The era in which "advanced societies" addressed the flaws of capitalism with policies that narrowed the gap between what the wealthy class provided and what people needed is coming to an end.
These societies, including our own, are now under enormous pressure to forego these policies and unleash corporations from any government restraints at a time when most of the world's wealth is already in the hands of a few with the predictable results that billions are living in extreme poverty.
Because of the centuries-old, worldwide system of patriarchy, the burden of eking out a living in desperate circumstances falls heavily on the shoulders of women. The United Nations has found that women do 2/3 of the world's work, but receive only 10% of the world's income and constitute only 1% of the world's property owners.
Apologist for a Post-Feudal System
The beliefs that many of today's Republicans, the neo-cons with their global enrich-the-rich scheme, those Tea Partiers who wrap their political agenda in religious theology, wealthy individuals like Grover Norquist and the Koch brothers are drawn from the writings of an eighteenth-century figure, Adam Smith, author of The Wealth of Nations and, by all accounts, "the patron saint of modern economists."
In Adam's Fallacy , Duncan Foley, a professor of economics at the New School for Social Research, critiques Smith's theories. Smith was basically a moral philosopher so he makes the argument for capitalism based on those terms. As Foley puts it, Smith set forth "the apparently self-contradictory notion that capitalism transforms selfishness into its opposite: regard and service for others. Thus by being selfish within the rules of capitalist property relations, we are actually being good to our fellow human beings."
This belief was echoed recently in the words of David Koch, the sugar daddy for the Tea Party, a number of governors as well as members of Congress including our own Scott Brown, who had this to say about his wealth: "I believe my business and non-profit investments are much more beneficial to societal well-being than sending more money to Washington."
However, as Foley points out, "The psychological failing of Smith's (and, by extension, Koch's) rationalization is that it requires a strategy of wholesale denial of the real consequences of capitalist development, particularly the systematic imposition of costs on those least able to bear them, and the implacable reproduction of inequalities that divide people one from another in society."
As a consequence, over the last century, governments in "advanced societies" regulated working hours, for example, and established minimum pay and vacation time, oversaw working conditions, provided compensation for injury or sickness incurred on the job, guaranteed retirement and unemployment benefits, set up product and food safety watch dogs, instituted universal health care, funded education, and so forth.
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