From: glevy@PRATT.EDU
Date: Tue Aug 30 2005 - 08:07:29 EDT
+--------------------------------------------------------------------+ | George Caffentzis, "Jeffrey Sachs' <I>The End of Poverty</I>" | < http://info.interactivist.net/article.pl?sid=05/07/19/0242219 > +--------------------------------------------------------------------+ "Dr. Jeffrey Sachs’ The End of Poverty: A Political Review" George Caffentzis "At length the term-day, the fatal Martinmas, arrived, and violent measures of ejection were resorted to. A strong posse of peace-officers, sufficient to render all resistance vain, charged the inhabitants to depart by noon; and as they did not obey, the officers, in terms of their warrant, proceeded to unroof the cottages, and pull down the wretched doors and windows, — a summary and effectual mode of ejection, still practiced in some remote parts of Scotland, when a tenant proves refractory." — Sir Walter Scott, Guy Mannering or The Astrologer (1829) Neoliberal globalization entered into its first major crisis seven summers ago, with the so-called “Asian Financial Crisis.” Since then the ideological power of this form of capitalism has been slowly ebbing. The once attractive image of the creative powers of humanity finally being brought together in the process of globalization for the “general welfare” by borderless transfers of money, capital and labor at the speed of light now seems to be a nostalgic relic. Since 1997, along with the continuing economic crises and stagnation of Europe, South America, and Africa, neoliberal globalization has faced two major ideological reversals. The first reversal is associated with a city (Seattle) and the second with a date (September 11, 2001). This story continues at: <http://info.interactivist.net/article.pl?sid=05/07/19/0242219>
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