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For InterPress Service © Hazel Henderson, December 1998 (984 word count)
"THE AGE
of TRUTH"
"The Information Age" has defined the late 20th Centuryhyped
by technological optimists as ushering in democracy, individual empowerment,
the automation of drudgery and a new leisure society. Its most unexpected
offspring may be a new "Age of Truth". Henry Hyde, chairing
the U.S. Congress impeachment proceedings against President Clinton
stated that "lying is part and parcel of the trade of politics" (National
Public Radio, December 18, 1998). Today, the rules are changing.
So far, the fruits of the computer-communications revolution have
been decidedly mixed and unequally shared. Along with the individual
empowerment of the few has come the widening gap between "info-rich" and "info-poor".
Democracies have morphed into "mediocracies" dominated
by global commercial media conglomerates, sound-bite politics and
its increasing corruption by money.
The newest challenges to societies lie in the technology-driven
globalizing of corporations (200 of which now control 28% of the
global economy) and electronic commerce, most visible in todays
unstable $1.5 trillion daily global casino. Most of this electronic
currency trading is speculation and unrelated to real trade or investment.
Politicians are alarmed about this out-of-control global casino
and its tidal waves of hot money sloshing around the planet. Many
do not yet admit they helped create it with their financial deregulation
and privatization policies which took down the firewalls between
national economies. G-7 finance ministers mystify todays speculative
excesses as "global contagion" and call vaguely for "new
financial architecture".
In the USA, home of the cyberspace revolution, electronic markets
and Wall Streets information "bubble" economy, the
Clinton Administration has declared this sector as a laissez-faire,
tax haven. Despite US urging, other countries, including the 15 members
of the European Union are more skeptical. They worry about untaxed,
unregulated electronic markets and cybershoppers eroding their national
sovereignty and tax bases. Real, bricks and mortar small businesses
on Main Streets of rural towns and villages must pay rents, and taxes
on their sales. They cannot compete with the growing virtual businesses
in cyberspace.
All of the good and bad news of globalization and the Information
Age will be debated for decades. What is new and indisputable is
that all this has led to a new Age of Truth. Information overload
is creating more selectivity, awareness and skepticism among citizens,
voters and consumers worldwide. Citizens organizations continue
to proliferate. They share information and campaigns via the internet
against unaccountable corporations, governments, politicians and
tyrants.
The rules are changing in the global village. All politicians, not
only Bill Clinton, must understand they now live in the global goldfish
bowl created by the technologies of the Information Age. Higher standards
of personal conduct come with this new territory. Hypocrisy is short-lived.
Campaign rhetoric is held to account as citizens demand that politicians
walk their talk. Corporations are expected to live up to their codes
of conductand submit to outside audits of their ethics, social
and environmental conduct. Appeals for privacy and against the unfairness
of harsher public scrutiny are irrelevant.
Erstwhile cozy relationships between political elites, corporate
chieftains and top news editors are now labeled "cronyism".
Private conferences of world leaders and heads of state in watering
holes like Davos, Switzerland and Jackson Hole, Wyoming are suspect
as "collusion". Public relations and political advisors
have given rise to terms such as "spin doctoring" and "corporate
green-washing".
Young "Generation Xers" fight back against the fashion
moguls and the "culture industry" by choosing second-hand
and retro clothes. Ad Busters and other anti-marketing magazines
and groups promote "Buy Nothing Days", TV turn-offs, "No
Gift Holidays" and clever anti-advertising that spoofs global
brands and consumerism. Anti-economists ridicule orthodox economic
textbooks and the economic prescriptions of the World Bank and the
IMF as "The Washington Consensus".
These newly aware citizens and their allies in academia sounded
the global alarm on bio-engineered food, crops and livestock. They
reveal new truths behind the hype of chemical, agribusiness and pharmaceutical
corporations ads claiming that they have the answer to the
worlds food problems. When US-based giant Monsanto announced
its now infamous infertile seeds that cannot germinate future crops,
protest groups worldwide staged media events and rallies against "Monstercos" "Terminator" seeds
that would be useless to save, making farmers dependent on buying
costly new seeds each year.
And this 50th anniversary year of the Universal Declaration
on Human Rights, the Age of Truth caught up with those accused of
genocide in Rwanda and Bosnia. Tyrants everywhere were put on notice
by the trials of war criminals in the Hague and by the Rome agreement
to create the International Criminal Courtin spite of lonely
obstruction by the worlds self-styled policeman, the USA. General
Pinochets future still hangs in the balance while Amnesty International
is now a household word.
Meanwhile, the sages of the cyber age who ignored the millennium
computer bug, still tend toward hyperbole or banality. Nicholas Negroponte
of the Massachusetts Institute of Technologys Media Lab "predicts" (Wired,
Dec. 1998.) that nations will erode because they are not big
enough to be global nor small enough to be localechoing 25
year old statements by this author and E.F. Schumacher in his Small
is Beautiful (1973).
While the verdict is not yet in on the bewildering effects of the
Information Age, it has already ushered in the Age of Truth.
****
Hazel Henderson is author of Paradigms In Progress (1991,
1995) and Building a Win-Win World (1996, 1997) and co-editor
with Harlan Cleveland and Inge Kaul of The UN: Policy and Financing
Alternatives. She co-directed a recent survey on
the Y2K bug, accessible at
www.publicinterestpolling.co
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