Thursday 21 June 2012

The Wrong Side of the Volcano

We took a trip to see a volcano this week.....Volcan Arenal, seen here from across the artificial lake created to supply hydroelectric power for Costa Rica.

Looks cool and sleepy, doesn't it? And so people thought who farmed its slopes until in July 1968, without any warning, it erupted, killing 87 people, covering an area of some fifteen kilometres in ash and lava...rocks weighing several tons being launched into the air.
A tragedy.

But as activity, less violent but very dramatic, continued, it was put to good account in Costa Rica's burgeoning tourist business.....where else could you see this, for example?
                                                      An amazing sight!

Hotels began to be built offering their clients views of nature's fireworks from the comfort of their own rooms...or sitting on the terrace, glass in hand, while the volcano rumbled and spat fire at close range.

As the tourist demand increased, other activities prospered too. Hot springs establishments....bird watching visits to the wetlands to the north...fishing and windsurfing on Lake Arenal...

And just as well, because Arenal began to nod off again....

First the flow moved round to the other side of the volcano - depriving the expensive tourist traps of their main attraction  - and now seems to have ceased completely.
No fireworks...no rumbles.

I still see some pretty misleading publicity about Arenal...I have no idea if the guidebooks have caught up with the situation...but eventually the distributors will run out of postcards and flyers showing molten lava running down from the cone and the businesses dependent on its presence will die or adapt.

Death or adaption has been the choice of whole areas of Europe where traditional industrial production was a way of life.
Coal mines, steel mills...filthy dirty things that ruined the health of as many as they employed, if not more...but regarded as essential to produce the necessities that the nation required to be independent.

Governments decided that they did not need to safeguard these  industries any more...any more than they needed to maintain control of transport and energy supply.
The mines and factories closed, private enterprise took over the transport and energy industries - but never without a hefty subsidy from the public purse.

The same public purse that funded governments'  preference for maintaining able bodied people on benefits rather than making any effort to replace the old industries with new.
Inculcating the dependency culture they would pretend to deplore.

Governments abdicated their responsibilities both to people and to nation, putting everything up for grabs in the name of the market.

The market.
Where everything which affects our lives is bought and sold to enrich others.
The market.
Pelf its only pride.

Governments - or rather the financial - media - political nexus which has replaced the traditional model - have been farming the slopes of green and pleasant lands undisturbed since they renounced their traditional responsibilities....their peoples drugged by the bribes of easy credit into falling into hedonism.
Lotus eaters.
But the lotus are running short on the shelves of Tesco.

Governments - or rather the political - media - finance nexus which has replaced the traditional model - are savvier than the farmers on the slopes of Arenal in the sixties. They know that those waked from a drugged sleep can be violent - thus all the 'security' measures justified by the fear of 'terrorism'.

How long before there is a social explosion from the other side of the slopes that sends pieces of their corrupt edifice flying to destruction?

And should it come, and when it comes, remember that you, middle class, law abiding, protesting peacefully at the loss of all you and your parents worked for, will be treated as though you were a lawless lout on the rampage. For such you will be in the eyes of those who make the  law. The law of the market.

a
Enhanced by Zemanta

16 comments:

  1. I'd sooner trust a real volcano than a financial one. Real volcanos don't erupt out of ineptitude.

    ReplyDelete
  2. The future's looking grim, that's for sure. Except possibly for the volcano.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. I think the volcano will pull through....only because no banker has yet worked out how to get it to take on the burden of sovereign debt....

      Delete
  3. Nail on head, Fly. History repeats itself: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Timeline_of_the_French_Revolution
    but this time I think it's going to encompass a far larger area than France. Scary times, n'est-ce pas?

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Yes, I think so.

      You let people get accustomed to relative affluence and then you pull the rug....recipe for social unrest.

      Delete
  4. It seems that just as you thought it couldn't get any worse ... it does ...

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. And worse to come, I think.
      the U.K. had the chance when Northern Rock went down to set up a state bank...but ideology stood in the way.
      The money they've thrown at the banks could have been used via the NR to finance house loans and loans for small and medium businesses....keeping things going...but our politicians can't see beyond the end of Murdoch's nose.

      Delete
  5. Well said, and with another spate of mega wealthy individuals being shown to be legally avoiding tax, a volcanic eruption is well on the way.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. You wonder why it hasn't already happened, but then, people are concentrating on making ends meet - no time to take to the streets. Yet.

      Delete
  6. We should have taken to the streets in 2008 when the shite hit the fan, so to speak...

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Yes, before they got their defences in order..

      Delete
  7. Well put. So sad when you think about it. My grandparents lived through two world wars. They sacrificed so much in the hope of leaving a better world for future generations. And they did, but how long did it last? So much of what is going on in Europe at the moment (all I really know about) is madness. Here in Ireland, the government speaks a lot about 'the country'. It is becoming increasingly clear though that whatever this 'country' is that they are talking about, it has nothing to do with the people living in it. They are being cheerfully sacrificed but I'm not quite sure for what.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Oh yes...the country....
      They need the country more than the country needs them and it's more than time that people woke up to it.

      Delete
  8. So thought-provoking and so true, Fly. I don't have so many more years of it to endure, but my heart breaks at the prospect of what we are storing up for our children and grandchildren....

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Something we like to call tyranny when it happens somewhere else....

      Delete