Le Monde diplomatique on Sun, 14 May 2000 19:06:30 +0200 (CEST) |
[Date Prev] [Date Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Date Index] [Thread Index]
<nettime> May 2000 |
Le Monde diplomatique ----------------------------------------------------- May 2000 UNITED STATES GOES GLOBAL The control of pleasure * by IGNACIO RAMONET How could it fail to fascinate us? The United States has powerful resources with which to excite our envy and enchant our hearts and minds. In political terms, it has the amiable countenance of an old and accommodating democracy, heir to a revolution of universal significance and a rich culture. For millions of oppressed people all over the world, its famous symbol - Liberty lighting the world - still represents a powerful message of hope and the promise of a better life. After emerging victorious from the cold war, the US went on to win the war in the Gulf and then in Kosovo, upholding humanitarian principles and countering authoritarian regimes or evil dictatorships on each occasion. Having reached this peak of military glory as the only remaining "hyperpower", it coolly dominates the world like no other country in history. What is more, the length of the current US cycle of growth seems to confirm that God really is on America's side. Did it not invent the internet and launch the new economy? Is it not the driving force behind globalisation? All over the world, people are following its example, adopting the latest management methods, legal systems, sales techniques, spin doctors and, of course, its fashions, stars and myths. US firms in every field - from Microsoft to Yahoo, Walt Disney or Monsanto - flaunt their intriguing success and continue their world conquest, backed by clever advertising campaigns. But whatever its admirers may think, it is hardly surprising that here and there, and above all in America itself (as we saw in Seattle last December and in Washington this April), people should be wondering about the meaning of this offensive. About the new face of the US empire. The power of its ideology. And its strategies of persuasion. <http://www.monde-diplomatique.fr/en/2000/05/02pleasure> Translated by Harry Forster The specialities of nowhere by RICK FANTASIA Original text in English Irresistible business schools by IBRAHIM WARDE Is the universal teaching of US-style management transforming schools into companies, students into customers and teachers into consultants? Translated by Harry Forster GENETIC TESTS AND HEALTH INSURANCE A future divided by DOROTHÉE BENOIT BROWAEYS and JEAN-CLAUDE KAPLAN On 6 April the US company Celera Genomics announced that it had decoded the 3bn characters making up the genome of each human being. This scientific breakthrough could in the near future lead to the development of treatments for such common illnesses as cancer, diabetes, cardio-vascular disease and the like. But there is also the prospect of enormous greed. On the pretext of inventing tomorrow's medicines, there is a temptation to patent genes, privatise them and use them for the wrong ends - as the case of the Axa insurance company showed last February. Before it was forced to back down under pressure from public opinion, it had decided to increase the monthly premiums paid by parents of handicapped children by 180%. Tomorrow, knowing the secrets of DNA could enable other insurers to select, eliminate or penalise their customers on the basis of genetic risk. So there is an urgent need for legislation to preserve the genome as the common property of humanity. Translated by Malcolm Greenwood In Europe and America * <http://www.monde-diplomatique.fr/en/2000/05/051geneticsbox> Translated by Malcolm Greenwood LEGACY OF UNJUST LAND DISTRIBUTION Zimbabwe in the grips of strife and uncertainty by CHRISTOPHE CHAMPIN Zimbabwe is going through an unprecedented crisis in the run-up to general elections that look risky for the ruling party. Now faced with a credible opposition, Robert Mugabe is doing all he can to hold on to power, violently attacking the few thousand white farmers who still hold the best land. But this strategy could permanently destabilise the country and is worrying its neighbours. Translated by Malcolm Greenwood CHALLENGE TO NEW LABOUR London's mayor versus Tony Blair by PHILIPPE MARLIÈRE Massimo D'Alema and Tony Blair - who both recently signed a document calling for a further shift to the free market by the European left - are currently going through a bad patch. D'Alema has had to resign as prime minister as a result of Italy's regional elections. Tony Blair is having to deal with setbacks on all sides since May's local elections - not least Ken Livingstone's victory as Mayor of London. This bitter pill for New Labour follows an unprecedented, and highly unpopular, display of authoritarianism. Translated by Ed Emery HOW TO SOLVE CULTURAL IDENTITY PROBLEMS Choose your own nation by YVES PLASSERAUD Throughout the world, ethnic entanglement is on the increase. In the Balkans, Northern Ireland, the Basque country, the Caucasus and Indonesia, conflicts involving ethnic minorities and minority rights appear to defy solution. The result is often a demand for secession, and the consequent proliferation of states creates instability and an endless chain of confrontations. But a look at European history shows other examples that could offer hope for the future. Translated by Barry Smerin REAPPRAISING BOURGUIBA Subversive mourning in Tunisia by KAMEL LABIDI Habib Bourguiba, former president of Tunisia, died on 6 April. Though his funeral was really an excuse to glorify his successor, President Zine al-Abidine Ben Ali, the genuine emotion that swept the country reflected more than just gratitude towards the man who led Tunisia to independence. It was also part of a reappraisal of his record - in particular on education and women's rights - which prompts a comparison with the current regime. Translated by Harry Forster GOOD FENCES MAKE GOOD NEIGHBOURS South Lebanon's border wars by HENRY LAURENS In April the UN Security Council welcomed Israel's decision to withdraw from south Lebanon. It stressed however - at Syria's insistence - the need to achieve a full, fair and lasting peace in the Middle East, based on UN Resolutions 242 and 338. Much remains unclear. How far will the Israeli troops withdraw? How will Hizbollah respond? What about its demands for the release of its men held in Israel and the return of seven villages in the disputed border territory? The danger of escalation cannot be ruled out. Translated by Barbara Wilson A COUNTRY REBUILT FROM ASHES AND MUD Starting over in East Timor by our special correspondent ROLAND-PIERRE PARINGAUX The campaign of terror launched last September, after 78.5% of East Timorese had voted for independence, was the last in a long chain of violence that has claimed 200,000 victims. This time it has left at least 1,000 dead. As a result of the scorched earth policy of army and militias, East Timor has been devastated. The local authorities and the UN's provisional administration (Untaet) are now trying to get the country back on its feet. Translated by Julie Stoker Calling in the judges * <http://www.monde-diplomatique.fr/en/2000/05/12timorbox> Translated by Julie Stoker THE ENDLESS UNDECLARED CIVIL WAR Why Colombia's guerrillas haven't made peace by our special correspondent MAURICE LEMOINE The long, entrenched struggle between the guerrillas and the authorities rolls on. Yet neither side wants to be seen as intransigent, the obstacle to peace. Translated by Derry Cook-Radmore BACK PAGE Woody's woeful women * by ALAIN BRASSART The Paris critics are more respectful of Woody Allen than American critics are. After all, since the New Wave, the French have grown used to seeing the director as 'sole creator' of a film (rather than part of a team including a scriptwriter, editor, producer) - always constructing the same film, essentially his own vision of the world. Perhaps this is why they are prepared to overlook the fact that Allen is an incurable misogynist. His latest, Sweet and Lowdown, reinforces the point. <http://www.monde-diplomatique.fr/en/2000/05/14woody> Translated by Barry Smerin English language editorial director: Wendy Kristianasen _________________________________________________________________ (*) Star-marked articles are available to every reader. Other articles are available to paid subscribers only. Yearly subscription fee: 24 US $ (Institutions 48 US $). ALL RIGHTS RESERVED - Le Monde diplomatique ______________________________________________________________ For more information on our English edition, please visit http://www.monde-diplomatique.fr/en/ To subscribe to our free "dispatch" mailing-list, send an (empty) e-mail to: dispatch-on@london.monde-diplomatique.fr To unsubscribe from this list, send an (empty) e-mail to: dispatch-off@london.monde-diplomatique.fr # distributed via <nettime>: no commercial use without permission # <nettime> is a moderated mailing list for net criticism, # collaborative text filtering and cultural politics of the nets # more info: majordomo@bbs.thing.net and "info nettime-l" in the msg body # archive: http://www.nettime.org contact: nettime@bbs.thing.net