator, most of which weren’t answered by the ERM consultants. The discussion have witnessed well informed  and genuine concern and query from the Hatfield residents, about a whole lot of serious issues like the increase in traffic, sound and noise pollution, impairment of visibility because of this alien structure in New Barnfield , loss of social amenities and the air pollution etc...

The workshop has clearly revealed that the filters in the incinerator would never be able to filter particles of dimension more than 0.1 micron. The 0.1 micron size pores will be virtually ineffective in controlling the nanoparitcles which are 1000 times smaller than one micron. That essentially means just a single 0.1 micron filter pore, in those huge filters would allow around 100 nanoparticles continuously into the environment, a grave danger of those millions of nanoparticles of potentially harmful chemicals getting accumulated in the bodies of all the people including all the other living organisms nearby.

The nanoparticles are the most toxic and deadliest particle entities which, because of their smaller size and increased surface area would not only escape the human body’s general defence barriers such as the lungs and the skin (as the nano particles are way to small in size henceforth gain an easy entry even through the microscopic skin pores and also enter the general circulation of the body and would get into the brain, blood, liver, bone marrow and nervous system). It could also potentially cause DNA mutation, structural changes in the cell organelles and ultimately cell death. Apart from the nanoparticles’ extremely smaller dimension and profoundly increased surface area which result in the production of free radicals (potential cancer causing agent and also induces the ageing process), their chemical composition and also the level of impact the nanoparticle would have amongst the vulnerable population like children, pregnant ladies, immune compromised people, people with chronic diseases especially respiratory illness and the older age groups are of serious concerns.

Veolia is a business entity and its interests are profits and further scope for profits. It is the people who should come forward to protect their own interest as well as their communities’ interest. Let us all come forward to defend our community from the deadly incinerator.     


“BIN THE INCINERATOR”.


- Sajith Attepuram
  Branch secretary, Hatfield socialist party.