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  1. On this May 1, I’d like to applaud migrant farm laborers for their very hard work, yet for minimal pay. Here in the Greater Vancouver regional district, I’ve observed over the last few decades that the strong work ethic exceptionally practiced by them is demonstrably notable in the produce harvesting sector. It’s one of typically hump-busting work that almost all post second or third generation Canadians won’t tolerate for themselves. Watching them, I even feel a bit guilty, as strange as that may sound. Considering it from a purely human(e) perspective, I don’t see why they should have to toil so for minimal pay and not also I.

    Migrant farm laborers work very hard and should be treated humanely, including regular access to Covid-19 vaccination and proper workplace protection, but often are not. While I don’t favor Canada-based businesses exporting labor abroad at low wages while there are unemployed Canadians who want that work, I can imagine migrant farm workers being fifty to a hundred percent more productive than their born-and-reared-here Canadian counterparts.

    I anticipate that if they (as citizens) resided here for a number of decades, their strong work ethics and higher-than-average productivity, unfortunately, likely would gradually diminish as these motivated laborers’ descendant generations’ young people become accustomed to the relatively easier Western way of work. One can already witness this effect in such youth getting caught up in much of our overall liberal culture — attire, lingo, nightlife, as well as work. I’ve also found that ‘Canadian values’ assimilation often means the unfortunate acquisition of a distasteful yet strong sense of entitlement.

  2. Dave, we appreciate your knowledge of history, but no one is going to wade through that lot.

    And I am sad to say, most of it is irrelevant.

    You have correctly identified that capitalism is in its very last, and absolutely terminal, crisis. But you have failed to identify the causes of the terminal crisis we are living through.

    The 1930s crisis was one of mistrust and financial greed, with the upper echelon of western societies extracting every last ounce of work potential from the masses whilst living a life of extraordinary luxury and pleasure themselves. This was famously described by the widow who used her last few cents to write to the president to plea that he do something. Meanwhile banks were foreclosing and grabbing the assets of anyone unable to make the required weekly payments.

    The 1970s crisis was triggered by OPEC nations rejecting the ultra-low prices offered by western nations for oil (with support for the fascist state of Israel thrown in).

    The western capitalists got out of that predicament by developing oil extraction technology that could be used to suck the North Sea and Alaskan basins dry. By gaining temporary oil independence, the western capitalists were able to manipulate the oil price down to ridiculously low levels witnessed through the 1980s and 1990s, and embark on the orgy of resource squandering that characterised the 1990s and early 2000s -thereby condemning humanity to death by Planetary Overheating (which you have correctly identified as the existential crisis of the times we live in, and already killing millions).

    The next crisis, the dom.com crisis was a mere blip on the way to the major crisis of 2007-2008, triggered by corruption, lies and greed in the subprime sector of the US mortgage market, but also accompanied by the peaking of conventional oil extraction worldwide and speculation on oil, which sent the price of Brent crude to $147 a barrel, which was waaaaay more than the globalised economic system could handle (even though it was still exceedingly cheap when the energy value of oil is considered). Next thing we know the price of oil has been manipulated down to $33 a barrel and the oil-importing countries are happy, while the oil-exporting countries are not.

    Supposedly to create oil independence (one of many BIG LIES), the American drillers got to frack everything in sight on the back of ultra-low-interest loans -so called junk bonds because most of the fracking companies never actually made much (any) profit. This ‘strength-through-depletion’ philosophy, championed by Thatcher, Reagan, Bush 1, Clinton, Tony B Liar, Bush 2, Obama, Trump and now Biden) and all the other members of the gang, including NZ’s very own saboteurs, led to exactly what one would expect: depletion, followed by no strength. And a monstrous, unsolvable climate crisis.

    As for your main point about the need for worldwide unity and clear objectives, I’m afraid the ‘powers that be’ are simply not going to allow that. If it takes gunning down of protesters in teh streets, so be it, as far as they are concerned.

    You have correctly identified the viciousness with which sociopaths will attempt to hang on to power and privilege.

    As for the time frame, I disagree. There is no ’10 year’ window of opportunity. The whole caboodle is headed off the cliff very soon -arguably this year via the collapse of the US ability to produce food.

    https://droughtmonitor.unl.edu/

    1. The cause of the terminal crisis today is the same as the structural crises post-1970s. It is the long-term tendency for the rate of profit to fall – the LTRPF.

      Each crisis expresses one or more aspects of this law in operation – the long term effect is that each boom gets weaker and each bust deeper until it becomes terminal.

      In other words, the forms, or superficial features, of each crisis may differ and trigger the events which give their names to crises, like dotcom or subprime assets, yet they are all the result of the LTRPF redirecting excess capital from production into speculative behavior.

      Footnote 1 above that refers to Michael Roberts work will clarify all this for you.

      But I differ from Roberts on his question. I think the crisis is terminal, since capital cannot recover when it destroys the material conditions for its existence – the ecological (or as Marx puts it “metabolic”) rift between society and nature.

      Actually, Marx’s metabolic rift theory was based on his analysis of soil science, it points to the fundamental fragility of human life which depends on organised food production that destroys soil fertility.

      So we have the explanation and the conclusion that capitalism has reached its end – both grounded in Marx.

      The main point I am making above is one also made by Marx. Without this knowledge as a guide to action, then there is no prospect of the revolution necessary to remove the root cause, capital, and to build a society that fixes the ecological rift before we face extinction.

      1. It is interesting that many of us have been discussing these aspects for 20 years or more, and nothing changes in the financial-economic-political scene, other than further enrichment of the ‘elites’ and further impoverishment of the bulk of society.

        I guess we have to wait for geological-chemical-physical-ecological forces to bring the system down -for they surely will, and very soon- and then endure the mass starvation and chaos that ensue as the ‘elites’ (scumbags really) attempt to purloin whatever resources as still available for themselves.

        Nobody survives on an uninhabitable planet. And that’s exactly where we are headed.

      2. Unlike a few social/labor revolutions of the past, notably the Bolshevik and French revolutions, it seems to me that contemporary Western world’s virtual corporate rule and superfluously wealthy essentially have the police and military ready to foremost protect big power and money interests, even over the food and shelter needs of the protesting masses. I can imagine that there are/were lessons learned from them (How to Hinder Progressive Revolutions 101?) with the clarity of hindsight by big power and money interests.

        They, the police/military/big-money, can claim they must bust heads to maintain law and order as a priority; thus the absurdly unjust inequities and inequalities can persist.

        1. Frank , turn all that on its head. The revolutions that succeeded, even if they were short lived.
          They proved that the power of the ruling class (their cops, paramilitaries etc) are not all-powerful.
          Workers have proved they could unite and overthrow the ruling class regimes.
          The Bolshevik Revolution is the best example.
          he task is building a movement that grasps that it has the potential to take power.
          And once that power is won, stopping the capitalist class from taking it back.
          Terminal crisis creates the pre-conditions for that power.
          Workers and poor farmers have no choice but to fight back or die.
          We can see that in the struggles of workers and poor farmers across the world.
          The uprising of the Indian farmers shows what is possible possible even limited to a national struggle.
          Uniting those struggles needs an internationalist perspective.
          For me that is world socialism, capable of replacing global capitalism.
          We can see some of that unity beginning with the international movements. Extinction Rebellion (XR) and BLM which are basic struggles for survival.
          We have to build more movements in every part of the world, then merge them into one big movement.
          Only by uniting our forces in action can we defeat the organised resistance of the ruling classes.
          In building that unity we need a common program and that is the question I address in the article above.
          We need to give up any hope of reforming capitalism, it is destroying us.
          It has to be replaced by a new society without class, race and gender oppression.
          Where the needs of ordinary working people are met in harmony with nature and we free ourselves from alienation.

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