https://theintercept.com/2020/04/01/essential-workers-and-the-reverse-robin-hood-coronavirus-bailout/
The centralization of ownership of the private media in the United States and elsewhere has become increasingly pronounced, at the same time that its reporting has become increasingly one-sided and monolithic. My blog seeks to expose this lack of objectivity and present alternative ideas that point in the direction of much-needed fundamental change.
Thursday, April 2, 2020
HOW TWENTY-FIRST CENTURY CAPITALISM SET THE STAGE FOR THE INTENSITY OF THE CORONAVIRUS CRISIS IN THE U.S.
The business model in
the age of neoliberalism known as "mean and lean" has exacerbated
the effects of the coronavirus crisis. It means that management cuts corners, a
euphemism for laying off workers to streamline production, itself a euphemism
for "speedups." All this conforms to the neoliberal tendency to
privilege immediate profit over long- term considerations. In the field of
hospital care that meant overcrowded hospitals with no elbow room to deal with
emergency situations such as the coronavirus pandemic. Twenty-first century
capitalism has also intensified capital concentration, meaning that mergers were
the order of the day, resulting in numerous hospital closures. In New York City
alone 19 hospitals shut down since the turn of the century, many replaced by
luxury cons. Saint Vincent’s Hospital (south of 14th St. in Manhattan, shown in this photo) founded
in 1849 was one of the victims. Yesterday's The Intercept program with Jeremy
Scahill discussed the relationship between capitalism in the age of neoliberalism
and the coronavirus scourge in the U.S.
https://theintercept.com/2020/04/01/essential-workers-and-the-reverse-robin-hood-coronavirus-bailout/
https://theintercept.com/2020/04/01/essential-workers-and-the-reverse-robin-hood-coronavirus-bailout/
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