The drive to demonise China is tied to the crisis-ridden nature of capitalism. Capitalist China has been both friend and enemy,听depending on the state of play within the global economy. William Briggs reports.
Capitalism
PM Scott Morrison said Australia would achieve net zero by 2050 鈥榯he Australian way鈥. It is听pure spin, argues Petrina Harley.
There was no altruism in the speed in which听pharmaceutical companies developed successful vaccines. The very future of capitalism relied on science鈥檚 ability to keep the wheels turning, argues William Briggs.
Asia鈥檚 billionaires have increased their wealth by 74% while 148 million others in the region have been pushed into poverty since the start of the COVID-19 pandemic, writes S Arutchelvan.
Thirty years since the collapse of the听Soviet Union and听the end of the Cold War听the promised听peace and听harmony has been illusive, writes William Briggs.
听
The COVID-19 catastrophe presents听a challenge of planetary proportions. You would expect it would elicit a response drawing on all our skills, compassion and collective resources. But Andrew Smart argues we are seeing the opposite.
Prime Minister Scott Morrison has been promoting 鈥渃an do capitalism鈥 when Australia needs policies that treat all equally, argues Stuart Rees.
Wherever the forces of destruction attempt to cut down trees, pollute our air and water, and rip away the earth for minerals, women have been leading the resistance, writes Jess Spear.
Racism is not fundamentally about individual behaviour 鈥 although often that鈥檚 how people experience it. Lavanya Thavaraja argues that it is central to the institutions of Australian capitalism.
In Less is More, Jason Hickel听has written a readable book that seeks to promote hope rather than doom in the era of the Anthropocene or, more appropriately, the Capitolocene, writes Hans Baer.
There was a sense of relief as former Collingwood president Eddie McGuire was forced to quit, but why is it that racists, or apologists for racism, often escape the consequences, asks Jacob Andrewartha.
When Indian cricketers reported racist abuse during the recent Sydney test match, Australia鈥檚 ugly racism hit the headlines again. Sue Bull argues the media has an interest in muddying the connection between capitalism and racism.
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