truthdig | What is happening in Egypt is a precursor to a wider global war
between the world’s elites and the world’s poor, a war caused by
diminishing resources, chronic unemployment and underemployment,
overpopulation, declining crop yields caused by climate change, and
rising food prices. Thirty-three percent of Egypt’s 80 million people
are 14 or younger, and millions live under or just above the poverty
line, which the World Bank sets at a daily income of $2 in that nation.
The poor in Egypt spend more than half their income on food—often food
that has little nutritional value. An estimated 13.7 million Egyptians,
or 17 percent of the population, suffered from food insecurity in 2011,
compared with 14 percent in 2009, according to a report by the U.N.
World Food Program and the Egyptian Central Agency for Public
Mobilization and Statistics (CAPMAS). Malnutrition is endemic among poor
children, with 31 percent under 5 years old stunted in growth.
Illiteracy runs at more than 70 percent.
In “Les Misérables” Victor Hugo described war with the poor as one
between the “egoists” and the “outcasts.” The egoists, Hugo wrote, had
“the bemusement of prosperity, which blunts the sense, the fear of
suffering which is some cases goes so far as to hate all sufferers, and
unshakable complacency, the ego so inflated that is stifles the soul.”
The outcasts, who were ignored until their persecution and deprivation
morphed into violence, had “greed and envy, resentment at the happiness
of others, the turmoil of the human element in search of personal
fulfillment, hearts filled with fog, misery, needs, and fatalism, and
simple, impure ignorance.”
The belief systems the oppressed embrace can be intolerant, but these
belief systems are a response to the injustice, state violence and
cruelty inflicted on them by the global elites. Our enemy is not radical
Islam. It is global capitalism. It is a world where the wretched of the
earth are forced to bow before the dictates of the marketplace, where
children go hungry as global corporate elites siphon away the world’s
wealth and natural resources and where our troops and U.S.-backed
militaries carry out massacres on city streets. Egypt offers a window
into the coming dystopia. The wars of survival will mark the final stage
of human habitation of the planet. And if you want to know what they
will look like, visit any city morgue in Cairo.
0 comments:
Post a Comment