EDITORIAL
No jobs on the moon
Published Jul 22, 2009 1:59 PM
It has been there in the sky since long before our species walked the earth. As
our ability to wonder and imagine grew, so did our curiosity about this great
luminous ball that waxed and waned above us. No matter what continent we lived
on, we worshiped it, wrote poetry to it, made love under its soft beams.
Not strange, then, that when the U.S. scientific-military establishment,
through NASA, put a person on the moon, it was a very big deal. It generated
such excitement and optimism; somehow this technological breakthrough would
usher in a better, more enlightened period in human history.
Well, that was four decades ago, when the United States military was involved
in another horrible war that brought nothing but suffering and misery to the
peoples of Southeast Asia and the U.S. In fact, the Apollo moonwalk may have
prolonged that catastrophe, because it bolstered the sagging prestige of the
U.S. at a time when rejection of imperialist war and plunder was growing around
the world.
Today the efforts of the corporate media to revive the flag-waving euphoria of
1969 are falling flat. This is 2009, the scientific-technological revolution
has transformed the world on a huge scale, and workers are worse off than ever.
Yes, we see the wondrous new devices everywhere, but they don’t bring us
much joy.
Official unemployment in the U.S. has hit double digits as jobs evaporate.
Truck drivers hate the GPS spy in the sky that knows if they take an
unauthorized break. Villagers in Pakistan and Afghanistan hate the pilotless
drones that bring death-dealing missile strikes. All workers feel insecure when
their bosses roam the world in search of ever-cheaper labor.
Case in point: A few years ago, Ireland was the country of choice for many
transnational electronics corporations. It had a labor shortage and workers
immigrated from all over Europe. Now Irish workers are in a deep crisis as
their jobs have been shifted further east. It was easy for the companies to
pick up and leave; the plants and equipment were totally modular and could be
moved in a week. Of course, they planned it that way.
At the time of the Apollo landing in 1969, Workers World wrote an article
pointing out that in Harlem, where 50,000 people were attending a cultural
festival, there were boos when the announcement was made. Our article said that
“contempt and hostility for the celebrations of imperialist overlords who
planted their hated flag of slavery on the moon was undoubtedly the reaction of
the millions of oppressed people in Asia, Africa and Latin America who live
under the heel of Washington and who defiantly refuse to applaud a victory for
their oppressor.”
The Black struggle by then had swept away segregation laws but poverty,
super-exploitation and daily abuse remained. A healthy skepticism about what
the government was doing was high in the Black community.
Now that much of the world has been plunged into a new economic crisis, brought
on by capitalism’s incurable disease of accumulating incredible wealth in
the hands of a few while pauperizing the workers, the ground is being prepared
for a broader struggle of the working class as a whole against the
exploiters.
To quote again from our 1969 article: “At this moment, the greatest
burden on humanity is not ignorance of outer space but how to overthrow the
parasitic imperialist bourgeoisie right here on earth. This decadent class
utilizes all knowledge for its predatory ends of intensifying the exploitation
of the toiling classes and of improving the means to keep the workers and the
oppressed from breaking their chains. Technology in the hands of the capitalist
class is distorted until it is almost unrecognizable as a means of serving
human ends. All leaps forward in science and technology by the imperialists
must necessarily increase the burden on humanity, not lighten it.”
Articles copyright 1995-2012 Workers World.
Verbatim copying and distribution of this entire article is permitted in any medium without royalty provided this notice is preserved.
Workers World, 55 W. 17 St., NY, NY 10011
Email:
[email protected]
Subscribe
[email protected]
Support independent news
DONATE