“Any sort of slowing in the health system has dire consequences,” Lindmark said.
“Any sort of slowing in the health system has dire consequences,” Lindmark said.
The COVID-19 pandemic is now moving at a speed that the world had not anticipated. It is difficult to predict the likely course of the COVID-19 pandemic. It is a completely new virus. This crisis has illustrated, so clearly and painfully, some of the weaknesses in the fabric of our capitalist society that the Socialist Party has passionately trying to focus our fellow-workers’ attention on. To many socialist ideas do not look so bad now.
Wartime profiteering is has been as common as war itself. Merchants and traders line their pockets by controlling the supply and jacking up the prices of various goods. We now have a new breed of parasites, the pandemic profiteers. Corporate CEOs are shoving aside millions of workers, small businesses, poor people, students, the non–profits, farmers, cities and all other devastated victims of the COVID-19 crisis, for a massive government bailout rescue. Boeing, already disgraced for putting its profits before peoples safety, has its lobbyists pleading for $60 billion.
Republican lawmakers claim there’s a portion of the bill that incentivizes Americans not to work since the relief package could potentially give them more money than their normal incomes. No such worries when it comes to Big Business lodging their claims for compensation. One reporter remarked “I apologize — I don’t know how to ask this without sounding like I’m being a smart ass, and I’m not. But do you understand how bad the optics are to have probably the wealthiest person in the Senate potentially holding up this bill for a couple hundreds bucks for some of the poorest people in this country?”
Wall Street and employers are crippled by employees’ staying home, so now their rallying call is “We have to get back to work” despite the medical advice of the experts. Let us risk and sacrifice our lives for the health of the stock-market and the well-being of the industrial barons and billionaires.
It has been reported that some companies are now charging $7 for protective masks that typically cost less than $1. None of this should be surprising coming from executives who question whether curing disease is a “sustainable business model,” nor should it be surprising within a system that continually seeks profit maximisation despite deadly circumstances.
Capitalists’ consistent push for profits is now coming home to roost, as manifesting in staff shortages during this crisis caused by earlier austerity cuts.
Much concern has been shown about the shortage of ventilators to assist patients breathing. Industry is organised to benefit a wealthy minority of capitalists and previously has been unable to respond to the needs of people. Yet it is now being demonstrated that manufacturers can re-tool their machinery and produce the necessary equipment.
The COVID-19 pandemic is magnifying capitalism’s complete inability to foster overall health and well being. We don’t just need a new healthcare system, but a new economic system altogether.We simply cannot accept these for-profit parasites producing the vaccines, surgical masks, ventilators, and disinfectants needed to battle this pandemic for any longer. We have an economic system based on profits, but right now, we need to mobilize all of production and healthcare for the purposes of saving people’s lives. Even though it can achieve this capitalism has shown itself incapable of doing that. We need a healthcare system run democratically by doctors, nurses, employees, and patients. This would be drastically different from the current system in which wealthy capitalists make the major decisions in hospitals, pharmaceutical companies, medical equipment manufacturing firms, and insurance companies. We need a system where healthcare is not a means to make money.
We need an economic system that puts health and survival over profit maximisation. Socialism would allow for all production to be organized in a planned economy under workers’ control, so that resources could be better allocated and the creative and scientific energy of people could be used productively for the benefit of all of us. Our healthcare system has revealed its failings. Capitalism will never give us what we need. We not only need a new healthcare system, but a new economic system that values life over profit. Let’s have courage, work together, and help each other get through this the best we can. But, when we are able, let us change our society and the way we are expected to live. We are experiencing a growing awareness of what it means to be a citizen of the world and at a little closer to home, being part of a community with our family, our friends, our neighbours and our co-workers. We are learning how to better conserve, to be more self-sufficient, to share. We are re–evaluating what really matters in our life. We have an opportunity to adopt new behaviours and learn and practice new skills, nurturing them. It can be argued that we better understand the urgency of what we are facing regarding the climate crisis.
Do we want our children, or our children’s children and beyond, to look back at this point in history and wonder why we all didn’t change our priorities and choose to act more responsibly. We need to dis-empower the looting class; stop their incessant propaganda, PR and advertising.
In the UK, some farming leaders have called for a “land army” of workers to replace a shortfall of workers that could reach 80,000, according to one estimate, if the 60,000 seasonal workers recruited from abroad in normal years are prevented from coming, and if some British workers fall ill.
https://www.theguardian.com/global-development/2020/mar/26/coronavirus-measures-could-cause-global-food-shortage-un-warns
Mike Schauerte
https://www.wspus.org/2020/03/william-morris-and-the-treasures-of-early-socialism/
Millions of other daily-wage earners are in a similar situation. Millions of other Indians also earn money as street traders – people who own small businesses and employ people like themselves.
Several state governments, from Uttar Pradesh in the north to Kerala in the south have promised direct cash transfers into the accounts of workers like Kumar. Modi’s government has also promised to help daily-wage earners affected by the lockdown. But there are logistical challenges.
‘One touch of nature makes the whole world kin’ –. Shakespeare, Troilus and Cressida
We are in strange and unsettling days. COVID-19 has upset normal life and no-one knows exactly how long the outbreak or its ramifications will last. Isn’t there a message of hope for the world? Of course, there is, especially for those who have eyes to see and ears to hear. What matters most of all is to stay safe. This cannot be done unless we cooperate with one another. That is the lesson everyone has to learn.
Crises such as the current COVID-19 pandemic opens up opportunities for change by making it more and more obvious the need for mutual aid and cooperation. Each day we witness signs of solidarity. For sure, emergencies may trigger selfish actions, where the right has staked out their nationalist vision, turning others into the enemy but such responses are thankfully rare. Capitalism is a great promoter of individual rights: the right to own, to sell, to keep, to have. Yet it cannot meet the needs of the people. capitalism is also a virus, and it has infected every aspect of our daily lives.
“Germany is home to one of the most modern, richest and most powerful health-care systems in the world,” reports Der Spiegel. “The coronavirus is mercilessly exposing the problems that have been burdening the German health-care system for years: the pitfalls of profit-driven hospital financing. The pressure to cut spending. The chronic shortage of nursing staff. The often poor equipping of public health departments.”
As the media headline those individuals who are hoarding toilet paper and hand sanitiser, the real hoarders are the pharmaceutical corporations who view this pandemic as a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to make massive profits from the desperate. Over the past few weeks, investment bankers have been candid on investor calls and during health care conferences about the opportunity to raise drug prices.
Steve Collis, president and chief executive of AmerisourceBergen, noted that his company has been actively involved in efforts to push back against political demands to limit the price of pharmaceutical products.
Johanna Mercier, executive vice president of Gilead, explains, “Commercial opportunity might come if this becomes a seasonal disease or stockpiling comes into play…”
Worldwide corporate cash reserves topped $12 trillion in 2017, more than the foreign exchange reserves of the world’s central governments, yet transnational corporations cannot find enough opportunities to profitably reinvest their profits.
We need to re–imagine everything. After all, we have just re-learned that we coexists communities, not as isolated individuals. We hope that this pandemic develops into a popular global movement for a total reconstruction of the system. Surely, it is easier to imagine socialism in the midst of the effects of COVID-19, than it is to continue to live under the heartless regime of capitalism. It is easy enough to fall into a state of doom and gloom about the future of the world as the COVID-19 spreads, but we witness strong social solidarity making sure that society goes on functioning. If humanity held the illusion that it was in control of its destiny, COVID-19 has now taught us differently. What we can’t control shouldn’t stop us from believing we are helpless when it comes to those things we can. This may be the eureka moment for everyone out there.
“It’s almost always a human behaviour that causes it and there will be more in the future unless we change,” said Cunningham. Markets butchering live wild animals from far and wide are the most obvious example, he said. A market in China is believed to have been the source of Covid-19. “The animals have been transported over large distances and are crammed together into cages. They are stressed and immunosuppressed and excreting whatever pathogens they have in them,” he said. “With people in large numbers in the market and in intimate contact with the body fluids of these animals, you have an ideal mixing bowl for [disease] emergence. If you wanted a scenario to maximise the chances of [transmission], I couldn’t think of a much better way of doing it.”
Aaron Bernstein, at the Harvard School of Public Health in the US, said the destruction of natural places drives wildlife to live close to people and that climate change was also forcing animals to move: “That creates an opportunity for pathogens to get into new hosts. We’ve had Sars, Mers, Covid-19, HIV. We need to see what nature is trying to tell us here. We need to recognise that we’re playing with fire,” he said. “The separation of health and environmental policy is a dangerous delusion. Our health entirely depends on the climate and the other organisms we share the planet with.”https://www.theguardian.com/world/2020/mar/25/coronavirus-nature-is-sending-us-a-message-says-un-environment-chief
About 11,000 former medics have also agreed to return to the health service and more than 24,000 final year student nurses and medics will join them.
Stephen Powis, NHS England medical director, said there had been “outbreaks of altruism” and he was “bowled over” by the medics returning to the front line and the response from volunteers.
Justice Secretary Robert Buckland said the virus posed an “acute” risk in prisons, many of which were overcrowded and faced staff shortages as officers self-isolated. So the government is considering the early release of some prisoners to relieve pressure caused by the outbreak.
https://www.bbc.com/news/uk-52029877