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Opium dreams, de-industrialization and the export of raw materials

By Peter Ewart

Tuesday, August 03, 2010 03:45 AM

By Peter Ewart

 
One of the problems with sucking on an opium pipe is that it renders you just about useless for anything else. So it has been in the United Kingdom with the love affair it has had with banking, financial services and other non-manufacturing industries over the last few decades.
 
For years, the mantra from economists and pundits in London’s high finance centre of Canary Wharf has been that manufacturing, the production and export of “things”, has no future in post-industrial U.K. Like a bubble, financial services grew and grew, and with it the bombast of the bankers and their shills. “The financial services economy”, “The knowledge economy”, “The service sector economy” - all were trumpeted as the way of the future for the country that once led the world in manufacturing. 
 
Until, of course, the recent financial and credit crisis burst the bubble, leaving battered banks, empty office towers, thousands of layoffs, and a dazed and confused British elite in its wake. Now a new government has come to power, David Cameron’s Conservatives. And what is the centerpiece of its new economic program? Lo and behold, it is to “resurrect” and “rejuvenate” Britain’s manufacturing base. At the core of the government’s thinking is that serious structural problems exist in the British economy, not the least of which has been the hollowing out of manufacturing, which has been going on for more than half a century.
 
But this “hollowing out of manufacturing” is not just a British phenomenon. Although starting the process much later than the U.K., Canada, in recent years, has lost hundreds of thousands of manufacturing jobs, and the U.S., millions.
 
It is reasonable to expect that Canadian politicians and pundits should learn something from the British experience in abandoning manufacturing and embracing “financial services”. But is that the case?
 
Witness, for example, what is happening in Ontario. Like other provinces, Ontario has lost tens of thousands of manufacturing jobs, especially in the auto, steel and forestry sectors. So what has been the response of the Ontario government? In its 2010 Budget, it talks about how “Ontario’s economy has shifted from a domestic and manufacturing focus to one that is powered by services, especially business and financial services” and that Ontario is “well-positioned” to capitalize on the trend towards a more “knowledge-based” economy. 
 
The budget even puts forward the prospect of Toronto becoming “one of the world’s elite financial centres”. In response, an “Ottawa Citizen” newspaper editorial has taken the idea further, ecstatically claiming that the city is on the verge of becoming “the new Zurich”.
 
Far from learning from a failed British experiment, the Ontario government and various newspaper pundits seem hell bent on repeating it.
 
But are provinces like British Columbia and Alberta much better in regards to the development of manufacturing?
 
Both provinces export an abundance of raw or relatively unprocessed materials, including oil, coal, wood, and minerals of various kinds. For too long, these governments have been sucking on the opium pipe of raw exports. It has always been the easy way. But there are long-term consequences.
 
One of the things that often gets lost in the controversy over whether pipelines should be built across British Columbia to export oil, is that for every barrel of oil that is shipped out - just like for every raw log and every railcar loaded with coal - jobs and manufacturing opportunities are lost forever.
 
Because it has such rich resources, Canada has, or should have, tremendous leverage in developing an advanced manufacturing base. Why isn’t this leverage utilized more? Furthermore, why are the “development of financial services” and “increased export of raw materials” put up as the pinnacles of achievement for the Canadian economy? 
 
As Britain is finding out, in today’s world, giving up manufacturing will inevitably wreak a terrible cost on a national economy. The Chinese, of course, have been heading in the opposite direction, and the results show in its phenomenal industrial progress.
 
It is interesting to note that, in its long struggle for independence in the 19th and 20th centuries, one of the critical things that China did was smash up the opium pipes and opium dens of the extensive drug trade that was fostered and supported by the foreign colonial powers of that time. This, of course, was one of the factors that cleared the way for its emergence as an independent country, and more recently, a robust economy.
 
Perhaps, in Canada, we need to learn from both the British and Chinese experience. We, too, need to smash up our “opium pipes” of de-industrialization and export of raw materials, and set, as a key ongoing and overall aim, the development of an advanced manufacturing industrial economy that fully utilizes our wealth of resources.
 
Peter Ewart is a columnist and writer based in Prince George, British Columbia. He can be reached at: peter.ewart@shaw.ca
 

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Comments

Instead of smashing opium pipes, we should be plugging the pipelines which are sending to foreigners the precious energy resources that our country will need to keep future generations from "freezing in the dark".
Well put, Peter. Keep these articles coming!
Jesus and I thought the Mayor was quoting Martin Luther King when he said “I have a dream” In a recent media releases.
Build Canadian, buy Canadian - that's the key for our economic growth.
The Protocols of Zion are alive and well (I would have been executed without trial had I said that in 1918 Russia).

We are way up the ladder to global hegemony now. The financier of the Protocols are the same people that financed the opium trade, the repressive East India Company, The Bank of England and the US Federal Reserve, the derivative scams of 2008 that stole private enterprise from a large swath of the economy... and they are also known as the Crown, the Temple Bar, or simply the City (of London) (all led by the Rothschild legacy)... we have seen their work in history from the world wars to the bolshevik revolution and its rein of terror on the world... we see their work today in Israel and the Middle East wars... and we see their new soviet in the make up of Obama's new Czar class of zionist political ministers operating with the full authority of the bolshevik executive, but outside of legislative approval based on merits for the job.

I read recently that almost all key positions in the US military are now held by duel citizen zionist Americans, and yet as a whole Jews make up less then .005% of the military population. That to me is far more ominous a sign of the future... than the almost total control over MSM, the financial world, our courts, and our ruling political class.

Christianity will one day be an outlawed religion and the people will be debased no different than Gaza until we all submit to a policy we will know in our hearts is wrong. Obama recently gave the Palestinians an ultimatum to accept two party talks (removing America as a third party) with Israel or there will be vengeance to pay (black mail threats for peace)... all just in time for war it would seem. Obama knows nothing about building peace and shows it in his recent letter to the Palestinians. He is a puppet that looks like a fool as he takes his obvious talking points from behind the curtain.

For example American knows it can't start a war with Iran and have the moral ascendancy... therefor the plan is to have Israel start a war they know they can not finish, but rather will have America finish for them at great cost to America. These people will take the great masses to war through the actions entirely not sovereign to the American people. Guys like Stephen Harper and his other neocon friends will be the apologists that lend legitimacy to the process, and you can be sure Canada will be committed to do its part killing in foreign lands for a foreign ideological agenda most Canadians couldn't even identify, much less understand.

The end result will be supranational government based on an ethnocentric ideology of the chosen ruling class where the only true sovereigns are the ones holding all the gold stolen from the central banks around the world.

The only way to stop it is fair trade and not free trade, free enterprise and not capitalist monopoly, and a currency that has meaning in direct relation to the production economy and real capital asset values, and not a speculative paper based financial economy. The only way we can get there is through education and people speaking out when given the opportunity so that we can empower our democracy to shunt the evil forces out of our power structure in society. Most people are ignorant and choose to believe that which is easiest to believe (left verse right) without much thinking of their own... so things will have to get much worse before people really start to try and understand IMO.

This is the world we live in like it or not.

This era in the future will be known as the new bolshevism occupation period, and the zionist end game.