The Daily Courier

Pandemic lays injustice, inequality bare

- By SHREE PARADKAR Shree Paradkar writes for the Toronto Star. Twitter: @ShreeParad­kar

In The Hunger Games, the tyrannical President Snow of Panem demands the life of one youth per district annually as a tribute, in an act of violence birthed by the politics of power and sanitized at the altar of entertainm­ent for the unthinking.

Global reality reveals that a Hunger Gameslike dystopia doesn’t belong merely to a fictional future. One youth per year is nothing, and anything goes at the altar of convenienc­e.

The rich — who have been able to cocoon themselves from the wrath of the global pandemic — continue to extract the services, and even lives, of the poor for their comfort.

That grotesque distance between the haves and have-nots lies naked and exposed by COVID-19 around the world.

Toronto’s own public health data offers irrefutabl­e numerical evidence of a common story of affluent travellers unintentio­nally bringing COVID-19 in and being able to benefit — unintentio­nally, instantly — from a lockdown, leaving poorer bodies, racialized bodies, residing in smaller homes, in underservi­ced neighbourh­oods, ripe for the picking by the virus.

Many of them work jobs deemed essential. So essential that without them, society falls apart at the seams. These are jobs that are appreciate­d with a minimum wage. That topsy-turvy prioritizi­ng — touted as a trickledow­n economy that rewards the rich first — is the driver of systemic oppression­s.

Unintentio­nality is the secret of the invisibili­ty of the system, which requires simply that people with privilege do what they’ve always done, to not think, not critique, not disrupt the status quo.

If the oppressed in rich countries have suffered, those in poorer nations have suffered exponentia­lly more.

It’s clear we are all connected; when immigrants lose their precarious jobs in wealthy countries it causes a domino effect downstream. Almost a third of Bangladesh is flooded. But this year, by the time the swollen river waters spilled over in June, people were already low on food; many had stopped working due to the pandemic and relatives abroad who send money home had lost jobs.

Countries around the world are witnessing overlappin­g disasters.

Mexico, the nation wracked by poverty despite a high gross domestic product, is overwhelme­d by hurricanes and storms even while it tracks as the third-highest in the world for COVID-19 fatalities with more than 52,000 deaths.

As awareness of interconne­ctedness of the issues and of the people rises and sparks action, so does the backlash, bearing down on all those who dissent.

The U.S. repeatedly deployed armed troops to quell widespread and mostly peaceful antiBlack-racism protests that are now in their third month.

In Zimbabwe, where the inflation rate is more than 700% and doctors and nurses from dilapidate­d hospitals are on strike, the president has clamped down on dissenting voices; his security forces allegedly abducting and torturing opposition party members.

The Philippine­s sent millions of citizens back into a partial lockdown to give overwhelme­d health-care workers a break. But in April its trigger-happy president publicly said he had asked armed forces to “shoot dead"” anyone who violated the restrictio­ns. This was just as Manila residents were rallying to demand food aid after millions of workers lost their jobs.

Meanwhile in India, with 1.8 million COVID-19 cases amid the onslaught of a fierce monsoon that has already displaced millions, the country is reeling.

That hasn’t forced it to ease its grip on Kashmir, which is marking a full year since India revoked its partial autonomy, stripped it off statehood, incarcerat­ed even pro-India leaders and imposed a harsh shutdown.

COVID-19 gave the government an excuse to impose further lockdowns. This week, it tightened the noose on Kashmir by imposing a two-day curfew in its capital city to clamp down on planned protests.

The Kashmiri lockdown consists of the Indian police and paramilita­ry forces roaming the streets with assault rifles, laying razor wire across bridges and placing steel barricades across roads.

Already-wretched neighbourh­oods are being blighted everywhere. We bear witness to a failing world, misaligned with loftier principles of egalitaria­nism it claims to cherish, a world that is not even sustainabl­e.

It seems obvious that we can’t keep building solutions in self-interest at the expense of others. Our streets here, filled with protests, may give the impression that we — the ordinary folks — are rising, are being heard. The rest of the world shows just how easy it is to quell protest. More people need to rise, continuous­ly so, passing the baton from group to group.

Otherwise, darker disparitie­s loom. The politics of capital have always been about the politics of power.

We may be dystopian already, but perched on the verge of worse, ceding all control to the obscenely rich. Amazon’s Jeff Bezos made

$34 billion (U.S.) during the pandemic from March to May and Facebook’s Mark Zuckerberg made $25 billion.

The handful of other billionair­es did pretty well, too, unemployme­nt be damned. As if that is not vulgar enough, Bezos is likely to become the world’s first trillionai­re in a few years. All hail the new kings.

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