430 lines
25 KiB
Plaintext
430 lines
25 KiB
Plaintext
THE REAL PURPOSE OF GOVERNMENTS, AN EXTRACT FROM "THE NATURE OF THE STATE."
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by Derrick A Pike
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Freely distributable, but please quote source
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5 WHY WE CHOOSE THE STATE AND HOW WE CAN DISCOVER ITS TRUE PURPOSE
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The state is simply one way that people can organise and live together.
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There are many other ways to do this, but always people have only two
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choices. If they believe that humans are innately good, they will choose a
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society where they cooperate with one another of their own free will; but
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if they believe that humans are innately evil, they will choose a society
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where everyone is forced to cooperate with one another by violence. If
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people choose the former, they will be free; but if they choose the latter
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, they will not.=20
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=09Unfortunately, because people believe that some of us are innately
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evil (not themselves, of course) and because they know of no alternative,
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they choose violence to protect themselves from the enemies that exist at
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home and abroad. (The enemies exist, but only because our present social
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pattern creates them.) Then, when people have accepted violence, they must
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accept a separate group - a government - to organise it. They also accept
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a government because they believe that people are incapable of controlli
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ng their own affairs and so must be directed by others. People accept the
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state.=20
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=09Once people choose a government to direct affairs and be in charge
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of violent forces to protect them, it must have absolute power to make
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them obey its commands. It would be ineffectual if people did not obey. It
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must also have complete power to overcome any violent opposition to its
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rule. But because a government has absolute power it can rule in any way
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it wishes. And this it does. As a result, it has a purpose that is very
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different from the one that was used to justify its existence. As will be
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prove d, governments rule in their own interests, in the interests of
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those they wish to favour, and in the interests of those whose support
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they have to buy.=20
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=09Because governments are in charge, and since people obey the laws
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they enforce, it is possible to discover the real purpose of governments.
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It is important to do this because once their true purpose is recognised,
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all socioeconomic details, all history, and all government morality can be
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explained. It will be understood why even the most benign ruler behaves
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like an ardent reactionary, why no political party is substantially
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different from any other, and why even a change of political system (from
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or to: democratic, fascist, socialist, communist, etc.) does not produce
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any change in social conditions. Once the true purpose of governments is
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understood, and once an alternative to the state is seen to be practical
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then, hopefully, people will create a free
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and ideal society.
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=09The purpose of governments is revealed by the way they behave and
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by the kind of society they produce as the result of their rule. The real
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purpose of governments can also be discovered by examining the
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construction of the state because the way they control the people will
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confirm their true purpose. By these means we can discover whether
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governments exist to serve all the people or only some of them.=20
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6 THE GOVERNMENTS' MAIN PURPOSE IS TO DISTRIBUTE WEALTH UNEQUALLY
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The outstanding characteristic of every state is the massive inequality of
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wealth that exists within it. There are a few extremely rich individuals
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who have wealth worth billions of pounds, a relatively small number who
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have a reasonable amount of wealth, and a mass of people who have little
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or nothing. There are those own everything they want and those who do not
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have their next meal or the money to buy it. Ten per cent of the people
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living in the industrial countries own 80 per cent of all the wealth in
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the world. Generally, women are much poorer than men. It is the same with
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income. Some individuals have a huge income; others have very little or
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none at all.=20
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=09The contrast between the rich and poor in the first and third
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worlds is obscene. According to the World Bank First Development Report
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more than a billion people were living in poverty "a condition of life so
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characterised by malnutrition, illiteracy, disease, squalid surroundings,
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high infant mortality, and low life expectancy as to be beneath any
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reasonable definition of human decency." In 1990 it added, "Being poor
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means being unable to maintain a minimal standard of living . . . it means
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low life expe ctancies, high death rates among infants and children, and
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few opportunities to obtain even a basic education." So in the third world
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millions and millions starve, while in the first world many have their own
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camcorders, televisions, videos, and every other luxury. In the developed
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countries, the middle and upper classes dress in a variety of clothes to
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attend horse races, fashion shows, plays, operas, dances, concerts, and
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all the other enchanting diversions.=20
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=09The inequalities in the world are always increasing. In 1960, the
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richest 20 per cent of the world's population received 70.2 per cent of
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the total annual income, and the poorest 20 per cent received 2.3 per cent
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of it. By 1989, the richest 20 per cent received 82.7 per cent of the
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total annual income and the poorest 20 per cent received 1.4 per cent of
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it.=20
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7 POVERTY AND INEQUALITY IN THE DEVELOPED COUNTRIES
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Unfortunately, even in the first world, a great many people do not have
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the luxuries or even the necessities. Fewer than two-thirds of the people
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in the so-called rich countries can maintain even a modest standard of
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living, and many do not have enough to eat, so that they become hungry.
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There are areas of unbelievable squalor where people live without hope.
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According to official statistics, there were, in the early 1980s, more
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than thirty million people in Europe who were chronically poor. The figure
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wor sened in the early nineties. Some parents were so poor that they had
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to abandon their children. Teenagers had to live on the streets, stealing,
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and sleeping rough. In Britain, nearly one family in three with children
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was living in poverty. One sixth of th e population was on income support.
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In America, people died because they could not afford medical attention,
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and many unemployed had to queue for food vouchers.=20
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=09In Britain, in the 1980s, over a quarter of the total income went
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to the top ten per cent of the people, while less than a quarter of the
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total income went to the bottom 50 per cent. A quarter of all wealth was
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owned by 1 per cent of the adult population and 59 per cent of all wealth
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was owned by 10 per cent of it. Nearly two-thirds of the land was owned by
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only 2 per cent of the people - more than half of the land was owned by
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only 1 per cent.=20
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=09The inequality of wealth does not even remain stable for while the
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poor get poorer the rich get richer. Those with a high income always
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receive large pay rises. These are the senior civil servants, the judges,
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the high ranking military officers, the Civil Service 'mandrins'', and
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the directors of companies. Amid the slump around 1990, while teachers,
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nurses, and social workers had rises of only a few per cent, these people
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had rises of more than 20 per cent. For example, in 1992, the TSB chief
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executive had a 25 per cent rise, bringing his salary to =A3230,000. The
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directors of MFI got =A31.3m as a bonus when their company returned to the
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stock market. This cash was on top of salaries ranging from =A3100,000 to
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=A3275,000 a year. A report published in the British Journal of Industrial
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Relations showed that top bosses enjoyed pay rises out of all proportion
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to their companies' performance during the recession. During the worst
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years, from 1989 to 1991, their salaries increased by 14 per cent per
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year. During each year since 1983, their average salary increase was 20
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per cent. Many company directors were paid around one million pounds a
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year. Britain's highest paid tycoon had a remuneration of =A318m in 1993.
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Most of this took place while company dividends, interest
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on the shares, and general performances were nosediving.
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=09Always the inequality of wealth and income is maintained or
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increased. In the latter part of 1993, the bottom 10 per cent of the
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population survived on =A354 per week, while the directors of the top 100
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firms earned on average =A310,000 a week. It is not sur prising the number
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of millionaires in Britain became greater than ever and that some people
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were immensely rich. David Sainsbury shares were worth =A31.89bn; Lord
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Sainsbury's, =A3262.2m; and Lord Rothermere's, =A3249.3m. In contrast, in
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Britain, as in all countries, there are beggars who can exist only by
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living off the charity of the public. The police move on about 100 beggars
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every day in the Central London stations.=20
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=09Official statistics confirm that the wealth inequality increases.
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In June 1993, the Social Security Department issued a report concerning
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the income of people between the years 1979 and 1991-92. It showed that
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during those years there was a dramatic fall in the share of income for
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the poorer 10 per cent of households. Although average incomes rose 35 per
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cent in real terms from 1979 the incomes of the bottom 10 per cent fell by
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17 per cent. At the same time the income of the richest 10 per cent rose
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by 62 per cent. The Financial Secretary to the Treasury later showed that
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even during the first two years of the recession, between 1989 and 1991,
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the income of Britain's highest earners increased enormously while the
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income of the poorest in work was cut. =09In 1994, Tom White, the chief
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executive of the National Children's Home charity, said, "It is appalling,
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as we approach the year 2000, that even an 1876 workhouse diet is too
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expensive for the families of one in four of our children."=20
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=09As people get poorer, their working conditions also deteriorate.
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Now there is less full-time pensionable employment and more insecure
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part-time and contract work.=20
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=09In America, between the years 1988 and 1992, the wealth inequality
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rose sharply. Real wages rose rapidly for 20 per cent of males, held
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constantly for another 20 per cent, and fell for the remaining 60 per
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cent.=20
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=09In the state there is an inequality not only of material wealth
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but also of social service. The rich can afford to pay others to look
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after them; the poor cannot.=20
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=09Since those who are rich have money to buy anything, they need do
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no work, and although a great number may continue to work, the majority do
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not. So within the state there is not only an unequal distribution of
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wealth and service but also an unequal distribution of labour and leisure.=
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=20
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=09Because all of this inequality is the result of the governments'
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rule, we must conclude that it is their purpose to produce it. The true
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purpose of governments must be to serve themselves, and certain
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individuals and groups.=20
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8 GOVERNMENTS DO NOT EXIST THE SERVE THE PEOPLE
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By observing what governments do, we have discovered their true purpose.
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They control the production and distribution of wealth with partiality. We
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can confirm that this is indeed their purpose by observing what they do
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not do.=20
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=09It is not the governments' purpose to provide even adequate living
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conditions. On the contrary, as we shall see, to achieve their true
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purpose, they must see to it that most people remain poor and deprived.=20
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=09Governments do not arrange the efficient production and
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distribution of food, and because of this there is no state where everyone
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has enough to eat. In the third world, millions starve and die, and even
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in the developed countries there are thousands who are often hungry.=20
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Equally shameful, much of the food produced is unhealthy and downright
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poisonous. Dr Richard Lacey, professor of microbiology at Leeds
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University, said local studies have shown food poisoning cases were up
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from 200 a year in 1988 to 800 a year in 1992. He said, "That equates to a
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real figure of 200,000 across the country, and the exact total could be as
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high as two million." During the year ending May 1993, there were 16,664
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cases of food poisoning. Many people who understand that they should eat
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healthy food have no money to buy it.=20
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=09Governments fail to provide water. Some people have adequate
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supplies but most have not. Two-thirds of the people in the world have to
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fetch water from outside their homes. In the third world, governments make
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no serious attempt to organise water supplie s. Even when there is no
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drought, many people have to walk miles for their daily supply. In
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Britain, a supposedly developed country, not enough water is stored for
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the people or industry, so often it has to be rationed. Millions drink
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water contaminated b y harmful sewage, fertilisers, pesticides, and lead.
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Raw sewage is discharged into the sea on the holiday coasts.=20
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=09In the third world, millions are unhealthy because they have no
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money to buy medical attention and because governments do not arrange to
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give it to them. Epidemics occur because there are famines, mass
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migrations, revolutions, and wars. Humanity's greatest killer,
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tuberculosis, is out of control in many parts of the world, although the
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disease is preventable and treatable. Aids is infecting 5,000 people a
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day; 40 million worldwide will be affected by the year 2000. Of the 42
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million blind people in the w orld, 30 million could see if they had a
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simple operation. Even in the developed countries people are not as fit as
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they should be. Not only do they eat and drink unhealthy food and water
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but they also breathe polluted air, swim in dirty seas, and absorb deadly
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human-made radiations. As always, only the rich are cared for. It is they
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who can buy adequate and immediate medical attention. Once the government
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of Britain took regular amounts of money so that it could provide medical
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care for everybody at no e xtra charge. In the eighties, however, the
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government reverted to type and the National Health Service started to
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deteriorate. Charges were made for some services, and hospitals had to
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refuse patients for lack of money. By June 1993, more than a million p
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eople were waiting for hospital treatment, even though thousands of beds
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were closed down. Needless to say, there was no reduction, only an
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increase, in the regular payments made by the public. The death rate in
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Glasgow and Sheffield confirms the inequali ty of health care. In the
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deprived parts of these cities the poor can expect to die eight years
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earlier than people in the affluent areas. According to a report issued by
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the British Medical Journal, in April 1994, the growth of poverty and the
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widening d ifference between the rich and poor in Britain over the last
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fifty years meant that the latter had a mortality rate four times higher
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than the former.=20
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=09People would be healthier if they were always protected against
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the elements. Unfortunately, in the state societies, the very poor have
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little or no protections. It is they who are killed, often in their tens
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of thousands, by earthquakes and floods becau se they are compelled to
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live in disaster areas and in poor housing. Further, not everyone has
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adequate clothing. It is only the well-off who can dress in any way they
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desire. Many of the poor in the third world are only just adequately
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covered. People su ffer from the cold and have accidents, even in the
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developed countries, because they cannot afford to buy fuel and
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electricity.=20
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=09Many people are unhealthy because they are unemployed. The suffer
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not only economically but also psychologically as they feel they have no
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place in society or purpose in life. Unemployment and poverty are often
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responsible for family breakdown, social di stress, and crime. The suicide
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rate among the unemployed is much greater than the average, and their
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expectation of life is shorter.=20
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=09A number of people are unprotected because they have no place to
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live. Governments have never provided enough houses. In Britain, in the
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third quarter of 1992, local councils accepted that 35,550 families were
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homeless. Although 1,500,000 families receiv ed temporary accommodation,
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there was none available for many others. The organisation Shelter
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calculated that there were 1.7 million "unofficially homeless". These were
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the squatters and the people in temporary private lodgings and hostels.
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Such people h ave a death rate that is three times the normal. An
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estimated 8,600 people sleep rough every night - in cardboard boxes, shop
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doorways, car parks, abandoned buildings, parks, and hedgerows. More than
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600 people died on the streets of England and Wales in 1992. Yet while the
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poor have nowhere to live, the rich live in splendid houses and mansions.
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Many have more than one residence.=20
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=09If governments do not provide enough food and shelter, one would
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hardly expect them to provide a good education for everybody. Nor do they.
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In Britain, for example, there are about nine million adults who have
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difficulties with reading, writing, spelling , and basic mathematics. In
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some state schools, the parents have to provide books and pencils. Many
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schools have not been redecorated or maintained properly for decades. The
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Government, even after nearly a century, cannot decide how the pupils
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should be t aught the basic subjects. In the entire world, half the people
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cannot read or write, and in Africa and Asia only one in ten can do so.=20
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=09The deficiencies and inequalities extend to every part of life.
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Most people in the world, for example, have no transport, but others have
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fine cars, ships, and aeroplanes. Some are inconvenienced by transport
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strikes, others are not.=20
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=09The true purpose of governments has now been confirmed by showing
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what they do not do. They do not provide all the essentials of life. Those
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who are rich have them, but the majority do not. They do not because it is
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not the function of governments to pro vide them.=20
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=09Despite our increased scientific and technical knowledge, despite
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all the possibilities of computer control and automatic machinery, and in
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spite of all the modern means of producing food and other forms of wealth,
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under government rule the standard of living drops. It drops when, with
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the advance of science and technology, it should be rising and rising with
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great rapidity. Yet Mr J. Callaghan, when Prime Minister, said, "I say
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with all the force I can command that it is not possible to have an
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increase d standard of life at present."=20
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9 THE STARVATION IN THE WORLD IS DUE TO GOVERNMENT RULE, NOT OVERPOPULATION
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Other than their wars, the worse failure of governments is their total
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inability to organise the production and distribution of food. In the
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third world, a child dies of hunger, or a hunger related illness, every
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2.4 seconds. This tragedy is horrifying. A ll of us would think so if we
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were the next to die. In Somalia alone, in 1992, a million people were on
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the brink of death. A thousand died every day and the entire population
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was in danger of being wiped out. In sub-Saharan Africa, according to The
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Food and Agriculture Organisation, 40 million people were threatened with
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hunger.=20
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=09Well-meaning people, who have not done their homework, say that
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the world is overpopulated, and so it is impossible to provide for all.
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The resources of the world, they say, are not enough to feed so many
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people. They point out that every minute there ar e three hundred extra
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people to feed, as if the rest of the population were obliged to feed them
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while they did no work themselves. With every new mouth there is also a
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new pair of hands and with those hands more wealth can be created. Nobody
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has to feed more people; they will feed themselves. Each new pair of hands
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can create enough wealth to feed at least fifty people. It is simply not
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true that the world is overpopulated. It would appear so because
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governments are incapable of organising society so tha t everyone has
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enough to eat.=20
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=09The starvation in the world is due entirely to the way governments
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organise our social life. It is not due to overpopulation, inadequate
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resources, or insufficient food production. The world is not a food larder
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with contents so limited that there is not enough for everyone. The world
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is a food larder that - even with governments - produces 2.4 pounds of
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grain as well as beans, potatoes, fruit, and vegetables every day for
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every person. Even now, there is 50 per cent more food produced than is
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necessary to feed everyone. Much, much more could be produced. As Dr H.
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Kissinger said, as long ago as 1976, "For the first time we have the
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technical capacity to free mankind from the scourge of hunger."=20
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=09The starvation in the third world could be lessened if the
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governments there bought food in the world market. It cannot be said that
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they do not have the money because, as is evident, there is always enough
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to maintain large numbers of well-equipped arme d forces and often to
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develop atom bombs.=20
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=09People starve in some sections of the world because food is stored
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without being used, deliberately destroyed, unequally distributed, and
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used for political bargaining. Food is managed in this way because it is
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used as a source of privilege, profit, and world power. Starvation is
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produced by drought, civil war, war, and ecological collapse. It is
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increased because some governments export food while their own people
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starve. The use of money makes all this possible.=20
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=09So today people starve not because they have no food but because
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they have no money. During 1992, in Somalia, people starved on the
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outskirts of towns where the markets were full of food. Rich people never
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starve. If there is no food, it is soon created when there is a market for
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it - that is, if people can sell it at a profit to those who have money.
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It is the poor who starve. It is those with power in North America and
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Europe who increase the poverty in the third world. They decide that low
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prices shal l be paid for third world products, that national debts shall
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not be cancelled, and that corrupt and evil regimes shall be supported.=20
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=09Those worried about the birth rate must remember that it is
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reduced when people have a decent standard of living. For the very poor,
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children are a form of wealth. They are the means of providing for old
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age.=20
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10 GOVERNMENTS DO NOT PROTECT THE PEOPLE OR THEIR PROPERTY
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=09In the state there is a massive amount of violence by individuals
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who use it for themselves and for their government. This causes untold
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suffering. Consequently, neither property nor person is protected. An
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immense amount of personal property is stolen a nd vandalised by
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individuals, and a greater amount is destroyed when governments make war.
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It
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=09Children are bullied in school and attacked in their homes.
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Nurses, teachers, police, and women in their homes are attacked. People
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are robbed and murdered. Women and children are raped in their homes;
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children are raped while in governmental care. It is dangerous for
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children to be alone day or night and for women to be alone in isolated
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areas. The number raped by the sexual psychopaths, however, is nothing
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compared with number raped during the wars. There were 30,000 raped in
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Bosnia in 1993. Rape is part of the spoils of war, the officers get the
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paintings and jewellery, and the lower ranks get the women.=20
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=09People are kidnapped by criminals for ransom, and a far greater
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number by governments for punishment (in prisons) and for fighting (in
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war).=20
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=09It is during the wars and the civil wars that people are in most
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danger from living in the state societies. Criminals murder people every
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day, but when governments murder, they do it on a massive scale. When
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governments fought one another in Rwanda, in 1 994, more than a million
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people were massacred and half the population, emaciated and famished,
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spread in terror accross borders. Wars and civil wars produce millions of
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refugees and displaced people. Since 1945, there were 6m from Afghanistan,
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4m from Y ugoslavia, 1.4m from Kurdistan, and 3m from Rwanda. Those from
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Rwanda died from starvation and disease at the rate of one a minute. The
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size of the governments' battles during a war is also incrediable. In 1943
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German forces were engaged in Hitler's Opera tion Zitadelle on the Kursk
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salient. The ensuing battle involved 2.7 million men and over 6,000 tanks,
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34,000 guns and 4,000 aircraft. The governments' air raids are even more
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violent. On 13 February 1945, the allies dropped 1,223 bombs on Dresden, a
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city of little strategic importance. As a result, 35,000 people were
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killed and 15 square kilometres of the city were destroyed. When the
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American forces dropped the atom bomb on Hiroshima they killed 80,000
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people at the time and an untold number who have di ed since. There were
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about 56 million people killed in World War 2, and another 22 million died
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as the result of it up to the year 1992. More have died since. Millions of
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people are killed in wars, mostly civilians. Now, with their atomic
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bombs, governme nts have the means to kill the whole human race many times
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over. Only the rich can buy physical protection, and even they may not be
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able to do so in a nuclear war.=20
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=09With all the facts available, those who believe that governments
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exist to serve the whole country and not just a part of it must believe in
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fairies. Governments rule with partiality and no part of society can be
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explained unless this is understood.=20
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