No society can aspire to democracy unless it maintains an unbreakable connection between its politics and its police powers.
Once  the populace has no political access to policy and enforcement, once  those with coercive power over others are not directly accountable to  the people’s representatives, you can kiss your ass goodbye.
We’re on the verge of it in America, 2012.
As David Foster Wallace remarked, the truth will set you free but not until it’s finished with you.
All  across the western world, there is enormous pressure being brought to  "privatize" everything. Where does this pressure come from? On whose  behalf? What does it mean? What is the connection between the demands  for "privatization" in Greece, as part of an "austerity package"  initiated by the International Monetary Fund, with the "privatization"  of prisons in Florida and other states of the U.S.? Is there one?
Let’s  begin with this thought: as human cultures have evolved, there has been  a general agreement that some things on the planet, such as water and  air, belong to everyone. Democratization has extended these rights to  include access to natural beauty and to the oceans.
With various  forms of democracy, even including communism and socialism, have come  the acceptance that matters of common concern, however approached or  regulated, are integrally connected to the political system. That is a  fundamental good, since without it there is no way for the people to  exercise any real power over their political environment.
If one  subscribes, therefore, to democracy, one also must take with it an  inviolable connection between, for example, the building of roads, and  politics. Otherwise, should roads be privately built, no one could pass  without paying extortionate fees. Farmers could not get their crops to  market. People could not travel or visit one another. And so forth.
Severing  the connection between the public and the management of and control  over public resources and operations thought to be of the commons, is  dangerous. It would be hard to exaggerate just how dangerous.
The  issue of privatization is maybe the most important public issue we’re  facing in the U.S., and it’s causing terrible dislocation and political  chaos in Europe, as well. You’re not going to see it on the news (sic).  As with many things in America now, this is a story we’ll have to piece  together on our own.
The Corrections Corporation of America,  largest company operating private prisons, has written to 48 states  offering to take over the running of prisons, provided that the states  guarantee a 90 percent occupancy.
The systemic corruption this invites is breathtaking.
The  care of inmates is of course a responsibility of the prison systems in  the states and in the country as a whole for federal institutions. How  we treat inmates, provision for their food and clothing, their  recreation, their activities, their health, this is a matter of public  policy. The state arrests, tries, and attains convictions; inmates have  been sentenced to prison. The duration of the sentence is often impacted  by the behavior of the prisoner.
It should be obvious that  prison conditions are subject to politics; it is politics which passes  the laws and operates the judicial system. How prisons are run is our  public responsibility, and this is subject to our laws.
Prisons  are not meant to be, nor should they be, profit-making enterprises. They  have functions to fulfill. That’s not to say that budget matters are  unimportant, only that they cannot be the sole criterion for proper  operation.
Otherwise, inmates would be given no services at all.  Rice is cheap; rancid meat is really cheap. There would be no point  worrying about rehabilitation, which can be expensive. Nobody cares what  happens when they get out. Gulags give you a profit margin that would  impress even Wall Street.
Government is not supposed to be a  profit-making enterprise. But any governmental function, once  privatized, becomes exactly that. Does anyone have to ask what happens  to law enforcement and the judicial system once the state agrees to keep  private prisons at 90% of capacity?
How will the national parks  be run when we privatize them, as some idiot politicians are advocating?  What will the nation’s coastlines be like? Years ago, California voters  approved the Coastal Initiative which protected it and secured public  access; if and when that promise is broken, how long before only the  wealthy can enjoy the beach?
On a lighter note, how about  privatizing the military? It’s being done, you know. When Obama  announced the "withdrawal" of U.S. troops from Iraq he’d promised only  three years before, he didn’t bother to mention that remaining behind  are an estimated 50,000 private troops, a private army serving the needs  of the corporate mobsters who are figuring to loot what’s left.
Xe,  nee Blackwater, is a private army the government contracts with to  perform certain tasks, often unspecified, which it feels the regular  army cannot perform. Its soldiers are paid much more than GIs, and the  casualty rate is much higher. Xe works for the U.S. or for Halliburton  or Bechtel or whomever hires it. It is, as we discovered when Blackwater  mercenaries murdered Iraqi civilians for pure sport, exempt from U.S.  law and the control of the American government which hired it.
When  private armies can operate outside the political control of a country,  there is no democracy, even in form. We all know what it is, don’t we?
Privatization of water, which I wrote about recently ("As Benign as Lucifer"),  has enabled major corporations to destroy wide swaths of agriculture in  India and elsewhere, causing widespread suicide as farmers by the tens  of thousands have lost their land. Privatization of public services,  public properties, public responsibilities, is a one-way ticket to hell.
The  riots in Greece are about privatization. That is the agenda of the  International Monetary Fund, the consortium of bankers who run a large  part of the world and want more. Through the mechanism of manufactured  debt, the bankers are able to extort whatever "austerity" measures they  want. These involve a reduction in the wages of public employees, a  reduction in social services for the poor, and the privatization of what  is publicly owned.
If you think we’re not headed in that  direction in the United States, you’re dreaming. That’s what the budget  arguments are about now, and the talk of America’s "debt." To whom is  that "debt" owed? Why, to the bankers, of course, the same people whose  looting of the Treasury caused this crisis in the first place. Pretty  neat, huh?
Having taken everything else, they are going after  what’s left, and what’s left are the treasures of a nation, the wealth  owned in common by its people.
We simply can’t let them get it.
http://theragblog.blogspot.com/2012/03/richard-razinkov-privatization-of.html
 
