276 lines
13 KiB
Plaintext
276 lines
13 KiB
Plaintext
Why we hate McDonald's
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by Iain MacSaorsa
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Talk given as part of a Scottish Federation of Anarchists
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speaking tour April 1995
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I'm not hear to spill the beans on the Big Mac Empire, others can
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do that far better.
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I'm here to place McDonalds in context, as a product of the
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system we live under. McDOnalds did not develop in isolation.
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McDOnalds, with its empire, its advertising, its product, its
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production methods, its workforce, is the classic example of
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modern capitalism. Its methods, its "values" reflect those of the
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system and are becoming the "norm", if you like.
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This process is typical of a market economy developing into a
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market society, of the process where the society increasingly
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reflects the economic basis on which it is built.
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This process could be called "capitalisation" but we will call it
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McDonaldisation as this is more fitting with the times and feel
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of the modern spectacle within which we live.
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McDonaldisation is the process by which the principles of the
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fast-food restaurant are becoming the dominate more and more
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parts of our society.
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Image, if you like, is replacing content.
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The key to understanding McDonaldisation is to understand that
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it, like capitalism, requires that the "human factor" be removed
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from process. It does this in 4 main ways :-
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Efficiency, calculability, predictability and control.
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Some examples will illustrate these four dimensions of
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McDonaldisation. There are plenty more. In fact someone has
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written a book on the subject "The McDonaldisation of Society".
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This speech is plagiarising said book. But since plagiarism is by
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its very nature creative, I hope you will think no less of it.
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Honesty is, I hope you agree, often the best bet!
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So, lets take efficiency first.
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Efficiency within a McDonaldised system means that the vast
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potential of human life is controlled and narrowed in order to
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ensure "efficiency" (which, in practice, means less cost). Ray
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Kroc, the brain behind big Mac empire, emphasised this
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"there was inefficiency, waste and temperamental cooks, sloppy
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service and food whose quality was never consistent. What was
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needed was a simple product that moved from start to completion
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in a streamlined path"
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To increase "efficiency" work was deskilled and turned into an
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assembly line. The eating of food was turned into "finger food",
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no need for knifes and forks, time was minimised. Consumption was
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also made "efficient" with tables, chairs and environment
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designed to ensure customers feel uncomfortable and want to more
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on as quickly as possible. And as time means money under
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capitalism, as "efficiently" as possible.
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The Egg McMuffin is a classic example of efficiency as it
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combines an entire breakfast in one handy sandwich, making
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breakfast far more efficient as all you have to do is stick it in
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your mouth and chew! Instead of a wide range of options, the
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menus are narrowly defined and we get to chose between the
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options others have created.
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Media "sound bits" are another classic example of efficiency,
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where complex issues are condensed into 30 minute slots on the
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tv. The content is so summarised and distorted that issues cannot
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be addressed nor people informed of the reality of the situation.
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This ensures even more the elite domination of the news medium as
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30 seconds is an impossible time to challenge accepted ideas.
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Whether this efficiency destroys all traces of human interaction
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and quality of service or just most of them, I will leave to the
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listener to decide.
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Efficiency is driven by calculability. In order to work out if
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its efficient, we need to be about to measure it. Hence the need
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to emphasis "quantity", not quality. The big Mac, the large fries
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and so on.
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Great care is taken to ensure that the pre-grilled hamburger is
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exactly 3.875 inches across and the roll it goes into is exactly
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3.5 inches. Why? For the same reason that the French fries box
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has been designed with strips, to give the illusion of size, the
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image of "value for money". The "Big Mac" can appear to be
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bursting out of the roll, a useful illusion.
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In addition, calculability ensures that what really matters is
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maximised. Profits. A McDonaldised system is based on a system
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called "scientific management" invented by Frederick Taylor at
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the turn of the century. This was based on calculating the one
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best way of doing something and getting workers to follow these
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mind-less tasks, day in, day out. In the first workplace this was
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introduced, it lead to 360% increase in production. The workers
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got a 60% increase in their wages for the privilege of being turned
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into "human robots".
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More nearer home, Burger King fries are sold at 400% of cost,
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their drinks, 600%. Calculability does pay off, for some at
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least. Of course, we can calculate the amount of rubbish they
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produce!
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Being able to calculate something means you can make it
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predictable, the third aspect of a McDonaldised system.
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We know that if we went into a McDonalds in Glasgow, in Moscow,
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in Sidney, we'll get the same shit, in the same packaging with
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the same inane smile. Everywhere you go, we see identical shops,
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selling identical products - a standardised world filled with
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clones. And McDonalds have the gall to claim on one of their
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leaflets they place design their restaurant to fit into the local
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culture! Aye, right! The local culture of McDonalds!
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In work, we go through standardised work routines, with mad,
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pointless rules. On the bru, we fill in the same standard forms,
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in the same standard bureaucracies. Objective rules, crushing the
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subjective individual, turning them sad charactatures of their
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work!
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In a system of competition, this is not unusual, competition
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means putting like against like. Predictability is good for
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business!
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Lastly, there is control. The replacement of human by non-human
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technology. The great source of trouble in any form of
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McDonaldised system is human uncertainty and unpredictability. In
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other words, human individuality!
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This great evil to rationality, to calculability, to
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predictability and to efficiency must be controlled and removed.
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Hence people are replaced, controlled and processed by machines.
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And working in such an environment soon results in massive
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alienation, the feeling that who become the servants of machines,
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of others.
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Not that such facts were unknown to the real founders of control,
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the assembly line. Both Taylor and Henry Ford recognised the
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horrible nature of repetitive, controlled work, but since they
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considered the majority to be stupid and not "mentally alert and
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intelligent" enough (to use Taylor's phrase) they considered the
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system they were imposing to be for the "greater good". Needless
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to say, reality proved them wrong.
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We have already mentioned a very useful by-product of such
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control by technology, the increased profits of such a system. In
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addition, technology deskills the worker, allowing wages to be
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lowered, increasing the pool of labour, allowing each worker to
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be replaceable and so not treated as individuals, but as
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replaceable human machines. The mass worker replaces the unique
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individual. That this process of McDonaldisation is widespread in
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industry is seen from the name this type of employment is called
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- the McJob!
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Here we have the crux of why we hate McDonalds, its not totally
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because of what they do (although that's a big part of it) but
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because of what they represent, the cutting edge of capitalism. A
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veggie McDonalds would still be a hell hole, an affront to
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individuality and humanity.
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Such a system soon produces the "irrationality of rationality",
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where the living, feeling, thinking individual is crushed under
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the dead weight of the past, of capital, of authority and
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hierarchy.
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The effects of McDonaldisation as felt everywhere, in all our
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social relationships. The market economy becomes the market
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society, commodity replaces community. In a McDonaldised system,
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people are not encouraged to feel emotions. "Emotional" people
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are to be considered strange, freaks. Only the efficient,
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calculable "emotions" of "have a nice day" count, to be doled as
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and when the boss required.
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Which is, of course, the golden rule. Those with the gold make
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the rules. William Blake once said, "A Tyrant is the worst
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disease and the Cause of all others". Social hierarchy, economic
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and political power in the hands of the few, is the real source
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of social problems and so ecological ones. McDonaldisation would
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never develop in a self-managed system based on co-operation
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within humanity and with nature. McDonaldisation may be the
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"natural" result of capitalism, but its not the natural result of
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human life. Only when human life is placed under the control of
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"official" authority, with "natural" authorities of self-
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management ignored (to use Bakunin's terms for a moment) does
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profit replace humanity.
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Capitalism needs to enforce "official" authority on us in order
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to keep the "quantifiable" system it needs to extract profit from
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us, to keep going. The present destruction of the planet in the
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name of progress is no accident. Its not a product of some sort
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of abstract "humanity", but of a system which places accumulation
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and growth above all else, which thinks that 5 is better than 2,
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that money now is better than rainforest latter.
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A green capitalism is impossible simply because it has to grow,
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it has to accumulate. Eco-systems cannot expand, but the economy
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must! Capitalism can never be green, it needs to grow, to expand.
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That is why short-termism rules, why wilderness is being
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destroyed, why the environment is being scarified. Its the
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system, it has to do it in order to survive.
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A Japanese anarchist writing in the 1920's said that every social
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system has its belief system. Under feudalism, its the church.
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Under capitalism, its science. It has to be able to measure and
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quantify everything inorder to sell it. And its faith is
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reflected in its politics and economics, were quantity is more
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important than quality, where exchange value is better than use
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value, where 5 votes are better than 2 votes, where $5 is
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better than $2.
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Like all religions, capitalism needs sacrifice. It sacrifices
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individuality, humanity and ecology for the power and profits for
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the elite few, the ones who make the golden rules, the ones that
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enforce McDonaldisation in the name of "freedom". The ones that
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have the power while we have the pollution!
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We need to resist the system, create new values, values based on
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quality, not quantity. We must put the human factor back into
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society, otherwise our alienated society will alienate itself off
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the planet.
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We must change our values, our "belief" system, if you like while
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changing the system. The "belief" system of anarchy is quality
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over quantity. The Japanese anarchist said this would be equivalent
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to geography, or in more up to date language, ecology. People
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living in harmony with nature because they live in harmony with
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themselves both as individuals and with each other, placing human
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values above all else.
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We can only do that by reclaiming our individuality, organising
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together and change things by our own efforts and based on our own
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ideas of right and wrong. That always goes on, that's why the
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human factor is so hated by the system. Where there is
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oppression, there is resistance. And resistance is the sign of
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humanity and it needs to be encouraged and developed to such a
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point that the current system can be replaced and the world
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renewed in the bright light of freedom, equality and solidarity.
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That's what the Scottish Federation of Anarchists aims to do,
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but we cannot do it alone.
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As one Zapatista said "how are you going to construct something
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new, if you keep doing the same old things?" We have to learn the
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mistakes of the past and build the new world in the shell of the
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old. In the Chiapas, in Mexico, the Zapatistas are learning these
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lessons, as are all people in struggle like the anti-roads
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protesters in Pollok, the people organising the centre in
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Edinburgh. All across the world, the anarchist message is being
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heard and being applied. Its a message whose time has come.
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Its a message that strikes at the heart of the system which
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McDonalds represents and its so-called values.
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We need to act. Just saying "I object" is not enough. It implies
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acceptance of the status quo. You have to *do* something.
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McDonalds is being resisted across the globe. From Mexico to
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Denmark, McDonalds stores get trashed. Such actions show that
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the message is getting through. But while attacking the symbols
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of capitalism is a fun experience, it is not enough. We have to
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challenge and change the content of the system while trashing and
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subverting its images.
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The future is in your hands.
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