26 January, 2011

You Want How Much ? (singlish lah)

Singapore Notes: More Hard Truths About Education In Singapore

 In a new twist to his graduate mother policy, Lee Kuan Yew is blaming parents for the difference between "brand-name" schools and neighbourhood schools. He observed that 72 per cent of Raffles Girls' School pupils have fathers who are university graduates while it was 9 per cent at Bukit Merah Secondary. The disparity is similar across the schools in terms of educational profiles of mothers. He urged non-graduate parents to bring their children to the library from an early stage, "They must get their children accustomed to ... acquiring knowledge by themselves and not be spoon-fed by teachers."

We know how "brand-name" schools end up with the graduate parents. 18 year old Wong Zheng Kai explained it clearly and patiently to the slow learner: "Hwa Chong's fees would be too taxing on my parents." While the monthly fee at Dunman High is $37, it is $300 at Hwa Chong. Grossly out of touch, Lee was still thinking meritocracy alone determines placement in secondary schools when he posed his question to her earlier, "What made you choose Dunman High? Which schools did you try to get in but couldn't? Let's not be shy."

Let's not be shy. There are the poor who need a leg up to level the playing field (Recall the education of rookie MP Michael Palmer: "Before I joined the grassroots organisation, I never knew there were poor people in developed countries"). Northbrooks Secondary principal Janet Oh told MediaCorp it was not easy to "just encourage parents to support their child's learning" when their physical needs are not met. Northbrooks encourages students to stay back for two periods after school to build up the habit of doing homework, but "Many of them don't stay back after school because they have no money for lunch." This school provides money for lunch and recess. Thank you, principal Oh.

About the spoon-feeding by teachers: A Norwegian lady friend doing her doctorate here sent her two daughters to a neighborhood school because she didn't want them to be pampered by the likes of the American School (who bent the rules for Lee's autistic grandson). Her personal observation after 2 years was that the teachers here don't cover all the syllabus material in class, and the kids are expected to have tutors to make up the shortfall. Needless to say, the poor can hardly cough up the extortion money charged by tutors these days. Someone who emigrated to Canada also noted their kids studying there have no homework - the teaching and learning are completed during classroom hours.

Some schools require a PSLE score of at least 265 before doling out the financial assistance. Kids who don't do well academically because their parents can't afford the "books and all the paraphernalia that makes for a learning child" mentioned by Lee, end up spiralling deeper into the poverty trap. And into the tentacles of the local street gangs. At least some of those guys are more genuine in offering a helping hand than the MOE officials.



" ... Northbrooks Secondary principal Janet Oh told MediaCorp it was not easy to "just encourage parents to support their child's learning or just tell them about the importance of education". "The students' physical needs must be met first. Many of them don't stay back after school because they have no money for lunch. So the school provides money for lunch and recess," she said.

The school has tried to cater to lower-income parents since 2005, even serving dinner at its parent-teacher conference "so they would not be hungry". "Only a few turned up," she said. Northbrooks also keeps some students for two periods after school ends "to build up the habit of doing homework ... knowing that their homes may not have proper desks and a conducive learning" environment.

But she noted that the school's parents' support group has lesser-educated parents, and they "help to encourage other parents". "

i didn't know the condition of the poor in Singapore goes so far as to affect the children such that they have no pocket money for recess....thereby affacting their nourishment.

Growing up and attending a neighbourhood primary school in Singapore in the 1970s, even though most of us are not well off, with my father going in and out of jobs (retrenchments and his mental state then) and my mother taking on a full time job as a production operator, buying a bowl of porridge was never an issue for me in school.

What is happening to this country? The country is getting richer and richer and yet the people is getting poorer and poorer ?



26 January 2011

25 January, 2011

and they thought there is no Union here ...

yahoo! news :

Marina Bay Sands - Do not take sick leave or else…

Dealers at Marina Bay Sands (MBS) casino will have to pay the price if they fall ill during the Chinese New Year (CNY) period.

In a report by The Straits Times, anyone who fails to turn up for work at the casino during this time — regardless of whether they have a valid sick leave (MC) — will receive two demerit points.

This comes as the casino braces itself for a flood of patrons during CNY, which has its first day on Thursday next week.

The Ministry of Manpower (MOM) is not too pleased with this move, ( kudos ) telling ST that employers “should not require employees to compromise their right to take legitimate medical leave, or be penalised if they do so”.

It added that employees can seek its help or advice if they feel that they have been unfairly treated for taking an MC by sending an email message to mom_lrwd@mom.gov.sg. ( :-)) )


Negative reaction
Dealers are obviously upset about the MBS’ decision.

Dealer Edwin Lee, who is in his late 30s, said, “What if someone is genuinely sick during that time? It doesn’t seem like such a fair thing to do.”

Croupiers were informed of the rule in a memo last Friday. The casino said that the rule was enforced to ensure they were adequately staffed during the CNY peak period from February 2 to February 10.

Dealers who do not turn up for work without a valid MC during this period will be handed 4 demerit points, while those with perfect records will receive 4 merit points.

These points are accumulated throughout the year, which will then be factored in to the year-end appraisals, upon which bonuses and promotion chances are based.

Madam Halimah Yacob, deputy secretary-general of the National Trade Union Congress, believes that a sick worker should not be forced to work.

“If, despite being sick and having a valid MC, a worker still decides to go to work, who is going to be responsible if something happens to him?” she told ST.

While the move by MBS may seem harsh, industry and human resource experts say they understand why the casino made such a drastic move to ensure dealers show up.

Mr Tony Compton, who has been in the gambling industry for over 20 years, said this is the first time he has heard of such an action.

“This is MBS’ first CNY, and they will be very very busy. It’s up to the company to do what they have to, to ensure that it is well-staffed during that period,” said the Boston Business School lecturer in casino management.

Ms Jacqueline Thoo, a lecturer in human resource management at Singapore Polytechnic, felt the move was too harsh. However, she admitted that “medical leave taken during that time would affect operations very significantly”.

ST discovered that 250 out of 1,500 MBS dealers took medical leave on New Year’s Eve last month.


Rewards suggested
“The situation may have pushed the company to resort to such measures. However there should be more consideration for employees who may get sick during that period,” said Ms Thoo.

Perhaps giving staff an additional day off or paying them more for working during CNY might help, suggested Ms Thoo.

Resorts World Sentosa (RWS), for example, is paying its staff more than the usual overtime pay and public holiday rates to work over the CNY period.

ST”s check on 14 other companies in the service industry brought up the discovery that none of them use the point system to grade their employees.

Mr Andrew Tjioe, executive chairman of the Tung Lok Group, said he sets targets for his staff to motivate them.

“We definitely don’t want sick people serving our customers,” he said.

Kevin Bossino, General Manager of Grand Mercure Roxy Hotel, said his organisation does not believe in penalising employees as they “have to trust that an MC is valid”.

Rewards of extra days off to help motivate staff is the method employed by Mr Chris Hooi, owner of Dragon Phoenix Restaurant at Clarke Quay. Employees receive a week off in return for working over the two public holidays of CNY.

“This way, everyone wants to work during Chinese New Year,” he told ST.
An MBS spokesman was tight-lipped when asked about the reason behind the casino’s  point system. He only revealed that it allows them to identify and reward worthy employees based on their performance and attendance.

Although this ruling is designed to target the less-hardworking bunch of dealers, it has not gone down well with those who have put in their blood and sweat to the job.

“I was quite okay about working during the CNY period, but after seeing the memo, I feel like taking MC to challenge them,” said a 33-year-old dealer, who is scheduled to work on eight straight days from Feb 2. He also worked on Christmas Eve, Christmas Day, New Year’s Eve and New Year’s Day.

I have a question: Does Las Vegas Sands dare to pull such a stunt back home ? But then again, considering that the casino workers union ( or for that matter, workers union in America) have been considerably weaken since the dawn of Reaganomics...

union ? What Union ... hahaha ... cheers! Gong Xi Fa Cai !

Maybe they are right, there is no true workers union in this age today, they know.

25 January 2011

24 January, 2011

HT - whatever you say lah

Lucky Tan Luck Kee

A comment from Lucky Tan's blog. I like.

" The world is but a stage.... & the rest as in everything else is mostly wayang.

Nation building ? Its an overcooked concept...its everyman for himself except a few in times of crisis..but thats rare.

Hard Truths ? What is truth .... To the victor ...the spoils & he writes or rather rewrites history. Truth can be changed...takes thirty years...burn the libraries, kill the academics or kill off those who tell you their Hi-story and soon you can have your own version of history, your own history text book,history channel,and even your own fan club

Rigging of votes...look at the beacon of liberty & truth halfway round the world....we see it every night on Fox CNN BBC CNBC...every piece of news from finance , oil leaks .wikileaks & the weather has been twisted & stage for the global masses...its pop culture. Together with the stooges who help the kingmakers spin and shape public opinions and change or decieve our real conciousness they have given us false hope about democracy, freedom of speech & the two party system. If i am in the west and i have to send my children to pseudo wars 1 2 3...to be sacrificed for greed, control and mass depopulation campaigns, then i do not want democracy. I RATHER have my 2 Party system...Party on Saturday, and Party on Sunday.

A lot of cards are not played yet...we can be given whatever we wish for, freedom of speech, the regulated yet unregulated internet, a two party system, republicans & democrats , the ying and the yang...all two sides of the same coin. Same puppet master...The warchest & the arsenal is full...no need to use yet becos we got the sheeple by the.......exactly where we want them....Freud together with all the other behaviorior pshycologists with all their masters have designed a complex web to pull the wool over our third eye n using the Hollywood machinery. Giving hards truths and soft porn like CNN History Channel,HBO & American idol.....Don't want TV ...take cable...or Stomp the internet.....old hand at this game

The slavery is perpetuted & modernized. In the past slaves have to be fed , healed and housed...with modern financial mechanics & highly advanced technology plus a citizenry that is fully drugged and in semi commatose state, slaves feed,house,educate, procreate themselves and pay Taxes !

double income too. yeah long live Feminism & cosummerism !

No wonder more parang incidents even though there are more that will give unto God after giving unto Ceasar.....double ,triple taxation whichever way u turn....direct , indirect tax....what a stroke of genius.

But alas, we the sheeple will stand united...apathy or not as we get shoved into oblivion as our future generations stand in line for their turn. "

20 January, 2011

没 什 么 话 好 谈 了

"I’m not intellectually convinced that one-man, one-vote is the best. We practise it because that’s what the British bequeathed us" - Lee kuan Yew

David Rothkopf

It is clear that the memo that went out to the media from Echo Chamber Central Command this morning was "the visit of President Hu to Washington will be presented in terms of China's growing threat."

In paper after paper headlines blared and reporting backed up the message. Some of the stories focused on the nature of the economic threat. Notable among these were the Financial Times's front page piece on how China's influence was being enhanced by dramatic increases in its lending to the developing world -- lending that now surpassed that of the World Bank. Inside the FT there was more including a well-researched and compelling piece by Geoff Dyer, David Pilling and my long-ago colleague from Institutional Investor Magazine, Henny Sender called "A strategy to straddle the planet." The thrust of the piece was also that China is using its trade flows to build links and leverage worldwide in an effort to shape the rules and set the priorities for the international economy. There was also an excellent accompanying piece on the potency and problems associated with China's almost $3 trillion in hard currency reserves. The Washington Post had an in-depth look at the frustrating times that Wisconsin's Manitowoc Company was having in its dealings in China… echoing a piece in the New York Times about the uncomfortable deals trading technology for market access that General Electric has embarked on. In both cases the point was: while China is an appealing market, the Chinese are hard to deal with and seem likely to pose long-term threats as an economic rival.

On the security threat posed by China, we had an op-ed in the Wall Street Journal called "The New Era of U.S. China Rivalry" by Princeton professor Aaron Friedberg. The conclusion of the article: "Hu Jintao's visit may mark the end of an era of relatively smooth relations between the U.S. and China." The lead editorial in the Journal: "Dealing With an Assertive China." In the Times, Helene Cooper had a good piece (and not just because it quoted me) on the tougher posture adopted by the Obama administration called "For Chinese President's Visit, U.S. to Take a Bolder Tack" and another lead editorial which echoed that of the Journal in concluding, "State dinners and 21-gun salutes are ephemeral. What will earn China respect as a major power is if it behaves responsibly. That must be Mr. Obama's fundamental message."

The guts of the piece included statements like "(China's) overconfidence is clear. It has been aggressively pressing its claims to disputed islands in the East and South China Seas. The military's rising influence is troubling." And in the next paragraph: "For a country that claims to be a global power, it is still shirking its responsibilities. … For a major player, it can also be remarkably petulant."

It may seem unremarkable to Mr. Hu's delegation that the Journal and the Times are so aligned in their views. ( :-)) )Americans who know them often to be polar opposites know better. (The Washington Post also had its lead editorial in roughly the same place)

China's would-be reformers face an ugly contrary current, seemingly centered in the military, that has been pushing a belligerent foreign policy, including toward the United States… Mr. Hu's visit offers the opportunity for the United States to make clear that a liberalizing China will be far more welcome as it rises as a world power than one that continues to deny its citizens freedom and the rule of law."

While normally such a convergence of views in the press should be a warning sign, this is one of those rare cases in which even the experts believe what they are reading. Oh sure, there are debates about the tone with which one should address the threat (there is still a school-marmish quality to some of the pieces advocating that the United States lecture the Chinese) or whether or not the United States is in a position to do that any longer (Francis Fukuyama's piece in the FT suggests we've lost ground). But in my conversations with diplomats from around the region during the past couple of weeks, there has been a recurring theme that China is engaged in a sweeping, systematic effort to extend its influence and flex its muscles.

Some are even more worried than the articles in the press. One senior diplomat from one of Asia's most important countries described a perception that China was consciously embracing unstable regimes and promoting instability on Asia's western and eastern flanks in order to keep its rivals distracted. The argument was that the China is content to let the North Koreans behave badly because they neither want a unified Korean peninsula and because instability essentially preoccupies Japan and Korea and keeps them on the defensive. At the same time, it was suggested the Chinese were selling arms and supporting WMD proliferation to Pakistan to build good will and shore up a strategy that will help them build a corridor to the sea through Pakistan and which will, in coordination with related efforts in Tibet, Nepal, and Central Asia, keep the Indians on the defensive.

In Latin America and in Africa it is common place to hear talk of how China has supplanted the West in terms of economic aid and influence. China has also been very sophisticated in playing the United States and the Europeans against each other in its handling of trade and currency issues (such as Vice Premier Li's check-writing mission to Europe that was clear a balance-providing scene setter for the Hu visit to the United States)

Clearly China has come a long way from its sleeping giant days. Indeed, China is hardly the "developing nation" she argues she must still be treated as in climate and trade discussions. (When you give out more aid than the World Bank and have more reserves than any nation on earth, you don't qualify for developing nation status even if much of your society is just that. China shouldn't be able to have it both ways.) Further, on military matters recent initiatives and rhetoric have clearly signaled we are on to a new era in which a China that is actively investing in space and stealth technologies and building about her ability to project force a great distance from her home shores is not the China that successfully sold the argument that she was safely inward-looking by nature. (A position many of her neighbors found laughable thanks to centuries of history.)

Indubitably there is a growing threat posed by China. It is dramatically different than the threat once posed by the Soviet Union. China does not seek to claim territory via some old-fashioned strategy of imperial competition. And it is not a zero-sum competition with the United States -- both sides depend on one another too much for that. Rather, it is a threat posed by a power that has views, values and objectives that are out of sync and sometimes in conflict with those of the United States and many of our allies. In fact, a core element of China's strategy is to remain aloof from debates about how the nations of the global community should conduct their affairs, being a values-blind dealer in pure national self-interest. Whereas the United States and the Soviets sold competing ideologies, the China's are simply buying and selling without any apparent political strings attached.

That's a sham, of course. There are always strings. Big businesses that are required to trade intellectual property for market share are starting to feel it. Countries that grow dependent on Chinese cash are starting to feel it or will soon do.

It's not time to contain China, but it is certainly time to counter-balance her. It is not a time for enmity but it is a time to demand balance and a respect for the rule of law ... and to be willing to take action from withholding market access to building international coalitions in support of our views to bringing cases in international forums to deliberately and visibly building the capabilities to assert our views wherever that is called for. It is a rivalry that calls for a new kind of subtle diplomacy and an old-fashioned brand of steely toughness.

As such, it poses the single central challenge not only for Obama foreign policy but for diplomats from every major power worldwide.

There is nothing more to say ...


20 January 2011

13 January, 2011

Consequences of ...

Straits Times: Anyone caught leaking any official government documents in Singapore will be 'dealt with firmly,' warned Law and Home Affairs Minister K Shanmugam. - 11 Jan 2011.

Maybe the world's problem is not our business: Capital's War Against Wikileaks

i can understand where the Singapore PAP government is coming from, but the world is NOT changing for the better with regards to the state of the common man: Thai firms say protest threaten jobs

Update - 09 February 2011:  Scoundrels at Preah Vihear from Yawning Bread


To the global capitalist and mercantilist -

1) You want a Law-Abiding Citizenry (so that you can make your fortune in peace and order ...)

2) and You want to shortchange workers (so that not only can you make your fortune in peace and order but also to maximise your profit ...)

Somethings got to give. It is only a matter of time.

24 Dec 1961


... the Financial-Military-Industrial-Religio Complex.

Institutions like Labour, Health, Education, Charity, Religion and others are "bought over". The process is subtle. Institutions named perceived to stand for the common man, they still do today, but under the guidance and approval of the invisible hand of the market place. Today, this encroachment is complete. Wikileaks is a consequence of todays social order.

13 January 2011

12 January, 2011

Financial-Military-Industrial-Religio Complex

Catherine Lim: God And The Big Bang

I see you’re particularly excited about something. What is it you want to ask of Me this time? Let me guess (though I don’t have to). You want me to turn the clock back and change the Copenhagen Summit from the dismal failure it was to the resounding success everyone was hoping for

No, God. I don’t want to talk about Copenhagen. I want to talk about Geneva.

Geneva? Now listen, if there’s going to be another world conference there about global warming or poverty or oil—

Hey, God, I didn’t think You needed to ever use the conditional ‘if’. After all, You are omni-everything!

Alright, what about Geneva

It’s this huge project there called the Large Hadron Collider.

What about it.

God, LHC is the biggest scientific experiment of all time! It’s huge. It cost billions of dollars. It operates at 456 degrees below zero Fahrenheit. It’s simply unbelievable! All the world’s greatest scientists are talking about it and watching it—

Alright, what exactly are you getting at.

It wants to find out what happened at the moment of the Big Bang.

So?

Don’t you see, God, it wants to find out what happened at the dawn of creation, 13 billion years ago. It can do this by making streams of protons collide with each other at the near speed of light,and then seeing what particles come out.

So?

God, these particles are the very first to mark the birth of the universe! The scientists want to set up a rival to the Biblical story of the creation of the world!

They will never do that.

They already have, God. By discovering DNA, they have cracked the code of the biological world of life, and through LHC, they will crack the code of the physical world of matter. God, don’t you see that step by step, they are unlocking the secrets of the universe, and encroaching on Your territory! Nothing will be a mystery anymore, God, and You know that Mystery is Your game.

They will never take away My Mystery. And you know why? Even if they manage to reveal the secrets of the Big Bang, they will never be able to answer this question: Who created the Big Bang? It always comes back to Me, you see. I am First Cause and Prime Mover. Nothing can change that.

Pardon me, God, but aren’t You in the least worried that Your function will soon be reduced to this one act of starting the Big Bang, when once You had dominion over every aspect of human life on earth? You might not have presided over the death of every sparrow in the air or the growth of every lily in the field, but everyone believed that diseases like leprosy were caused by Your displeasure, everyone feared Your angry thunderbolts. Even today many believe that natural disasters such as earthquakes are Your punishment for man’s sinfulness, despite what seismologists tell them about tectonic activities in the earth’s crust and so on—

That’s exactly what I’m telling you. Science, however sophisticated its methods, will never succeed in eradicating this belief in Me and My power. Even if they succeed with this LHC, even if they provide all the proof of a Big Bang in a self-originating, self-sustaining universe, they will never stop people from believing in Me, praying to Me, depending on Me. Because the human species, right from the beginning, was programmed to believe in Me. You may say that there is a God centre in each human brain. It’s necessary for human survival.

Maybe you are right, God. Even the scientists don’t seem able to leave You out of their research. They call the ultimate particle they’re looking for, the ‘God Particle’ instead of the ‘Higgs Boson’—I’m sure Professor Higgs must be pretty sore about that! Even Einstein must have believed in divine will and purpose, for he said, ‘God does not play dice with the world.’ Stephen Hawking says that ultimately all search into the universe’s secrets will lead to the ‘mind of God’.

I’m glad you’re seeing some light at last.

You know, God, the scientists could be pretending to use God language so as not to offend those who are in charge of making recommendations for the enormous funding for their research—

If you’re that skeptical—Anyway, what exactly did you want to see Me about, this time?

Well, never mind, God.


12 January 2011

04 January, 2011

USA - Sick Man Of The Globe

Aljazeera: Capital's war against WikiLeaks

by Mark Levine

When your Swiss banker throws you overboard, you know you've made some very powerful enemies.

Long famed for hiding money for everyone from Nazis and drug lords to spies and dictators, the Swiss government's banking arm has decided that WikiLeaks and Julian Assange are just too hot even for it to handle.

And so the PostFinance, which runs the country's banks, declared in early December that it had "ended its business relationship with WikiLeaks founder Julian Paul Assange" after accusing Mr. Assange of - gasp! - providing false information about his place of residence.

This move followed similar moves by credit card companies MasterCard and Visa, as well as PayPal and Amazon.com, to no longer process WikiLeaks payments and, in Amazon.com's case, to cease hosting its data.

As I write this, Bank of America has joined the crescendo of corporations taking aim at WikiLeaks, refusing to process payments for it any longer because of "our reasonable belief that WikiLeaks may be engaged in activities that are, among other things, inconsistent with our internal policies for processing payments."

And soon after, none other than Apple joined the chorus, pulling the plug on a WikiLeaks app only days after it went on sale on its iTunes website. Every sector of the corporate economy, it seems, is out to get WikiLeaks.

Zeroing in on "neocorporatism"

Should CIA agents, mafia bosses and other fellow Swiss banking customers who have likely been even less than forthright in their personal representations than Assange is alleged to have been also worry about the loyalty and discretion of their Swiss bankers?

Probably not. And that's because the world's criminals, autocrats and spooks are very much part of the global political economic system, even if sometimes on opposite sides.

But WikiLeaks both operates outside the system, seeking "Matrix"-style, to use technology - the internet - to "destroy" it by prying it open to public scrutiny, exposing the constant conspiracies of the powerful against the rest of society.

This task, Assange argues, is the most important way to help free the system's millions of often complicit - if not quite willing - victims and in so doing, "change or remove... government and neocorporatist behaviour".

As a political theorist, Assange leaves something to be desired. "Neocorporatism" describes a system in which capital and labour are enmeshed in an integrated but ultimately dependent relationship with a powerful and autonomous state apparatus - an update of the triangular relationship that enabled unprecedented economic growth and gains for the working class in the West in the decades after World War II.

Ideologically, this kind of close working relationship between government, big business and organised labour is the antithesis of the neoliberal system WikiLeaks seeks to combat.

But Assange is right that there is something "neo", if not exactly new, in the way the corporate sector is behaving today and its relationship with government. It lies in the embrace - or better, re-embrace - of finance capitalism and militaristic empire and the military industrial complex that sustains it.

Whether preying on unwitting consumers in middle America or preying on suspected insurgents in the Middle East, these are two of the most secretive sectors of the American economy. They depend on the public knowing as little as possible about their inner workings to secure the greatest possible freedom of action, power and profits.



The power of secrecy

Assage's abandonment by the Swiss banking system and its American corporate cousins is thus not surprising. Few industries have used secrecy and lack of disclosure more effectively than the banking, financial services and credit card industries.

Indeed, their secretive business practises are central to their constant ability to rake in enormous profits at the expense of working and middle class Americans through monopolising trading systems, charging morally usurious interest rates and fees, and engaging in other practises that would make even the most cold-hearted lone shark blush.

If the grand bargain between workers, capitalists and governments enabled the first two post-World War II generations to move from high school right into the middle class, this road was irreparably damaged by the 1980s, when the neoliberal Right first came to power.

As the United States entered its long and painful era of deindustrialization American foreign policy became more aggressively militaristic; and so joining the military as opposed to GM or Ford became one of the few routes to secure any kind of stable economic future (as long as you stayed in the military).

Not surprisingly, profits from the financial sector surpassed that of manufacturing in the early 1990s and haven't dropped since. But these profits and the economic growth they generated have relied disproportionately on government and consumer debt and a hollowing out of the manufacturing sector, which together helped make the US the "sick man of the globe", as one senior corporate economist.

For their part, GM, Ford and Chrysler simultaneously focused most of their energies on producing comparatively profitable gas-guzzlers like SUVs while establishing financial services arms that quickly became responsible for a substantial share of their profits (in some years upwards of 90 percent of profits are so derived).

Their lending practises, it's worth noting, included the kinds of "liar" home loans, given out with little concern over the ability of borrowers to pay them, that precipitated the global economic crisis of 2007 till today.



Financialisation and history

None of these practises would have withstood the light of public scrutiny, and it was only the corporatisation - in good measure, financialization - of American politics that allowed them to flourish in the last thirty years. Few enterprises threaten that secrecy as much as WikiLeaks and its laser-like focus on openness, which is why its actions are viewed in Washington as "striking at the very heart of the global economy".

The "financialisation" of the economy represents the increasing dominance of the financial industries in the overall economy, taking over "the dominant economic, cultural, and political role in a national economy".

Crucially, this process isn't unique to the United States; it also happened to previous empires, like the Hapsburg's, Dutch and British empires, at precisely the eras they lost their dominant global position. In all cases, financialism and militarism went hand in hand, as first pointed out by the British historian John Hobson's famous 1902 book Imperialism: A Study.

In it, Hobson argued that the monopolisation of the financial sector created a new oligarchy that linked together the large banks and industrial firms together with "war mongers and speculators" which encouraged imperialism to secure markets for the surplus products produced by corporations.

America's rise to global dominance came after the end of the imperial era and so it couldn't blatantly conquer territory to create new markets. But at the moment of its rise policy makers called on the government to use high military spending to ensure overall robust economic growth.

This coincided with rapid expansion of easily obtainable credit, creating two "giant black holes" (in the words of Israeli economists Shimshon Bichler and Jonathan Nitzan) whose potential for expansion was limited only by the willingness of citizens to support the policies that enabled them, despite the long term harm to the economic and political well-being of their societies.

During the first thirty years of the Cold War era, the propensity towards militarism was balanced by the robust manufacturing economy and the tripartite business-labour-government relationship that secured it.

This began to change in the 1970s, when the hugely expensive, and profitable, Vietnam War began to wind down.

As Nitzan and Bichler describe in their hugely important book, The Global Political Economy of Israel, beginning in this period "there was a growing convergence of interests between the world's leading petroleum and armament corporations. The politicisation of oil, together with the parallel commercialisation of arms exports, helped shape an uneasy weapondollar-petrodollar coalition between these companies."

What is most crucial about Nitzan and Bichler's analysis is that one of the most important ways that the arms and oil industries were able to earn a disproportionate (as they describe it, "differential") level of profits was through the regular eruption of Middle Eastern energy conflicts, which ensured both relative high oil prices and arms purchases.



McDonald's and McDonnell Douglas

As this process developed, the authors explain that "the lines separating state from capital, foreign policy from corporate strategy, and territorial conquest from differential profit, no longer seem very solid."

New York Times columnist Thomas Friedman puts it more colourfully: "The hidden hand of the market will never work without the hidden fist. McDonald's cannot flourish without McDonnell Douglas - and the hidden fist that keeps the world safe for Silicon Valley's technologies to flourish is called the US Army, Air Force, Navy, and Marine Corps."

This is the "neocorporatism" that Assange and his WikiLeaks comrades have zeroed in on, although today, more than a decade after Friedman wrote the above words, Master Card is more relevant than McDonald's.

The problem is that WikiLeaks alone cannot turn the tide in this conflict.

Assange might well be a "high tech terrorist," as US Vice President Joseph Biden recently called him, given how much terror his actions have struck in the heart of the American political system.

But the US is ultimately only one of a group of powerful countries and corporations whose leaders all share a fundamental commitment to securing as much profit and power as possible for themselves, however much their methods and politics differ.

Indeed, a sober look at the relevant data reveals that the profit share of the financial sectors outside the US has almost always been significantly higher than in the US, meaning that the rest of the world has long been more "financialised" than has the US economy.

As always, capitalism and power have never been as conveniently centred in one country or region as people imagine.

To really have an impact, WikiLeaks needs to inspire a whole generation of leakers in other countries and cultures, who are as willing to risk their freedom as Assange and the other people behind WikiLeaks. The leak culture has started to take root, however only time will tell if it resists the forces working against it's development.

If this doesn't happen - if Assange and his comrades are successfully made into examples by their corporate and political enemies that scare off those who might be inspired by their example - Capital will likely win the world's first "cyber-war", much as it's won most every war before it during modernity's long, bloody and unimaginably profitable history.



 04 January 2011