Apart from global capitalism deciding on the geographical location of industry with no other consideration but the maximising of profit, even if you take that out of the equation, I don't think that the matter is a straightforward one. All throughout the 80s I was arguing for the retention of our industrial and agricultural base as opposed to trying to base an economy on financial services. This was partly due to finding it easier to understand and appreciate the world of what I considered to be "real" work, as apposed to the more ephemeral world of the service sector, and in no small part to my prejudice against "prats in suits who thought that moving bits of paper around was work". All rubbish of course. The project is to do away with the division between work and leisure and build a world where production is at the service of our desires rather than the creation of profit, and I knew that then as well as I do now.
When my generation left our Secondary Modern Schools at the age of fifteen we were destined for a lifetime of boring, repetitive, alienating factory work. I was one of the lucky few who managed to escape. The thing is Prof, before we start getting all moist about factory work it might be an idea to consider who is actually going to do this work. Cos it ain't going to be me and it sure as fuck ain't going to be you,
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Yesterday I heard a financial sector spokesman giving an interview in which he said that because bankers wouldn't be receiving their usual astonomical bonuses, the economy wouldn't be kick-started in the new year......
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