Wall St. Stands at the Pinnacle of 5,000 Years of Human Exploitation
As powerful as Wall Street appears to be, its abuse of power
has so eroded the economic, social, and environmental foundations of its own
existence that its fate is sealed.
In an earlier day, our rulers were kings and
emperors. Now they are corporate CEOs and hedge fund managers. Wall Street is
Empire’s most recent stage. Its reign will mark the end of the tragic drama of a
5,000 year Era of Empire.
Imperial historians would have us believe
that civilization, history, and human progress began with the consolidation of
dominator power in the first great empires that emerged some 5,000 years ago.
Much is made of their glorious accomplishments and heroic battles.
Rather less is said about the brutalization
of the slaves who built the great monuments, the racism, the suppression of
women, the conversion of free farmers into serfs or landless laborers, the
carnage of the battles, the hopes and lives destroyed by wave after wave of
invasion, the pillage and gratuitous devastation of the vanquished, and the lost
creative potential.
Nor is there mention that most all the
advances that make us truly human came before the Era of Empire—including the
domestication of plants and animals, food storage, and the arts of dance,
pottery, basket making, textile weaving, leather crafting, metallurgy,
architecture, town planning, boat building, highway construction, and oral
literature.
As the institutions of Empire took root,
humans turned from a reverence for the generative power of life to a reverence
for hierarchy and the power of the sword. The wisdom of the elder and the
priestess gave way to the arbitrary rule of often ruthless kings. Social
pathology became the norm and society’s creative energy focused on perfecting
the instruments of war and domination. Priority in the use of available
resources went to military, prisons, palaces, temples, and patronage.
Great civilizations were built and then swept
away in successive waves of violence and destruction. War, trade, and debt
served as weapons of the few to expropriate the means of livelihood of the many
and reduce them to slavery or serfdom. Whole empires were subjected to the
delusional hubris and debaucheries of psychopathic rulers.
If much of this sounds familiar, it is
because in the face of the democratic challenge, the dominator cultures and institutions of Empire simply morphedinto new fo rms.
The ideals of the American Revolution
heralded the possibilities of a new era of equality and popular democratic rule,
but it was a more modest beginning than we have been taught to believe. Once the
former colonies gained their freedom from British rule and declared themselves
the United States of America, their new leaders put aside the pronouncement of
the Declaration of Independence that all men are created equal and enjoy a
natural right to life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness—and set about
securing their own power.
The king was gone, but the Constitution they
drafted with a promise to “secure the Blessings of Liberty” for “We the People
of the United States” effectively limited political participation to white male
property owners and secured the return of escaped slaves to their designated
owners. Colonial expansion followed soon after as the new nation expropriated by
armed force all of the Native and Mexican lands between themselves and the
distant Pacific Ocean.
Global expansion beyond U.S. territorial
borders followed. The United States converted cooperative dictatorships into
client states by giving their ruling classes a choice between aligning
themselves with U.S. economic and political interests for a share in the booty
or being eliminated by assassination, foreign-financed internal rebellion, or
military invasion. Following World War II, when the classic forms of colonial
rule became unacceptable, international debt became a favored instrument for forcing
poorer nations to open to foreign corporate ownership and control.
Most of the economic, social, and
environmental pathologies of our time—including sexism, racism, economic
injustice, violence, and environmental destruction—originate in the institutions
of Empire. The resulting exploitation has reached the limits that the social
fabric and Earth’s natural systems will endure.
As powerful as Wall Street appears to be, its
abuse of power has so eroded the economic, social, and environmental foundations
of its own existence that its fate is sealed. We the People have a choice. We
can allow Wall Street to maintain its grip until it brings down the whole of
human civilization in irrevocable social and environmental collapse. Or we can
take control of our future and replace the Wall Street economy with the values and institutions of a New Economy comprised of
locally owned businesses devoted to serving their communities by investing in
the use of local resources to produce real goods and services responsive to
local needs.
Either way, Wall Street’s days are numbered.
Ours need not be.