Privatization Nightmare: Five Public Services That Should Never Be Handed Over to Greedy Corporations

The justification for privatization is the old argument that private companies do everything better and more “efficiently” than government, and will find ways to cut costs.  Over and over we hear that companies do everything for less cost than government. . . When government does something they don’t have to pay millions to someone at the top.

Private Not Public Interest

There is a fundamental conflict of interest between public and private. When things are privatized of course profit comes first, not public interest.  Public functions are supposed to serve the public, us, We, the People.  The ‘private’ in ‘privatization’ means that it is done for the private gain of a few.  When a public function is privatized it means that instead of operating for the benefit of We, the People – the 99% – it is operated for the benefit of a few – the 1%.

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Dorli Rainey, 84-Year-Old Occupy Seattle Protester, Pepper Sprayed In The Face

Dorli Rainey, the 84-year-old, pictured in the photo [above], has been an activist since the 1960s and even ran for mayor of Seattle in 2009, according to the Atlantic Wire. . . Rainey was among a group of Seattle protesters scattered by police on Tuesday. A pregnant 19-year-old woman was also reportedly hit by pepper spray Tuesday, The Associated Press reported, though police haven’t confirmed the incident. . . A priest was also among those pepper sprayed during the protesters’ march from their camp at Seattle Central Community College to Westlake Park, according to the Seattle Post-Intelligencer. Police officers on bicycles attempted to block the protesters’ way. After tensions mounted, the police used pepper spray to disperse the crowd.

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Alec Baldwin: What Occupy Wall Street Has Taught Me

Maintaining US corporate profitability is the single goal of this Congress. Because that is what the corporations who own the Congress paid for when they bought the Congress. . . Occupy Wall Street people understand that not only are more difficult times possibly around the corner, they know that the current government will likely do as it has historically done, which is to protect the rich and powerful at the expense of the long term interests of the middle class. Some of the most financially successful people in America continually remind us all that capitalism is a contest. There are winners and losers. And the winners want to enjoy their success and they want the losers to keep it down. The noise of the vanquished is spoiling the victors’ fun.

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Arundhati Roy: Occupy Wall Street is “So Important Because It is in the Heart of Empire”

Renowned Indian writer and global justice activist Arundhati Roy is preparing to address Occupy Wall Street on Wednesday. She recently joined us in the studio to talk about the Occupy movement. “What they are doing becomes so important because it is in the heart of empire, or what used to be empire,” Roy said. “And to criticize and to protest against the model that the rest of the world is aspiring to is a very important and a very serious business. So…it makes me very, very hopeful that after a long time you’re seeing some nascent political, real political anger here.” She also discussed her new book, “Walking with the Comrades,” a chronicle of her time in the forests of India alongside rebel guerrillas who are resisting a brutal military campaign by the Indian government.

Watch interview video here . . . 

The struggle at the heart of our history

Under feudalism, peasants were forced to hand over a portion of their crops to the lord–or they were obligated to work part of the time on the lord’s land. Under capitalism, the class relationship is disguised by the fact that there is a “free” exchange of goods on the market. Nevertheless, a handful of large corporations owns the means of production, and the vast majority of people are deprived of those means. Workers are therefore compelled (not by the whip, but by the economic whip of survival) to sell their ability to work–their labor power–to the bosses.

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