I went to see a documentary tonight called 'The end of Poverty'. The film portrayed the consequences of 500 years of colonialism on third world countries throughout the world. (A two minute video preview):
linkThe presentation makes a strong case that the worst of the poverty has been created and maintained by a system of dependancy. Created by European and American interests over hundreds of years, maintained by perpetual debt crisis, raw material trade, and recently forced privatization of public resources by the neoliberalism movement. The film portrays the trap of unrepayable third world debt, corporate greed, and extreme poverty and desperation that has occured as a result of these forced policies.
The film urges the end to private ownership and the return to economies of 'the common'. Shared resource use, local planning and local development, and a reduction in the demands that first world nations are putting on resource extraction from these regions. The film makes a case for the concept of 'sustainable retreat', to end economic growth as a social goal and return societies all over the world back to sustainable levels.
While I loved the film, and thought it was well planned and researched, I felt that it only showed one side of issues. The other side of the story, from the 'supply sider's' the 'free market advocates' and other 'bad guys' were not given a voice in this film. Its hard not to be critical of this flaw. Its hard to believe in the conclusions when only one side of the story has been presented.
All in all, as much as I believe in the necessity for 'sustainable retreat', relocalization and the like, I still think we are going to have to go through a collapse and much strife before this is obtainable, if ever. Those in power and control will not relinguish their lifestyles without a fight. I believe this will be a messy fight as this ideology winds down.