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Law of the Jungle? Reflections on Global
Law and money in the Amazon Rainforest
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n the TexacoChevron
lawsuit, I believe the plaintiff's motivations speak to
the fact that the environment -- Pacha mama, our life support
system -- has a monetary worth or value for humans. So the
critique is right -- it is about money.
The motivation behind Bush's Iraqi adventure -- if indeed
it is about "freedom"-- is analogous to that
of an ideology farmer where the US military is the hoe,
the Iraqi people the soil, "freedom" the seed
and propaganda the fertilizer. The crop to be harvested
is an expanding Western dominated corporate marketplace.
The motivation is of course money through the neoliberal
ideology of "free markets." The problem is that
humans are not blank slates and rivers of blood do not
always make good fertilizer for ideas...unless of course
you are pursuing totalitarian ideologies such as Mao's
or Stalin's.
Both examples bring to the surface interesting and complex
questions of international law, jurisdiction and ultimate
legitimacy. Further, they address questions of value and
worth.
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The motivation behind Bush's Iraqi adventure -- if indeed
it is about "freedom"-- is analogous to that of
an ideology farmer where the US military is the hoe, the
Iraqi people the soil, "freedom" the seed and
propaganda the fertilizer. The crop to be harvested is an
expanding Western dominated corporate marketplace. The motivation
is of course money through the neoliberal ideology of "free
markets." The problem is that humans are not blank
slates and rivers of blood do not always make good fertilizer
for ideas...unless of course you are pursuing totalitarian
ideologies such as Mao's or Stalin's.
Both examples bring to the surface interesting and complex
questions of international law, jurisdiction and ultimate
legitimacy. Further, they address questions of value and
worth.
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