People Before Profit: Globalization’s Ghosts
- July 6th, 2010
Hegel was right when he said that man can never learn anything from history.~George Bernard Shaw
History teaches us the mistakes we are going to make. ~Unknown
In this chapter of People Before Profit, Derber compares globalization to two previous systems: colonialism and the Gilded Age in the United States. Often people equate the Internet and information technology in general with globalization as well as the positive connotations of advanced technology. It is a fact that technological advances have made possible the form of globalization which we are experiencing today; however, we must be careful not to equate them. Colonialism was enabled by advances in shipbuilding, steel, etc. The policies of the Gilded Age were enabled by the telephone and railroads.
We equate the nature of colonialism and the sweatshops of the Gilded Age with a lack of freedom. They were not all bad, in that they overthrew old systems which were just as exploitative (the author did not cite these systems – maybe he will address it later?) and led to subsequent progress in social justice movements and views. The author views globalization as a progressive force and warns against demonizing it or creating nostalgia for the past. After all, the ways of the past were not the “good old days” that we often remember.
