Profit
Maximization is Easy: Invest in Violence
By Robert
J. Burrowes
September
08, 2017 "Information
Clearing House"
- For those of us committed to systematically
reducing and, one day, ending human violence, it
is vital to understand what is causing and
driving it so that effective strategies can be
developed for dealing with violence in its
myriad contexts. For an understanding of the
fundamental cause of violence, see
‘Why
Violence?’
However,
while we can tackle violence at its source by
each of us making and implementing
‘My Promise to
Children’,
the widespread violence in our world is
driven by just one factor: fear or, more
accurately, terror. And I am not talking about
jihadist terror or even the terror caused by US
warmaking. Let me explain, starting from the
beginning.
The person
who is fearless has no use for violence and has
no trouble achieving their goals, including
their own defence, without it. But fearlessness
is a state that few humans would claim. Hence
violence is rampant.
Moreover,
once someone is afraid, they will be less likely
to perceive the truth behind the delusions with
which they are presented. They will also be less
able to access and rely on other mental
functions, such as conscience and intelligence,
to decide their course of action in any context.
Worse still, the range of their possible
responses to perceived threats will be extremely
limited. And they will be more easily mobilised
to support or even participate in violence, in
the delusional belief that this will make them
safe.
For
reasons such as these, it is useful for
political and corporate elites to keep us in a
state of fear: social control is much easier in
this context. But so is profit maximization. And
the most profitable enterprise on the planet is
violence. In essence then: more violence leads
to more fear making it easier to gain greater
social control to inflict more violence…. And
starting early, by terrorizing children, is the
most efficient way to initiate and maintain this
cycle. See
‘Why
Violence?’
and
‘Fearless
Psychology and Fearful Psychology: Principles
and Practice’.
So, for
example, if you think the massive number of
police killings of innocent civilians in the
United States – see
‘Killed by Police’
and
‘The Counted: People killed by
police in the US’
– is a problem, you are not considering it from
the perspective of maintaining elite social
control and maximizing corporate profit. Police
killings of innocent civilians is just one
(necessary) part of the formula for maintaining
control and maximising profit.
This is
because if you want to make a lot of money in
this world, then killing or exploiting fellow
human beings and destroying the natural world
are the three most lucrative business
enterprises on the planet. And we are now very
good at it, as the record shows, with the
planetary death toll from violence and
exploitation now well over 100,000 human beings
each day, 200 species driven to extinction each
day and ecological destruction so advanced that
the end of all life (not just human life) on
Earth is postulated to occur within decades, if
not sooner, depending on the scenario. See, for
example,
‘The End of
Being: Abrupt Climate Change One of Many
Ecological Crises Threatening to Collapse the
Biosphere’.
So what
forms does this violence take? Here is a daily
accounting.
Corporate
capitalist control of national economies, held
in place by military violence, kills vast
numbers of people (nearly one million each week)
by starving them to death in Africa, Asia and
Central/South America. This is because this
‘economic’ system is designed and managed to
allocate resources for military weapons and
corporate profits for the wealthy, instead of
resources for living.
Wars kill,
wound and incapacitate a substantial number of
civilians, mostly women and children, as do
genocidal assaults, on a daily basis, in
countries all over the planet. Wars also kill
some soldiers and mercenaries.
Apart from
those people we kill every day, we sell many
women and children into sexual slavery, we
kidnap children to terrorise them into becoming
child soldiers and force men, women and children
to work as slave labourers, in horrific
conditions, in fields and factories (and buy the
cheap products of their exploited labour as our
latest ‘bargain’).
We condemn
millions of people to live in poverty,
homelessness and misery, even in industrialized
countries where the refugees of
western-instigated wars and climate-destroying
policies are often treated with contempt. We
cause many children to be born with grotesque
genetic deformities because we use horrific
weapons, like those with depleted uranium, on
their parents. We also inflict violence on women
and children in many other forms, ranging from
‘ordinary’ domestic violence to genital
mutilation.
We ensnare
and imprison vast numbers of people in the
police-legal-prison complex. See
‘The Rule of Law: Unjust and
Violent’.
We pay the pharmaceutical industry and its
handmaiden, psychiatry, to destroy our minds
with drugs and electro-shocking. See
‘Defeating the Violence of
Psychiatry’.
We imprison vast numbers of children in school
in the delusional belief that this is good for
them. See
‘Do We Want School or Education?’
And we kill or otherwise exploit animals, mostly
for human consumption, in numbers so vast the
death toll is probably beyond calculation.
We also
engage in an endless assault on the Earth’s
biosphere. Apart from the phenomenal damage done
to the environment and climate by military
violence: we emit gases and pollutants to heat
and destroy the atmosphere and destroy its
oxygen content. We cut down and burn
rainforests. We cut down mangroves and woodlands
and pave grasslands. We poison the soil with
herbicides and pesticides. We pollute the
waterways and oceans with everything from carbon
and nitrogenous fertilizers to plastic, as well
as the radioactive contamination from Fukushima.
And delude ourselves that our token gestures to
remedy this destruction constitutes
‘conservation’.
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So if you
are seeking work, whether as a recent graduate
or long-term unemployed person, then the most
readily available form of work, where you will
undoubtedly be exploited as well, is a
government bureaucracy or large corporation that
inflicts violence on life itself. Whether it is
the military, the police, legal or prison
system, a weapons, fossil fuel, banking,
pharmaceutical, media, mining, agricultural,
logging, food or water corporation, a farm that
exploits animals or even a retail outlet that
sells poisonous, processed and often
genetically-mutilated substances under the label
‘food’ – see
‘Defeating the Violence in Our
Food and Medicine’
– you will have many options to help add to the
profits of those corporations and government
‘services’ that exist to inflict violence on
you, your family and every other living being
that shares this biosphere.
Tragically, genuinely ethical employment is a
rarity because most industries, even those that
seem benign like the education, finance,
information technology and electronics
industries, usually end up providing skilled
personnel, finance, services or components that
are used to inflict violence. And other
industries such as those in insurance and
superannuation, like the corporate banks,
usually invest in violence (such as the military
and fossil fuel industries): it is the most
profitable.
So while
many government bureaucracies and corporate
industries exist to inflict violence, in one
form or another, they can only do so because we
are too scared to insist on seeking out ethical
employment. In the end, we will take a job as a
teacher, corporate journalist or pharmaceutical
drug pusher, serve junk food, work in a bank,
join the police or military, work in the legal
system, assemble a weapons component... rather
than ask ourselves the frightening questions ‘Is
this nonviolent? Is this ethical? Does it
enhance life?’
And yes, I
know about structural violence and the way it
limits options and opportunities for those of
particular classes, races, genders.... But if
ordinary people like us don’t consider moral
issues and make moral choices, why should
governments and corporations?
Moral
choices? you might ask in confusion. In this day
and age? Well, it might seem old-fashioned but,
in fact, while most of us have been drawn along
by the events in our life to make choices based
on such considerations as self-interest,
personal gain and ‘financial security’, there is
a deeper path. Remember Gandhi? ‘True morality
consists not in following the beaten track, but
in finding the true path for ourselves, and
fearlessly following it.’
Strange
words they no doubt sound in this world where
our attention is endlessly taken by all of those
high-tech devices. But Gandhi’s words remind us
that there is something deeper in life that the
violence we have suffered throughout our lives
has taken from us. The courage to be ourselves
and to seek our own unique destiny.
Do you
have this courage? To be yourself, rather than a
cog in someone else’s machine? To refuse to
submit to the violence that surrounds and
overwhelms us on a daily basis?
If you are
inclined to ponder these questions, you might
also consider making moral choices that work
systematically to end the violence in our world:
consider participating in
‘The Flame Tree Project to Save
Life on Earth’,
signing the online pledge of
‘The People’s Charter to Create a
Nonviolent World’
and/or helping to develop and implement an
effective strategy to resist one or the other of
the many threats to our survival using the
strategic framework explained in
Nonviolent Campaign Strategy.
Of course,
these choices aren’t for everyone. As Gandhi
observed: ‘Cowards can never be moral.’
Biodata:
Robert J. Burrowes has a lifetime commitment to
understanding and ending human violence. He has
done extensive research since 1966 in an effort
to understand why human beings are violent and
has been a nonviolent activist since 1981. He is
the author of
‘Why Violence?’
His email address is
flametree@riseup.net
and his website is
here.