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"The rich nations must surrender their power to a world parliament." - Another UK Opinion
Published in the Guardian 17th July 2001 ^ | Published in the Guardian 17th July 2001 | By George Monbiot.

Posted on 08/20/2002 4:19:34 PM PDT by vannrox

Let the People Rule the World



The rich nations must surrender their power to a world parliament.

By George Monbiot. Published in the Guardian 17th July 2001

The leaders of the free world present a glowing example to the rest of the planet. Of the eight men meeting in Genoa this week, one seized the presidency of his country after losing the election. Another is pursuing a genocidal war in an annexed republic. A third is facing allegations of corruption. A fourth, the summit's host, has been convicted of illegal party financing, bribery and false accounting, while his righthand man is on trial for consorting with the Mafia. Needless to say, the major theme of this week's summit is "promoting democracy".

But were the G8 nations governed by angels, they would still be incapable of promoting global democracy. These eight hungry men represent just 13% of the world's population. They were all elected to pursue domestic imperatives: their global role is simply a by- product of their national mandate. The decisions they make are haphazard and ephemeral. Last year, for example, the G8 leaders announced that they were "determined ... to achieve the goals of the Kyoto Protocol" limiting climate change and that they would "preserv[e] and strengthen the Anti-Ballistic Missile Treaty." One man is replaced and all is lost.

Similar problems delegitimise almost every global body. The World Bank and IMF, which apportion votes according to the money they receive, are governed by the countries in which they don't operate. The five permanent members of the United Nations security council, charged with maintaining world peace, also happen to be the world's five principal arms traders. The UN General Assembly represents governments rather than people: a poor nation of 900 million swings, in practice, less weight than a rich nation of 50 million. The G8 leaders know that the "global democracy" they are due to discuss is a sham, and they will do all they can to keep it that way.

There is, we are told by almost everyone, no alternative to the rule of finance and fear. Writing in the Guardian last week, Philippe Legrain, a former World Trade Organisation official, argued that "world elections to a world parliament" are not "realistic". "Sixty million Britons would not accept 1,300m Chinese outvoting them."

Mr Legrain has, unintentionally, presented the anti-globalisation movement with its central challenge. If those of us in the rich world who are protesting against the inordinate powers of the G8, the World Bank or the WTO are serious about overthrowing unaccountable power, then we must rise to his bait.

In 1937, George Orwell observed that "every revolutionary opinion draws part of its strength from a secret conviction that nothing can be changed." Bourgeois socialists, he charged, were prepared to demand the death of capitalism and the destruction of the British empire only because they knew that these things were unlikely to happen. "For, apart from any other consideration, the high standard of life we enjoy in England depends upon keeping a tight hold on the Empire ... in order that England may live in comparative comfort, a hundred million Indians must live on the verge of starvation -- an evil state of affairs, but you acquiesce in it every time you step into a taxi or eat a plate of strawberries and cream." The middle-class socialist, he insisted, "is perfectly ready to accept the products of Empire and to save his soul by sneering at the people who hold the Empire together".

Since then, empires have waxed and waned, but that basic economic formula holds true: we in the rich world live in comparative comfort only because of the inordinate power our governments wield, and the inordinate wealth which flows from that power. We acquiesce in this system every time we buy salad from a supermaket (grown with water stolen from Kenyan nomads) or step into a plane to the climate talks in Bonn. Accepting the need for global democracy means accepting the loss of our own nations' power to ensure that the world is run for our benefit. Are we ready for this, or is there lurking still some residual fear of the Yellow Peril, an age-old, long-imprinted urge towards paternalism?

Global democracy is meaningless unless ultimate power resides in a directly elected assembly. This means, of course, that a resident of Kensington would have no greater influence than a resident of Kinshasa. The Ethiopians would have the same number of representatives as the British (and rather more as their population increases). The people of China would, collectively, be 22 times as powerful as the people of the United Kingdom.

In a truly democratic world, the people's assembly would, unlike the European parliament, be sovereign. All other global bodies would report to it and act on its instructions. The UN, WTO and other bodies, if they survived at all, would be reduced to the status of the parliament's civil service. But, as the World Citizen Foundation has pointed out, to preserve local democracy its scope must be limited by subsidiarity. It could not interfere in strictly national decision-making, in other words, but would seek to do only what existing global bodies are attempting -- and failing -- to do today: resolving disputes, tackling global poverty, defending people from oppression and protecting the world's resources.

But it's not hard to see how a world parliament could bypass and undermine dictatorships. Just as proportional representation in European elections has encouraged us to start questioning our own, flawed system, genuine global democracy would highlight democratic deficits all over the world.

The danger, of course, is that the world parliament might make decisions we don't like very much. We may discover that people living in the world's most populous nations don't want to tackle global warming or to control nuclear weapons. But danger is what democracy is all about.

And it's hard, in truth, to imagine a people's assembly making a worse fist of these issues than the G8 and the warmongers of the security council. China has curbed its carbon dioxide emissions while energy use in the US has soared. Indeed, the only fair and lasting means of reducing CO2 (namely "contraction and convergence", which means working out how much pollution the planet can take, then allocating an equal pollution quota to everyone on earth) would surely be impossible to implement without a world parliament.

The very existence of a global assembly could help to resolve disputes: people often take up arms only because they have no other means of being heard. I suspect too that the World Bank and IMF, whose role is to police the debtors on behalf of the creditor nations, would disappear almost immediately. A democratic assembly would almost certainly replace them with something like Keynes's "International Clearing Union", which would force creditors as well as debtors to eliminate third world debt and improve the balance of trade.

But the democratisation which may or may not result in such changes cannot even be widely discussed until we, the new world order's prosperous dissidents, are prepared to take our arguments to their logical conclusion, and let go of the power our nations possess and the disproportionate wealth which flows from it. I hope that we, unlike Orwell's bourgeois socialists, are ready for this challenge. If not, we may as well as cancel our tickets to Genoa and stay at home eating strawberries and cream.



TOPICS: Business/Economy; Constitution/Conservatism; Crime/Corruption; Culture/Society; Editorial; Foreign Affairs; Government; News/Current Events; United Kingdom
KEYWORDS: 911; binladen; bomb; bush; gore; iran; iraq; opinion; taliban; terror; uk; wtc
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This guy... what a bone head.
1 posted on 08/20/2002 4:19:35 PM PDT by vannrox
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To: vannrox

Given this sophomoric IDIOT, the UK deserves what it has gotten:

The EU running it, and Islamic terrorists declaring that they will soon be domestically asserting themselves.

2 posted on 08/20/2002 4:27:44 PM PDT by Diogenesis
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To: vannrox
The rich nations must surrender their power to a world parliament.

It's not power they want as much as it is the wealth. The first act a world goverment would do is begin taxing the richer countries. Globalism = socialism.

3 posted on 08/20/2002 4:27:50 PM PDT by Reaganwuzthebest
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To: Diogenesis
He loooks French.
4 posted on 08/20/2002 4:30:57 PM PDT by RightWhale
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To: vannrox
"The rich nations must surrender their power to a world parliament."

Why? So they can become poor nations?

This guy is a serious idiot. Worse, he's an educated idiot who knows how to sound semi-plausible.

5 posted on 08/20/2002 4:31:24 PM PDT by Billy_bob_bob
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To: vannrox
The whole thing is rubbish, but just to raise one question: In what way is the water I drink "stolen from Kenyan nomads"?
6 posted on 08/20/2002 4:32:13 PM PDT by Steve_Seattle
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To: vannrox
LOL

"We acquiesce in this system every time we buy salad from a supermaket (grown with water stolen from Kenyan nomads)"

I really couldnt continue to read this tripe.

HAHAHAHA....I dont know what is funnier, the assertions of the Left or the fact that they actually believe this stuff.

I would trust this planet to a small clique of 5 year olds before I would give one right away for the benefit of these morons.

7 posted on 08/20/2002 4:33:09 PM PDT by VaBthang4
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To: vannrox
Yeah, that way you may be King someday.

In your dreams, bozo. Not while we have all the daisy-cutters and you have all the loud-mouths.
8 posted on 08/20/2002 4:33:53 PM PDT by dinasour
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To: Diogenesis
Dear George:

Please. Sit down. Be calm. Take the pink pills. Yes, the little ones. Zip up your pants. Yes, that's right. Wipe your chin. Oh........of course. George, pull your head out of your ass first. NOW wipe your chin.

George......pick up the crayon. The pretty blue one; that's right. Now...........color the sky on your little paper.............thaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaat's it.......................

9 posted on 08/20/2002 4:34:12 PM PDT by RightOnline
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To: VaBthang4
Sorry about that... "entrust".
10 posted on 08/20/2002 4:34:32 PM PDT by VaBthang4
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To: Billy_bob_bob
This guy is a serious idiot. Worse, he's an educated idiot who knows how to sound semi-plausible.

Whatever. When he falls under the domain of sha'ariah law (coming soon to a European nation near you!) the authorities will know how to deal with him.

11 posted on 08/20/2002 4:35:07 PM PDT by Alouette
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To: vannrox
Well Mr. Monbiot, I've considered your arguement carefully and I have but two words for you.

Unfortunately, this board maintains some pretty civilized standards so I can't print them for you. Let me simply say to you, why don't you come here and try to take our power and make us submit to a world parliment? I know I'd enjoy the process but you and your side might not.

12 posted on 08/20/2002 4:35:09 PM PDT by muir_redwoods
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To: vannrox
great stuff. reads like satire, only it's real. i don't think i ever stole water from a kenyan, but i might be wrong. i always thought my water was stolen from yosemite.
13 posted on 08/20/2002 4:35:36 PM PDT by GoreIsLove
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To: vannrox; All
Let him have it...

mail@monbiot.com

14 posted on 08/20/2002 4:36:59 PM PDT by VaBthang4
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To: vannrox
all of this, and all socialism, is based on the premise that anyone or any entity has the power to change another. no person can influence another's behavior to suit their will. we each must change through enlightenment, by self selection.
15 posted on 08/20/2002 4:37:11 PM PDT by galt-jw
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To: vannrox
There is too much robbing Peter to pay Paul in WITHIN the rich nations. If the 3rd worlders are given that power soon the entire planet will be starving.
16 posted on 08/20/2002 4:37:26 PM PDT by weikel
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To: vannrox
But the democratisation which may or may not result in such changes cannot even be widely discussed until we, the new world order's prosperous dissidents, are prepared to take our arguments to their logical conclusion, and let go of the power our nations possess and the disproportionate wealth which flows from it. I hope that we, unlike Orwell's bourgeois socialists, are ready for this challenge. If not, we may as well as cancel our tickets to Genoa and stay at home eating strawberries and cream.

The last paragraph is as bad as the first. The one good arrangement for national government: highly limited by a binding Constitution, independent of every other sovereign, and answerable to "we the people"... what HE is advocating invites a VERY different result.

17 posted on 08/20/2002 4:41:49 PM PDT by Teacher317
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To: Diogenesis
I sure am glad my Great great great Grandad killed a bunch of those redcoats and helped us run them back to Europe. I like it: Them over there, Us here.
18 posted on 08/20/2002 4:42:33 PM PDT by Uncle George
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Who cares what this a@@ thinks? Most working people in this country would rather DIE than have the sovereignty of their local, state, and national governments replaced by some world government.

Only jacka@@es of the highest degree and die-hard communists hiding out in coffee houses buy into this.

19 posted on 08/20/2002 4:45:37 PM PDT by willgetsome
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To: vannrox
I was trying to think of a word but bone-head seems to fit the bill. I might qualify it by saying "ultimate bone-head". How can someone who has no freaking clue about history or politics get a job writing.

He says:
Since then, empires have waxed and waned, but that basic economic formula holds true: we in the rich world live in comparative comfort only because of the inordinate power our governments wield, and the inordinate wealth which flows from that power.

What a load of crap. Our governments have power because of the wealth that WE generate through our WORK, our INGENUITY, and our FREEDOM. This scribbler has turned it on its head and it makes no freaking sense. The leadership of IRAQ and NORTH KOREA have more assumed powers than our government does but it does not tranlate to world power because their people are imprisoned and their economies are controlled by that power and not free. Their centralized and tyrannical all-powerful regimes have less actual power than our relatively lose democracies only because that power naturally flows from freedom and wealth and NOT because they don't wish they had that power.

Damn, Bill Gates only has the power he does because he has been gifted with a big house, cars, nice clothes, good food, and all that stuff. If I too were gifted with all those things then I would be just as powerful as Bill. Its that I don't have the same stuff he does man and has nothing to do with me just laying around the house all day watching Oprah. Oh Lord, won't you buy me a Mercedes Benz and while you are at it buy a new couch and AK-47 for all those folks in Zimbabwe and Albania so they can join the G-8 too.
20 posted on 08/20/2002 4:45:43 PM PDT by Arkinsaw
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