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Old May 31, 2003, 16:46   #61
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True, but for most it is an issue of give and take, other businesses still get custom. The collapse in Prague is due to the influence that the sheer presence of America has, in the wake there of the fall of the Soviet Union, but in other nations, it the mirages created by the wealth disparities.

The result is that in Prague, when I spoke to the manager in one rather posh restaurant, he said that having someone young in that restaurant was now a rarity. I did go a month after 9/11, so I'm not sure it was a backlash of acceptance of all things American, but that is in itself an accelerated example of a more general trend among some people in newly-globalised countries. There is of course another anti-US backlash, part of which forms the basis for many of the people that dislike that nation enough to want to hurt it.

In Britain, think about the rise of "townies" and "grebos" (modified skaters) in my town as a macrocosm of that. Brands like Adidas and Nike create a huge following, while some people reject it and listen to decent music. Others like me decide to be individuals and thus are disliked by practically all.

Starbucks rules!!! In more ways than one unfortunately.
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Old May 31, 2003, 16:47   #62
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Quote:
Originally posted by elijah
In a third world nation, one has an economically powerful nation, effectively extendign itself via corps into business there, mcdonalds etc, but especially the clothing companies, with the result that the local culture is simply overwhelmed.

Here, the economic effect of american culture is more limited, so we were less likely to be overwhelmed by it.
Cultures that do not put emphasis on education, competition, and progress are screwed today. Given the choice between living in air-conditioned apartments and a jungle hut, 99% of the people would choose the apartment. Not everyone will get ac apartments right away, but working in a clothing factory will get them there faster than staying in jungle huts.
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Old May 31, 2003, 16:50   #63
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"working in a clothing factory will get them there faster than staying in jungle huts"

£0.40 / day, 18 hour shifts, armed guards, no breaks, little prospect of promotion, kids as young as 6? I doubt it. The nations would be better off if they were able to develop their own economies, not have others thrust upon them.

"Cultures that do not put emphasis on education, competition, and progress are screwed today"

No they are merely different. Because we live in decadent cultures, surrounded by relative luxuries and mod cons, does not make cultures that dont have that any less valid, or indeed have anything less to contribute.
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Old May 31, 2003, 17:55   #64
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Quote:
Originally posted by elijah
No they are merely different. Because we live in decadent cultures, surrounded by relative luxuries and mod cons, does not make cultures that dont have that any less valid, or indeed have anything less to contribute.
Do you know what price our own societies paid to get to the living standard you enjoy today? The transition from agrarian to industrial society is always painful. British laborers had suffered far more and far longer than today's people in developing countries. What those people are experiencing now is what so many of your ancestors had suffered for almost 2 centuries prior to the beginning of the welfare state.

How do you think why Communism originated in England?

The people in third world countries have no choice here: agrarian societies are a thing of the past. There is no going back. Its productivity is too low to sustain their population. My question is really: can they make the transition quicker and less painful without the globalization?
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Old May 31, 2003, 17:57   #65
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Wait, if I remember correctly, Marx was German, and writing right before the 1848 revolutions, of which England saw none.
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Old May 31, 2003, 17:58   #66
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Quote:
Originally posted by elijah
"Cultures that do not put emphasis on education, competition, and progress are screwed today"

No they are merely different. Because we live in decadent cultures, surrounded by relative luxuries and mod cons, does not make cultures that dont have that any less valid, or indeed have anything less to contribute.
One more thing about culture: a culture that disregards the value of education is doomed to fail. Qualified people are the most important asset to any prosperous and strong societies. People with knowledge are most likely to make the best decisions for their lifes, their families, and their communities. Lack of education breeds ignorance, and ignorance can often lead to hate and extremism.
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Old May 31, 2003, 18:00   #67
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Quote:
Originally posted by GePap
Wait, if I remember correctly, Marx was German, and writing right before the 1848 revolutions, of which England saw none.
He wrote most of his Capital in England, along with his buddy Engels.

But you are right, too. Germany was also industrializing at the same time, workers's conditions there might be even more atrocious than in England.
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Old June 1, 2003, 17:24   #68
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"Of course cultural dominance is wrong, and that is the point of my argument, it should be augmentation, not annihilation!"

Show me a country's culture that has been annihilated.
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Old June 1, 2003, 17:48   #69
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Yes, of course they are a bit selfish...but it's funny that they get punished/criticized for trying to look after their own interests, when that's exactly what the USA does every now and then (in purely economic terms, in this case).

Too bad that's how globalization has started....and it looks like that's how it'll remain for a long time...
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Old June 1, 2003, 18:25   #70
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Quote:
Originally posted by elijah

£0.40 / day, 18 hour shifts, armed guards, no breaks, little prospect of promotion, kids as young as 6? I doubt it. The nations would be better off if they were able to develop their own economies, not have others thrust upon them.
...

First of all, those conditions that you describe are the absolute extreme worst, and are not representative of general conditions in those factories. Also keep in mind that most of these people took these jobs themselves. This implies that their only alternatives (e.g. - starving in overworked farmlands; toiling away in coal mines; picking used batteries at city dumps) are quite a lot worse.

And you say that "the nation would be better off" without foreign investment? Just like India before the 90's, China before the 80's, or North Korea today, no doubt.

Left alone, these nations simply have no local capital to invest, and the goods produced have no market, because these nations also have no middle class. Such a society would take several centuries to reach the level of the West (*if* things go along smoothly.) With foreign capital flowing in, the process is sped up. We have success stories galore - South Korea, Taiwan, Singapore, Hong Kong, and now - Shanghai and Bangalore. This gives other benefits as well - with thousands of Taiwanese merchants living in Shanghai, you can be sure that starting a war against Taiwan has become a much less attractive option for the Beijing government.

I'm sure you care about the living standards of people in the poorer nations, judging from your post. Great. Then we should eradicate most trade barriers immediately. That spares poorer nations centuries of groping in the dark, poverty, revolutions, and general mayhem.
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Old June 1, 2003, 18:33   #71
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Quote:
Originally posted by elijah

Agreed, and when one is living in a world where peoples of different cultures interact, and we as a culture are faced with a cultural treasure trove of different ways to do things, I think it is a good thing when both sides accept each other. Of course cultural dominance is wrong, and that is the point of my argument, it should be augmentation, not annihilation!
The problem here lies in definition. What is "augmentation" and what is "annihilation"? When the West picked up paper, the compass, and gunpowder from the Chinese, and astronomy, navigation and mathematics from the Arabs, was Western culture "annihilated" and replaced by a Sino-Arabic hybrid, or was it "augmented"?
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Old June 1, 2003, 18:41   #72
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Show me a country's culture that has been annihilated.
Ever hear of Native Americans?
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Old June 1, 2003, 18:44   #73
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Ever hear of Native Americans?
Ever hear of Wyoming or Colorado?

You go there and tell me if that culture is 'annihilated'.
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Old June 1, 2003, 18:58   #74
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I'm sure the Native American tribes would agree that their culture is thriving due to American expansion.
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Old June 1, 2003, 19:05   #75
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Enough of the threadjacking... I found this article on globalization from the Economic Policy Institute.
Quote:
How Should the Left Respond to Globalization

by Jeff Faux

Our relentless evolution toward a global economy will clearly require new institutions both to regulate unstable markets and to protect ordinary citizens from the brutalities of worldwide, dog-eat-dog capitalism. Eventually, like national economies, the global marketplace needs the equivalent of a central bank, securities regulation, enforceable labor and environmental rights, and the other institutions of modern social democracy.

But the social democratic left has little leverage at the level of global politics. So it is caught in a Catch-22: a global social democracy requires stronger international institutions. Stronger institutions increase the power of international capital, which further undercuts efforts at global social democracy. Rather, the left's leverage is in national politics. It is on that base that it must build its alternative program for the global economy.

Given this, the democratic left should not waste its time doing the work of the corporate right: decentralizing the organization charts of international agencies, creating new ones with more sophisticated powers, adding advisor committees of nongovernmental organizations, and so on. Instead, social democrats should concentrate on proposals that appeal to the needs of working people across borders, linking national and global economic questions in ways that build toward a social democratic vision of the global economy.

Here are three such proposals, in ascending order of difficulty:

1. Coordinated lowering of interest rates

It is a measure of the timidity of today's social democratic parties that there is little political agitation over high real interest rates in an era in which the core inflation threat is close to zero. High interest rates are a crushing burden on indebted developing economies, and they have made a major contribution to slow growth in Europe. Even in struggling Japan, signs of recovery are greeted by the central bank as a reason to raise the cost of money. As Federal Reserve Board head Alan Greenspan slows down the U.S. economy, it will be essential that Europe and Japan loosen monetary policy -- for their own economies and -- to maintain global momentum.

A parallel demand from progressives around around the world that central banks lower rates, would begin to challenge the hegemony of finance -- particularly the bond-holding class -- whose interests have been favored over poor debtors everywhere. Such campaigns also have the potential of creating alliances with the small- and medium-sized producers of goods and services in all countries, whose survival depends on cheap money.

2. Financial transactions tax, a.k.a. the "Tobin Tax"

The purpose of such a tax, whether applied domestically or internationally, is to slow down the destructive short-term, speculative movement of capital. It has the virtue of being easily understood, administered with minimal bureaucratic discretion, and already supported by many influential people around the world. Several years ago, for example, the government of Canada proposed a discussion of the Tobin Tax for the agenda of a G-7 meeting in Halifax. The U.S. Treasury quickly squashed the idea, although a domestic version was endorsed by the current secretary of the treasury, Larry Summers, a decade ago.

Social democrats around the world should campaign for a global transaction tax that would use the proceeds for long-term investment in education and health in poor countries. In the advanced nations, the left could also extend the idea into their own national economies, where financial speculation is a waste of scarce capital and a major driver of increasing inequality.

3. A "grand bargain" on social standards and development

Efforts to make labor rights and environmental standards part of international trade and finance agreements have been blocked by an alliance of multinational business and developing country elites. Some of the latter use globalization as a rationale for exploiting their own workers. Others are progressive nationalists opposed to ceding any more authority to Western-dominated global institutions. To overcome this resistance, the left
should propose a "grand bargain" between working people of developed and developing nations, in which the former would provide guaranteed commitments for long-term development aid, radical debt relief, and an enlarged developing world presence in the governance of international agencies. In return, the developing world would agree to enforceable labor rights and environmental standards -- appropriate to each nation's stage of development -- as part of international trade and financial agreements.

Because the United States is by far the most influential nation in these matters, one way to move forward would be to start close to home with a campaign by progressives in the three member countries of the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) for a North American version of the grand bargain. The proposal of the newly elected Mexican president, Vicente Fox, to expand NAFTA along the lines of the European Union provides a possible political opening for such a campaign. His specific call for open borders is a political nonstarter. But the United States and Canada could provide aid to Mexico, and relief some of the most onerous conditions of the original NAFTA imposed on Mexico, in exchange for a continent-wide system of enforceable labor rights and environmental standards. Such a positive proposal would put progressives in Canada, Mexico, and the United States in a posture of shaping the future rather than defending the past.



Jeff Faux is president and co-founder of the Economic Policy Institute in Washington, D.C.

[ POSTED TO VIEWPOINTS ON MARCH 6, 2001 ]
I know it's a bit old, but I think is relevant to this discussion. It talks about many concerns I have about globalization. Stereotypical lefties tend to dislike globalization, but this piece offers 3 interesting solutions to many of the problems I see with globalization. Overall, I think the movement to a global economy, etc, is a good thing; if we can ensure that we will have socially humane progress.
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Old June 1, 2003, 19:13   #76
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"Do you know what price our own societies paid to get to the living standard you enjoy today?"

Yes of course, but what I'm arguing is that poor working conditions and suffering is not essential to the industrialisation of a nation. While it may get it done faster, trampling on human rights is hardly a good way to go about it. It is not an either/or situation here.

Besides, why do we assume that they need to be or should be industrialised? Surely that is up to that culture to decide. Indeed, other cultures were getting on fine until we poked our noses in, imposing our values onto them. They work and are moral for us, but it is provincialist to assume that they will work for others. Provincialism seems to be a bit of a problem with the West at the moment.

" He wrote most of his Capital in England, along with his buddy Engels"

Communism (not Stalinism): One of Britains finest exports jk

"Show me a country's culture that has been annihilated"

Niger, Chad (to an extent), Buekino Faso, Sierra Lionne, Australia, America (the native Americans), etc etc. The cultures in some cases to exist to a tiny degree, like with native america, but they are not a credible cultural force, and destined to die out after a while as the populations dwindle, and the cultural values become less relevant in the face of a much more powerful culture.

" First of all, those conditions that you describe are the absolute extreme worst, and are not representative of general conditions in those factories. Also keep in mind that most of these people took these jobs themselves. This implies that their only alternatives (e.g. - starving in overworked farmlands; toiling away in coal mines; picking used batteries at city dumps) are quite a lot worse."

"Work for us or your children die" is hardly a good basis for recruiting and keeping workers, nor is it a particularly humane way of dealing with humans who dont happen to have financial power. They are still human, and human resources are human first, resources second.

"And you say that "the nation would be better off" without foreign investment?"

No, they would have been better off if we didnt stick our noses in in the first place. Now, we cant turn back the clock, so we should make the best of a bad situation and improve these peoples worker rights.

"The problem here lies in definition. What is "augmentation" and what is "annihilation"? When the West picked up paper, the compass, and gunpowder from the Chinese, and astronomy, navigation and mathematics from the Arabs, was Western culture "annihilated" and replaced by a Sino-Arabic hybrid, or was it "augmented"?"

Not at all, elements of Western culture changed, adapted to augment these new ideas. When an entire culture is exchanged with another, like for example, the Native American example or several cases in Africa, then that is erring to annihilation. It is true that a culture cannot be immediately annihilated, but in 200 years time, I doubt Native American culture will be existing.

"One more thing about culture: a culture that disregards the value of education is doomed to fail. Qualified people are the most important asset to any prosperous and strong societies. People with knowledge are most likely to make the best decisions for their lifes, their families, and their communities. Lack of education breeds ignorance, and ignorance can often lead to hate and extremism"

True to an extent, but does education have to mean schools, and western wisdom? One can be perfectly educated in the ways of ones own culture. Nonetheless, whether a culture can survive or not without education, or whether it can have a good economy, or whether it has certain other factors that make it "good" in the eyes of the West, does not make their culture any more subjective, and ours any more objective over theirs. We are simply in a case of two equally valid cultures.
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Old June 1, 2003, 19:16   #77
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elijah, could you please use the quote function when responding to people? It makes your posts much easier to read.
thanks

ps. just in case u don't know, you just put "quote" and "/quote" in brackets "[]" before and after your quoted text.
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Old June 1, 2003, 19:32   #78
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I'm sure the Native American tribes would agree that their culture is thriving due to American expansion.
You said they were annihilated. They don't have to be thriving to not be annihilated, Sava.
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Old June 1, 2003, 19:34   #79
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The culture, as it existed before Europeans came to the America, was annhilated. What survived is very different from what existed.
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Old June 1, 2003, 19:47   #80
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I think we mean "annihilated" for all intents and purposes. I will happily admit that it still exists for a tiny and decreasing minority of the population.

Quote:
elijah, could you please use the quote function when responding to people? It makes your posts much easier to read
Ah! Thanks, will try to use!! I was never much of a HTML coder
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Old June 1, 2003, 20:10   #81
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The culture, as it existed before Europeans came to the America, was annhilated. What survived is very different from what existed.
And what has survived in Europe after finding the new world is very different than what existed as well. Will you next be claiming that British culture or Spanish culture was annihilated by this?
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Old June 1, 2003, 20:14   #82
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No, this matter is an issue of common sense really. The European example was a matter of evolution, whereas others are a matter of annihilation for all intents and purposes.
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Old June 1, 2003, 20:15   #83
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Originally posted by elijah
No, this matter is an issue of common sense really. The European example was a matter of evolution, whereas others are a matter of annihilation for all intents and purposes.
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Old June 1, 2003, 20:50   #84
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Quote:
Originally posted by elijah

" First of all, those conditions that you describe are the absolute extreme worst, and are not representative of general conditions in those factories. Also keep in mind that most of these people took these jobs themselves. This implies that their only alternatives (e.g. - starving in overworked farmlands; toiling away in coal mines; picking used batteries at city dumps) are quite a lot worse."

"Work for us or your children die" is hardly a good basis for recruiting and keeping workers, nor is it a particularly humane way of dealing with humans who dont happen to have financial power. They are still human, and human resources are human first, resources second.
"Work for us or your children die" is hardly the fault of MNC's. There are entire underclasses of people who really face that prospect due to existing conditions - either send your children to factories (where they most probably wouldn't die), or send them to coal mines (where they might die) or send them to overworked farms (where they will die).

In addition, with the capital flowing in, countries like China and India are building their own middle classes, so that future generations will never have to face the situation of "work for us or your children die".

Quote:
"And you say that "the nation would be better off" without foreign investment?"

No, they would have been better off if we didnt stick our noses in in the first place. Now, we cant turn back the clock, so we should make the best of a bad situation and improve these peoples worker rights.
If the industrialized world didn't "stick their noses in", places like Singapore, South Korea, and Taiwan would be little better than North Korea. Right now these places have living standards comparable to Europe.

Quote:
Not at all, elements of Western culture changed, adapted to augment these new ideas. When an entire culture is exchanged with another, like for example, the Native American example or several cases in Africa, then that is erring to annihilation. It is true that a culture cannot be immediately annihilated, but in 200 years time, I doubt Native American culture will be existing.
The annihilation of North American and African cultures are tragic - but it is hardly the result of globalization, since the annihilation of cultures has happened ever since human cultures began to interact. The influence of Western civilization on the cultures of other places due to economic and cultural globalization can be better compared to the influence of Asian cultures on Europe in the late Middle Ages - in other words, augmentation, not annihilation.
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Old June 2, 2003, 04:17   #85
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Quote:
Originally posted by elijah
No, this matter is an issue of common sense really. The European example was a matter of evolution, whereas others are a matter of annihilation for all intents and purposes.
Perhaps all cultures are destined to evolve towards a similar end-story? Middle-classes around the world appear to have very similar tastes - perhaps what we are seeing is not an "annihilation" but a growing convergence.
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Old June 2, 2003, 06:28   #86
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Quote:
Originally posted by Lord Merciless

How do you think why Communism originated in England?
Because at the time it was the only place that would tolerate Marx after he'd been run out of everywhere else that had the potential to pulblish his work?

I must say, I find it totally unreadable. It's seems more emotional than scientific, with lots of criticism of Capitalism but no concrete evidence to actually back up Marx's alternative ideas.

One thing I did pick up was that he preached unity, not revolution.
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Old June 2, 2003, 06:34   #87
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Quote:
Originally posted by Boddington's

Show me a country's culture that has been annihilated.
Carthage (to name but one of the ancient cultures), Scotland (how many crofters and clansman do you know?), Carib Indians, Armenia, Kurdistan, Tibet, etc, etc,etc.

Just because you can eat a Western version of these cuiisines doesn't mean the culture is alive and well at home.
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Old June 2, 2003, 06:36   #88
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Bring back stone age culture, the early death was the best bit
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Old June 2, 2003, 07:24   #89
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Progression happens, Cruddy. If a culture was strong enough, there'd be enough people to continue it (ie, see parts of Wales ....)
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Old June 2, 2003, 08:33   #90
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Anti-globalisation is in itself not selfish, but those bunch of turds trashing Geneva centre certainly are. (For those of you who don't know, I live and work here.) Fire-bombing shops is not acceptable behaviour, no matter what your cause is.

The military/police presence is amazing. There are tanks all over the place and they stop cars at roadblocks for searches (is this even legal without a search warrant - does anyone know?). I was stopped yesterday on my way to the recycling centre so I had lots of bottle, paper and grass in bin liners (I had just mowed the lawn). They went through the whole bloody lot, though I seriously doubt an anticapitalist protestor goes to the demonstration in a brand new BMW.....
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