[NYTr] The Fires of Capitalism
All the News That Doesn't Fit
nytr at blythe-systems.com
Tue Nov 20 14:40:54 EST 2007
Workers World - Nov 22, 2007 issue
http://www.workers.org/2007/editorials/fires-1122
EDITORIAL
The fires of capitalism
Critics of socialism often ignore examples like Cuba, which provides
adequate housing and free health care to every person living on the
island—despite the U.S. blockade that has cost its economy so much.
However, an example of what can happen to the people of a country where
socialist planning and institutions have been destroyed by a
counter-revolution can be gleaned from a Nov. 7 New York Times article,
originally entitled “Deadly fires reveal flaws in Russia’s resurgence,”
but later renamed “Deadly fires expose disorder in [Russian President]
Putin’s Russia.”
Describing one of many recent tragedies, the article reports: “The
fast-moving fire on Oct. 2, and the grotesque panorama of desperation,
injury and death that accompanied it, underscored the enduring disorder
beneath Russia’s partial revival.”
In that fire, at the private Moscow Institute of Government and
Corporate Management, many students and workers jumped out of windows
after finding that the doors to the fire exits were locked. Both fire
trucks and medical vehicles arrived late. Eleven people have died,
while 30 remain hospitalized.
Fires caused the deaths of more than 17,000 people in Russia in 2006.
Adjusting for population, that puts its fire death rate at more than 10
times the rates of Western Europe and the United States. This year, the
number of dead hover around 40 a day.
Factors cited by the Times in the death toll include “aging electrical
and heating systems in public housing and rural homes; dilapidated
firefighting equipment; and widespread violations of safety codes. ...
Traffic-clogged roads—caused by soaring rates of automobile ownership
and uneven urban planning—have slowed fire engine response times.”
Later, the article admits: “Effective fire prevention and firefighting
have been problems in Russia since the Soviet Union’s collapse.” That
collapse was a boon for would-be capitalists in Russia and for the
transnational corporations that quickly moved in to exploit its
resources. The number of wealthy has soared. But it was a disaster for
the working people, the ones who live in public housing and rural homes.
The example of Russia only highlights the dangers that capitalism—an
economic and social system that has profit as its ultimate goal—can
bestow on working and oppressed people.
Meanwhile, an economy and social system that is planned with the goal
of human well-being in mind—a socialist system—can prevent unnecessary
suffering and harm. Cuba proves this every hurricane season, when it
manages to evacuate almost everyone to safety while, in neighboring
countries, the death toll soars. It’s why so many are looking now to
socialism as the solution to capitalist oppression and chaos.
Articles copyright 1995-2007 Workers World. Verbatim copying and
distribution of this entire article is permitted in any medium without
royalty provided this notice is preserved.
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