157 people murdered by capitalism: Source |
Richard
Mellor
Afscme
Local 444, retired
It’s
very handy that a corporation is a person in the US. That’s why when we read
about issues involving their activity, especially concerns about safety and
public safety in particular, we often read that GM said this or Google
says that.
As
far as I can recall, British Petroleum (BP) was quite chatty during the
horrendous oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico. This spill was not a “mistake” any more than the crashes of
two Boeing 737 MAX aircraft were mistakes. In early 2010, the New York Times
pointed out in with regards to the BP spill that an Interior Dept investigation
revealed that, “Federal regulators responsible for oversight of drilling in
the Gulf of Mexico allowed industry officials several years ago to fill in
their own inspection reports in pencil — and then turned them over to the
regulators, who traced over them in pen before submitting the reports to the
agency, according to an inspector general’s report to be released this week.
The report said that investigators "could not discern if any fraudulent
alterations were present on these forms." (1)
In
yesterday’s Senate Commerce Committee hearing, Boeing CEO Dennis Muilenburg stated
that “Boeing” made mistakes and in
response to Sen. Richard Blumenthal’s
(D., Conn.) accusation that Boeing was engaged in a “pattern of deliberate concealment” by blaming pilot error for the
crashes and that “Boeing” had lied, Muilenburg replied, “The premise that we would lie or conceal is not consistent with our
values.” They love that phrase don’t
they. Muilenburg received about $23 million in total compensation in 2018,
including a $13.1 million incentive payment. These are the only values he
respects.
There are countless examples of such tragedies. The catastrophic effects of the BP spill will not really be known for decades. It’s almost comical that the US government, one “of the people by the people” would hand over the writing of rules for deep water drilling to the energy company doing the drilling. Eleven workers died due to that “mistake” by BP.
A dead sea turtle lies in oil in Louisiana's Barataria Bay in 2010. Source |
I
wrote some time ago about the aftermath of the famous Exxon Valdez spill in
Alaska and what it meant for the local community. In
a Washington Post article from September 2010 a fisherman describes his
observations about the Herring after the Valdez spill:
“In 1990, he says, they began behaving oddly. Instead of laying their eggs
in a row, the herring would leave them in pyramids or in stacks. A year later,
they started reabsorbing their eggs.
"We were freaking out because
they weren't spawning," Renner says.
In 1992, he noticed lesions,
evidence that disease had taken hold of their population.
"And then they died,"
Renner says. "So we quit herring fishing, and that was devastating to this
town."
The
Senate investigation is just another sham performance for the public to show in
Bob Dylan’s words:
“That
the strings in the books ain't pulled and persuaded
And that even the nobles get properly handled” 2
And that even the nobles get properly handled” 2
It is not
as if the public are not aware of this. There is just a general feeling that we
can’t change it and there is no alternative. Workers have no political voice,
no political party. We are watching the representatives of capitalism debate among
themselves how best to get out of this “mistake” and protect the system
they govern.
The
system will not be questioned. An individual might be the fall guy, that is a
possibility as the death of over 350 people is no small matter and Muilenburg
told Trump after the Ethiopian crash that “aircraft
was safe and did not need to be grounded” . The Boeing CEO also praised
Trump saying, “He cares about business and he creates open communication
lines, and we will have differences from time to time, we may not agree on
every topic,”
What is more
important is the industry itself. Boeing, is the second largest
defense contractor receiving $104 billion in unclassified defense contracts
between 2014 and 2018 according to reports. US capitalism is the world’s
largest purveyor of weapons of mass destruction often supplying both sides in
conflicts. What a deal that is.
Like the
auto industry, the energy industry, and all the major industries crucial to the
needs of what should be a civilized, humane society, Boeing should be taken in
to public ownership and its productive capacity used for social need not
profits. It is the rapacious quest for profits that is the root cause of these
so-called mistakes. They are not “mistakes” they are market driven, an
inherent aspect of capitalist production.
A
government “for the people by the people” is not a bad slogan. The
question though is, which people.
(2)
The Lonesome Death of Hattie Carroll
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