I spent July 4th in Mountain View, California (I'm visiting head
office for two weeks). Apart from a very cool doodle on the
Google homepage and hearing some fireworks as I sat in my apartment, it
was just like any other weekend day I've spent in sleepy Mountain
View. The official day off is tomorrow, so nothing was closed or out of
the ordinary.
The name of the day got me thinking though. These days, the USA is no
more independent than most countries, in fact it (and most other countries) are far more dependent now than ever before. So I am declaring July 5th to be
Dependence day.
On this day we can celebrate (well maybe just acknowledge) our
dependencies. First off, our dependence on brutal governments around
the world to keep their people living in poverty and unimaginable
pollution while selling us oil and raw materials at knock-down prices
(hello Nigeria). And
on countries that are exporting minerals stolen from their neighbour,
mined by children and slaves, with all the care and humanity you would
expect from such operations (Congolese
coltan in your mobile phone).
We should also acknowledge the governments that make sure their
workers cannot meaningfully organise for better pay and conditions. Like China, where any unions are run by the company and the state and not the workers.
This
article about a recent strike indicates that things may be changing
but it includes this gem near the bottom
Many workers are asking for independent collective
representation. Unions in China are usually funded by companies,
staffed by management and answerable to the Communist party. During an
earlier strike at the Honda plant in Zhongshan, union representatives
fought workers, injuring two of them.
That sure is a militant union.
Without this setup we couldn't possibly have DVD players for €20
and other electronic devices that are cheaper to replace than to repair (e-waste is itself a massive
problem, I'm not sure if ifixit.com is really the answer but
fair play to them for trying). And of course all the cheap plasticky crap that we don't really need or want but end up with anyway. Stuff that may eventually make its way to the North Pacific Gyre and from there perhaps into the stomach of a soon-to-die albatross chick
As well as material dependence there is psychological
dependence. Living in Ireland, I get to be relatively happy with my
government's record on human rights and such-like. I'm not too happy
with the US military planes landing at Shannon on their way to Iraq but
we have a foreign minister that has attempted to visit Gaza and many
TDs (in and out of government) who speak out against Israel's
occupation and other issues. I get to rail against the US, UK,
French etc. governments for their part in the exploitation of various
people and places. If I don't think too hard about the origin of the
things I buy, the power I use and the forces that keep the whole
modern world ticking over, I can keep my conscience clean most of the
time and I really couldn't do that without those foreign governments or for that matter the Irish government. Although it isn't directly involved, my government happily lies down with those who are, while only making a fuss about the more obvious bad-actors.
Happy Dependence day everyone.
Post Script
After writing all this I did a Google search for "dependence
day", figuring someone had probably beaten me to all of this. I
was half right. On the first page at least, all I could find was various right-wingers decrying the lack of independence within the US, the "over-reaching", "over-regulating" "nanny state", the dependence on health care and how the
founders would be sick if they could see us now, blah blah. The usual
libertarian guff. It makes me think of this
video. So while I doubt this is really an original thought, it doesn't seem to be a common one.