The beginning of global order
By Pablo Ouziel
Online Journal Contributing
Writer
Jun 13, 2008, 00:10
We can
continue to believe our politicians as they echo messages of stability and
order around our planet, and we can continue to feed off the BBC or the New
York Times to get an insight into the normality of the global situation, but
sooner or later, the collapse of our economies is going to affect us directly
by hitting our pockets, and then perhaps we will be ready to act. Hopefully,
against those politicians and global capitalists who are infecting our daily
life by bringing a painful and miserable reality to the majority of humanity.
Monday, as
I drove on the motorway towards Barcelona, I was overcome with tears. Lining
the roads were truckers slowing the traffic, waving banners and making noise to
be heard in order to be understood, while the rest of the drivers in their cars
were feeling annoyed at the inconvenience of a minority obstructing their daily
routine. The radio was repeating negative messages about the truckers, the
politicians were repeating over and over again that these people were a
minority, and that the rest of us should not worry, because they would not
achieve the goal of disrupting the flow of petrol or the arrival of goods from
one point to another.
As this was
happening in Spain, discontented truckers in different parts of the planet were
also complaining. Their complaint was a simple one, �We can no longer afford to
feed our families.� Yet, solidarity is running so short these days that isolated
groups get affected by the global economic situation, while the rest of us
continue our routine without paying much attention to their pleas. What people
are failing to see is the connection between the truckers today, the fishermen
a few weeks ago, the homeowners losing their homes, and the global riots
because of rising food prices. The people being affected directly are giving us
a warning of things to come, and the only way this can be reversed is if we
group together and begin to show support to those who are feeling the pain
right now.
We have not
been smart enough as a collective of global citizens to understand that we are
being taken for a ride; that affected groups are being kept isolated by the
magic wand of the corporate media regurgitating the propagandistic message of
the ruling elite. Everyday, the global situation is getting worse. As strikes
are on the rise and unemployment is increasing, we must be alert; we must
understand what is happening. The elites will continue to keep us divided,
because divided is how they can control us, but we must be smarter than them
and understand that the only strength we have against their policies is the
collective strength of united discontent.
When will
we understand that our politicians are lying to us? Will we ever understand
that the corporate media are not democratic and that the police are there to
defend the interests of the wealthy? One can see clearly whose interest the
police serve when those who protest and strike have guns pointed at them. Only
a few years ago, Argentineans were going to the bank to retrieve their money,
and instead of happy clerks, they found hostile policemen telling them to go
away. Their money was not theirs anymore; it was gone. Yet, the owners of the
banks never lost anything, all their money was out of the country, and once
that country had collapsed, they came back again with smiles to buy things
cheaply. I often come cross Argentineans, and frequently they tell me that a
global �corralito� is what is about to happen. The sad thing is that I do not
need their wisdom to understand that, because I am seeing it with my own eyes.
Friends are losing their homes, others are losing their jobs, oil prices are
making life hard for those close to me who have to commute everyday, and the
hopelessness of the situation is slowly breaking the fabric of the community in
which I live.
Because of
the Internet, I am able to communicate with lots of people around the world,
and everything which I see around me, many in other places are seeing around
them. So, while bankers and politicians speak of inflation being under control,
recession being an illusion, and economic fundamentals being strong, I am led
to believe that in their world -- wherever that is -- they are not exposed to
reality. Yet, the truth is that they know the reality much better than I do;
they have access to information which I will only see years from now, when
hopefully they are punished for their crimes against humanity.
Going back
to those truckers whom I saw furious Monday on the motorway, people must begin
to see that they were not obstructing normality, but rather pointing out an
abnormality which global citizens must unite to correct. Monday, we should have
all stopped our cars in support of the truckers, because by supporting the
truckers we would be supporting ourselves. We should have demanded that CEOs of
oil companies stop receiving multimillion dollar salaries, we should have
demanded that our governments implement measures to limit the rising prices of oil
and stop the speculation, we should have ultimately asked that our governments
cease all their hostilities against the oil producing countries, many of those
currently in the Middle East.
The last
time oil prices skyrocketed was in 1973 when the members of Organization
of Arab Petroleum Exporting Countries OAPEC announced, as a result of the
ongoing Yom Kippur War, that they would no longer ship oil to nations that had
supported Israel in its conflict with Syria and Egypt. What a coincidence that
oil prices are rising today, as the West is on a rampage against the Arab
world, supporting the slaughter of the people in Gaza, supporting the
destruction of Iraq and Afghanistan, and showing an ever growing hostility
towards Iran.
We must begin to pave the path to peace in order to gain
global stability, and that must be done by setting measures to stop speculators
from benefiting from the misery of others, by punishing corrupt politicians,
and by collectively understanding that bankers are rich because we have placed
our money in their hands. Ultimately, unless we begin to see the world as a
whole, in which things are truly interconnected, our governments will continue
their hostilities, oil prices will keep on rising, and when the time comes for
us to complain, we will be faced with the guns of the police whom we have
helped to create with the payment of our taxes. The only positive thing coming
out of this chaos is that we are no longer able to avoid facing reality, and
soon after this social tsunami which has begun to unravel is over, we will be
faced with a true opportunity to collectively construct global order.
Pablo Ouziel is a sociologist and freelance
writer.
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