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MAHATMA GANDHI ~ Truth never damages a cause that is just.
Wednesday, 5 April 2017
Freeing up the rich to exploit the poor – that’s what Trump and Brexit are about
A bonfire of public protections is being lit in Britain and in the
United States – and the beneficiaries of it will be the very rich
‘When thinktanks and the billionaire press call for freedom, they are
careful not to specify whose freedoms they mean. Freedom for some, they
suggest, means freedom for all.’
Photograph: Dan Kitwood/Getty Images
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Propaganda
works by sanctifying a single value, such as faith, or patriotism.
Anyone who questions it puts themselves outside the circle of
respectable opinion. The sacred value is used to obscure the intentions
of those who champion it. Today, the value is freedom. Freedom is a word
that powerful people use to shut down thought.
When thinktanks and the billionaire press call for freedom, they are
careful not to specify whose freedoms they mean. Freedom for some, they
suggest, means freedom for all. In certain cases, this is true. You can
exercise freedom of thought, for instance, without harming others. In
other cases, one person’s freedom is another’s captivity.
When corporations free themselves from trade unions, they curtail the
freedoms of their workers. When the very rich free themselves from tax,
other people suffer through failing public services. When financiers
are free to design exotic financial instruments, the rest of us pay for
the crises they cause.
Above all, billionaires and the organisations they run demand freedom
from something they call “red tape”. What they mean by red tape is
public protection. An article in the Telegraph last week
was headlined “Cut the EU red tape choking Britain after Brexit to set
the country free from the shackles of Brussels”. Yes, we are choking,
but not on red tape. We are choking because the government flouts European rules on air quality. The resulting air pollution frees thousands of souls from their bodies.
‘Yes, we are choking, but not on red tape. We are choking
because the government flouts European rules on air quality.’
Photograph: Stefan Rousseau/PA
Ripping down such public protections means freedom for billionaires
and corporations from the constraints of democracy. This is what Brexit –
and Donald Trump – are all about. The freedom we were promised is the
freedom of the very rich to exploit us.
To
be fair to the Telegraph, which is running a campaign to deregulate the
entire economy once Britain has left the EU, it is, unusually, almost
explicit about who the beneficiaries are. It explains that “the ultimate
goal of this whole process should be to … set the wealth creators free”. (Wealth creators: code for the very rich.) Among the potential prizes it lists
are changes to the banana grading system, allowing strongly curved
bananas to be categorised as Class 1, a return to incandescent
lightbulbs and the freedom to kill great crested newts.
I suspect that the Barclay brothers,
the billionaires who own the Telegraph, couldn’t give a monkey’s about
bananas. But as their business empire incorporates hotels, shipping, car
sales, home shopping and deliveries, they might be intensely interested
in the European working time directive and other aspects of employment
law, tax directives, environmental impact assessments, the consumer
rights directive, maritime safety laws and a host of similar public
protections.
If the government agrees to a “bonfire of red tape”, we would win
bent bananas and newt-squashing prerogatives. On the other hand, we
could lose our rights to fair employment, an enduring living world,
clean air, clean water, public safety, consumer protection, functioning
public services, and the other distinguishing features of civilisation.
Tough choice, isn’t it?
As if to hammer the point home, the Sunday Telegraph interviewed Nick Varney,
chief executive of Merlin Entertainments, in an article claiming that
the “red tape burden” was too heavy for listed companies. He described
some of the public protections that companies have to observe as “bloody
baggage”. The article failed to connect these remarks to his company’s
own bloody baggage, caused by its unilateral decision to cut red tape.
As a result of overriding the safety mechanism on one of its rides at
Alton Towers – which was operating, against the guidelines, during high
winds – 16 people were injured, including two young women who had their
legs amputated. That’s why we need public protections of the kind the
Telegraph wants to destroy.
The same ethos, with the same justification, pervades the Trump
administration. The new head of the environmental protection agency,
Scott Pruitt, is seeking to annul the rules
protecting rivers from pollution, workers from exposure to pesticides,
and everyone from climate breakdown. It’s not as if the agency was
overzealous before: one of the reasons for the mass poisoning in Flint,
Michigan, was its catastrophic failure to protect people from the contamination of drinking water by lead: a failure that now afflicts 18 million Americans.
‘The new head of the US environmental protection agency
is seeking to annul the rules protecting rivers from pollution, workers
from exposure to pesticides and everyone from climate breakdown.’
Photograph: Alamy
As well as trying to dismantle the government’s climate change
programme, Trump is waging war on even the most obscure forms of
protection. For instance, he intends to remove funds from the tiny US chemical safety board, which investigates lethal industrial incidents. Discovering what happened and why would impede freedom.On neither side of the Atlantic are these efforts unopposed. Trump’s assault on public protections has already provoked dozens of lawsuits. The European council has told the UK government
that if it wants to trade with the EU on favourable terms after Brexit,
companies here cannot cut their costs by dumping them on the rest of
society.
This drives the leading Brexiters berserk. As a result of the pollution paradox
(the dirtiest corporations have to spend the most money on politics,
so the political system comes to be owned by them), politicians like
Boris Johnson and Michael Gove have an incentive to champion the freedom
of irresponsible companies. But it also puts them in a bind. Their
primary argument for deregulation is that it makes businesses more
competitive. If it means those businesses can’t trade with the EU, the
case falls apart.
They will try to light the bonfire anyway, as this is a
question of power and culture as well as money. You don’t need to listen
for long to the very rich to realise that many see themselves as the
“independents” Friedrich Hayek celebrated in The Constitution of Liberty, or as John Galt, who led a millionaires’ strike against the government in Ayn Rand’s novel, Atlas Shrugged.
Like Hayek, they regard freedom from democracy as an absolute right,
regardless of the costs this may inflict on others, or even themselves.
When we confront a system of propaganda, our first task is to decode
it. This begins by interrogating its sacred value. Whenever we hear the
word freedom, we should ask ourselves, “Freedom for whom, at whose
expense?”
Twitter: @GeorgeMonbiot. A fully linked version of this column will be published at monbiot.com
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